The Beatles: From Magical Mystery Tour to Let it Be
$ $75/series, $20/class
7:00 pm to 8:30 pm
From Thursday, April 16, 2020 to Thursday, May 7, 2020

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A 4-Week Music History Course Taught by Professor Stephen Schultz

Back by popular demand Rhythmix’s music history courses will focus on the phenomenon of the Beatles. Their songs will be studied, with analysis of the musical and lyrical content, as well as structural elements. What musical styles do the songs address? What were their musical influences? In what ways did their music change over the years? Why were the Beatles so popular and influential? What exactly caused Beatlemania? How did the group form, grow and end? Where do their public images and personal lives fit in? The Beatles are the most famous rock group in history; the reasons for this are cultural as well as musical, and we will study the two elements simultaneously.

After the Beatles reached their collaborative peak with Sgt. Pepper’s, the group slowly fragmented through Magical Mystery Tour, The White Album, Yellow Submarine, Abbey Road and Let it Be. We will discuss these albums in depth and cover their first solo albums after the breakup. People who have previously attended a Beatles course by Professor Schultz will discover his lectures rarely repeat themselves and you should be able to discover new things at each listening of The Beatles music.

There are no required readings for the course, but a suggested reading list will be given out at the first class. Students can prepare by downloading all tracks from the five albums covered in the course and listening to them before each class.

Some mature themes.

Week 1: Thursday, April 16

Magical Mystery Tour and Yellow Submarine

Week 2: Thursday, April 23

The White Album

Week 3: Thursday, April 30

Abbey Road and Let It Be

Week 4: Thursday, May 7

The Breakup and First Solo Albums


About Stephen Schultz

Stephen Schultz, called “among the most flawless artists on the Baroque flute” by the San Jose Mercury News and “flute extraordinaire” by the New Jersey Star-Ledger, plays solo and Principal flute with the Philharmonia Baroque Orchestra and Musica Angelica and performs with other leading Early music groups around the world.

A graduate of the Royal Conservatory of Music in Holland, Schultz also holds several degrees from the California Institute of the Arts and the California State University of San Francisco. Currently he is an Associate Teaching Professor in Music History and Flute at Carnegie Mellon University and director of the Carnegie Mellon Baroque Orchestra.

He splits his teaching time between Carnegie Mellon University, UC Berkeley OLLI and Rhythmix and specializes in classes on the Beatles, John Lennon, as well as the music of Bach and Mahler.