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Microphones, a Magic Flute, and Queer History, Oh My! A Look at Winter Term 2025

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A chance for students to try something outside the norm, this Winter Term saw 46 different options from mic building to art history, to producing a Mozart opera from the ground up.

January 29, 2025 by Alex Heigl

It’s a time to play in a way that you haven’t before.

Another Winter Term has passed at SFCM, allowing students a chance to hone their craft, develop another skillset, or simply have fun trying and learning something new!

First starting during the 2015-2016 school year, Winter Term is a chance for students to expand their horizons by exploring areas outside of their usual academic work. Steadily growing every year, this year's edition had 46 different options for students to immerse themselves in subjects beyond the standard curriculum for two weeks.

This year dozens of new and returning classes included Songwriting Across Genre, Tap Dancing, Intro to Arts Administration, Mock Orchestrestral Auditions and even The Music of Poetry with Daniel Handler (aka Lemony Snicket).

Longtime favorites also returned including Wine and Music Pairing, an art history treasure hunt at San Francisco’s de Young Museum in the city’s iconic Golden Gate Park, and the Guitar Department’s Harris Guitar Collection Recording Project.

Here’s a look at some of the highlights from this year’s projects including Experiments in Microphone Building, Queer Music History Tour of San Francisco, and building on the success of the past two years, Undergraduate Opera: Cast, Orchestra and Production put on Mozart’s The Magic Flute.

Winter Term isn’t a break. It’s a chance to break away. It’s a key part of SFCM’s mission of inspiring students to grow intellectually, artistically, professionally, and individually. In addition to the dozens of faculty-curated Winter Term classes, students can explore their own independent Winter Term Project. This year voice student Chea Kang made a short film, where she self-recorded and self-directed a music video of Gioachino Rossini’s "Cat Duet."

Undergraduate students participate in at least three Winter Terms during their time at SFCM, and graduate students participate each academic year.

Learn more about Winter Term at SFCM.