Health & Well-Being
Visit our Student Wellness Hub to learn about well-being services offered here at Schulich.
Life in Montreal
Visit McGill University's website dedicated to campus life for information about the university's student resources, athletics, campus clubs and activities, housing and more.
Music Graduate Students' Society: All music graduate students belong to the McGill University Music Graduate Students' Society (M.G.S.S.).
Post-Graduate Students' Society: All graduate students belong to the Post-Graduate Students' Society (P.G.S.S.).
McGill Association of Student Composers (MASC): MASC seeks to develop collaborations between composers, performers and scholars in order to promote new music at the Schulich School of Music and in Montreal. The goal is to create and inspire important connections between Performance and Music Research disciplines as students work towards, and build, their professional careers. Email MASC Board President mtouizrar [at] gmail.com (Moe Touizrar) if you'd like to participate.
Student Groups
What MASC does:
- Produce regular concerts of student pieces
- Host monthly forums on issues related to new music, with invited scholars, composers and performers (including graduate students from the Schulich School of Music)
- Meet regularly as a group to discuss our work
- Advocate to the faculty on behalf of composers
McGill Audio Engineering Society (Student Chapter): The Audio Engineering Society, now in its fifth decade, is the only professional society dedicated exclusively to audio technology. Its membership of leading engineers, scientists, and other authorities, has increased dramatically throughout the world, greatly boosting the society's stature and that of its members, in a truly symbiotic relationship.
Read more about the AES
The AES serves its members, the industry and the public, by stimulating and facilitating advances in the constantly changing field of audio. It encourages and disseminates new developments through annual technical meetings and exhibitions of professional equipment, and through the Journal of the Audio Engineering Society, the professional archival publication in the audio industry.
AES sections serve members in 41 concentrated geographical areas throughout the world. Sections in Australia, Canada, Europe, Japan, Mexico, South America, and the United States hold meetings regularly for the dissemination of the most current audio information. Liberal interchange of section meeting data keeps all sections abreast of new developments internationally. This give-and-take among sections is vital to an informed worldwide membership and offers a distinct advantage to those industry personnel who are members. AES members within the area of a particular section automatically receive notice of such meetings. The sections also provide fertile ground for developing new officers in the society through service at the local level.