Professor
Graham Raulerson
Most Helpful Review
Fall 2015 - He's a fun guy during lecture, makes jokes and all like he's from Iowa or whatever when talking about country music, but those exams are heavily based on memorizing. That's why everyone's so good at it except me. By memorizing, not only naming songs by hearing them but also the definition of skiffle, the name of that one producer that made The Beatles famous or James Brown's debut song. These are, of course, important, but when you have that name at the tip of your tongue and it's worth 3pts each you get distraught. Also don't expect any curve. In lecture he'll spend 20 minutes in telling a personal anecdote which is often funny, but then rush over the most critical points of the current slide for 30 seconds before moving on to the next topic, so you better be a fast note taker if you want to do well. I don't even recall hearing in lecture some of the things I was asked on the test. He skims over them ever so quickly. He says that you buy this book called Pop, Rock and Soul and read these pages this week it but you don't have to. It's an aggregate of off-topic articles, mostly about artists he doesn't even go over in lecture and are remotely related to lecture material, so they don't help at all in the exams. So think of it as "optional further reading". Also 20 pages/week is long for me. I'm lazy. Though both midterms and the final have multiple essay questions that are so open-ended (eg. soul's impact on blues) you can write in any way you like and still get full score on them , it's still based on a lot of memorizing. For instance, it's required that you reference at least 3-4 songs per short essay so that you can get full credit for the points you've made. Really fun lectures if you're taking it for the hell of it and not towards your degree, though you should be OK with memorizing. Even if you like rock, memorizing rock can make you hate it. I used to listed to Guns N Roses and stuff 6 months ago and now I'm all over house and techno. Just letting you know I could name 75 songs from 1920s to 2000s from listening to their first 10 seconds a couple months ago and tell their significance within the pop music history. Right now, I don't remember sh
Fall 2015 - He's a fun guy during lecture, makes jokes and all like he's from Iowa or whatever when talking about country music, but those exams are heavily based on memorizing. That's why everyone's so good at it except me. By memorizing, not only naming songs by hearing them but also the definition of skiffle, the name of that one producer that made The Beatles famous or James Brown's debut song. These are, of course, important, but when you have that name at the tip of your tongue and it's worth 3pts each you get distraught. Also don't expect any curve. In lecture he'll spend 20 minutes in telling a personal anecdote which is often funny, but then rush over the most critical points of the current slide for 30 seconds before moving on to the next topic, so you better be a fast note taker if you want to do well. I don't even recall hearing in lecture some of the things I was asked on the test. He skims over them ever so quickly. He says that you buy this book called Pop, Rock and Soul and read these pages this week it but you don't have to. It's an aggregate of off-topic articles, mostly about artists he doesn't even go over in lecture and are remotely related to lecture material, so they don't help at all in the exams. So think of it as "optional further reading". Also 20 pages/week is long for me. I'm lazy. Though both midterms and the final have multiple essay questions that are so open-ended (eg. soul's impact on blues) you can write in any way you like and still get full score on them , it's still based on a lot of memorizing. For instance, it's required that you reference at least 3-4 songs per short essay so that you can get full credit for the points you've made. Really fun lectures if you're taking it for the hell of it and not towards your degree, though you should be OK with memorizing. Even if you like rock, memorizing rock can make you hate it. I used to listed to Guns N Roses and stuff 6 months ago and now I'm all over house and techno. Just letting you know I could name 75 songs from 1920s to 2000s from listening to their first 10 seconds a couple months ago and tell their significance within the pop music history. Right now, I don't remember sh
Most Helpful Review
Winter 2016 - The midterm and final were easy enough. There was one paper for this class, 8-11 pages, which is kind of long for a lower div class. The material though was REALLY interesting. He also posted readings online which I did not do. Got an A. Wish I could take this professor again, sadly I am graduating.
Winter 2016 - The midterm and final were easy enough. There was one paper for this class, 8-11 pages, which is kind of long for a lower div class. The material though was REALLY interesting. He also posted readings online which I did not do. Got an A. Wish I could take this professor again, sadly I am graduating.
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Most Helpful Review
Spring 2016 - I can't believe this teacher is leaving. I had this class as a 9 AM, and I willingly got up each Monday and Wednesday to attend because I loved his lectures so much. I learned so much about musicals this quarter, and it was super fun! Great GE, but probably only because of this teacher. Side note: I was in his lecture during the shooting, and he was super professional the entire time making sure the students were safe. He even shortened the length of the final because of the stress this event had on the student body, as it occurred a week before finals. He genuinely cares about his students, more than any other professor I've had at UCLA. I'm going to miss him a lot.
Spring 2016 - I can't believe this teacher is leaving. I had this class as a 9 AM, and I willingly got up each Monday and Wednesday to attend because I loved his lectures so much. I learned so much about musicals this quarter, and it was super fun! Great GE, but probably only because of this teacher. Side note: I was in his lecture during the shooting, and he was super professional the entire time making sure the students were safe. He even shortened the length of the final because of the stress this event had on the student body, as it occurred a week before finals. He genuinely cares about his students, more than any other professor I've had at UCLA. I'm going to miss him a lot.