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Clarinet
Doctor of Musical Arts
Application & Audition Requirements

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About this Program

Overview

Juilliard offers the Doctor of Musical Arts (DMA) degree in the areas of classical instruments, classical voice, composition, and historical performance. Juilliard’s DMA program, known as the C.V. Starr Doctoral Program, is the most advanced course of study offered at the school. It is designed for gifted and accomplished musicians who also possess a broad range of knowledge about music, a keen intellect, a natural curiosity for a wide variety of disciplines, and the potential for pursuing high level performance and scholarly or teaching careers. 

A generous endowment grant from the C.V. Starr Foundation allows candidates accepted into the DMA degree to pursue their two-year resident studies with a full-tuition scholarship. Juilliard DMA students have access to a world-class faculty of performers and scholars as well as the extraordinary resources of the Juilliard library and its manuscript collection.

The DMA degree requires two years of full-time residency and program completion within five years of admission. Applicants must pass the prescreening round for their major and perform at the highest level during the audition. Based on the audition, selected applicants are then required to take a test and interview with the Doctoral Governance Committee. 

Admission decisions for the DMA program are based on a combination of the audition, test score, and interview. The school admits DMA applicants across the entire DMA applicant pool, not just the individual major. Public recitals and a dissertation are part of the program requirements. While instrumentalists may be assigned to large or small ensembles, based in part on the student’s interest, DMA students are not required to participate in orchestra assignments.

For additional information about the program, please visit the Music Division webpage and navigate to your area of study.

Eligibility

In order to be admitted as a DMA student, you must have:

  • A bachelor's degree and a master's degree or their equivalents by the time you enroll
  • Prior artistic training
  • English language fluency

You are ineligible to apply to this program if you have already earned a Doctor of Musical Arts in the same major from another institution.

If you apply to this degree program and are denied admission, you can apply again. After three unfavorable results, you are no longer eligible to apply. A favorable result is defined as receiving admission to Juilliard or being placed on the waitlist. An unfavorable result is defined as a denial of admission after the prescreening, after the audition, or not showing up for your scheduled audition (“no-show”). Withdrawals do not count towards the three opportunities you have to apply to Juilliard. 

Academic Requirements


The Juilliard School requires no specific courses, GPAs, standardized test scores, or class rankings for entry to this program. 

However, we will carefully evaluate your academic record and required essay to make sure you have the scholastic competence necessary to succeed in doctoral-level coursework. 

There are additional requirements for:

Criteria for Acceptance

  • Exceptional talent as a performer, and the potential to meet Juilliard's technical standards
  • A high level and quality of training and musicianship
  • A capacity for sustained, disciplined practice
  • The personal maturity and generosity of spirit essential for ensemble work
  • Broad and thoughtful interest in the world of music, including its historical traditions and contemporary trends
  • A clear dedication to artistic excellence and a desire to exercise artistic leadership 

Application Timeline

Application Timeline

Applications to the College Division open on September 1 each year for enrollment the following fall. Please note the various deadlines for individual materials below.

APPLICATION REQUIREMENTRECEIVED-BY DEADLINE
Online Application with Artistic Resume, Essay(s) and Introduction Video December 3
Application Fee ($USD) or Fee WaiverDecember 3
Prescreening MaterialsDecember 3
Proof of English Language Proficiency Official Test Scores as part of prescreeningDecember 3
Recommender InformationDecember 3
Recommendation(s) ReceivedDecember 15
Request for ADA audition accommodationsJanuary 15
TranscriptsDecember 15 
Dossier*February 16
Graded Paper*February 16
Scholarship / Financial Aid Application*March 1

*Dossier, *Graded Paper, and *Scholarship / Financial Aid Application required only if an invitation to an in-person audition is received.

PRESCREENING NOTIFICATIONS
Results announced via email by Mid-January
Audition Date(s)
See "Audition Dates" Page

 

Application Results

You will receive notification of your admission status (admit, wait list, or deny) through your application status page no later than April 1, if all required application materials have been received.

Application Fee & Waivers

Application Fee

The $110 application fee is nonrefundable and must be paid through your application status page upon submission of your application. Your application is not considered complete until the fee has been received.

Fee Waivers

Fee waiver requests are available for applicants to graduate programs who demonstrate significant financial need by uploading one of the following to the application: 

  • If you are independent, a copy of your most recent tax form filed OR 

  • A letter on school stationery from your current university’s or college's Financial Aid Office stating that you have financial need of a fee waiver 

If you are unable to provide one of the above documents, you may provide the following: 

  • A personal letter describing your financial situation 

All documentation must be in English. Original documents with translations are acceptable. 

How to Upload

Fee waiver documentation (translated into English if not originally in that language) must be uploaded directly within the online application and submitted by the appropriate deadline. Documents must be in either .doc or .pdf format. (Convert your file to another format if you have scanned your document as a jpg.)

Fee waiver requests are processed on an ongoing basis. You will receive an email with the results of your request as soon as it is processed. Note that we have a heavy volume of requests to process at the deadline, so you may not receive your results until after the deadline has passed. This does not disqualify your application. Do not pay the application fee if your waiver request is still pending.

Your application status page will show an application fee payment due until your request is approved. If you are notified that your request for an application fee waiver is denied, you will be required to pay the application fee. Your application is not considered complete until the fee has been received. If your fee waiver request is processed after the deadline, and is denied, you will still have a grace period in which to pay the fee. 

Your Application Materials

Your Online Application

Your application must be submitted online by the appropriate deadline. To begin, create your Juilliard Admissions Account, gather all of the required application materials, and follow the instructions to complete your application.

Start your online application

Your Resume

An artistic resume must be uploaded as part of the online application. The purpose of submitting a résumé is to provide the Admissions Committee with a document that quickly sums up your background and accomplishments. The résumé should contain lists, not full prose paragraphs such as in a program bio. The elements to include in your résumé are as follows: 

  • Your name and major (violin, jazz trumpet, soprano, etc.)
  • Your contact information (including address, phone, and email)
  • Education: Where you studied, degree or diploma earned (or to be earned)
  • Teachers: Particularly for classical instrumentalists and vocalists, listing your most recent teachers and the dates when you studied with them is important information for the Committee
  • Master classes where you performed: List teacher and date (for example, June 2020)
  • Ensemble experience: Youth orchestras, choirs, jazz bands, etc.
  • Competitions and awards: Include dates
  • Performances: If including orchestral performances, only include those if you were the soloist; otherwise list recitals and chamber music performances
  • Other experience: If you have done volunteer work, held a job, etc., those can be listed here 

You do not have to use these exact categories in this exact order. Use what is logical for your background, but make sure to put your name at the top of the document, and include your education and your teachers. DO NOT SUBMIT A PROGRAM BIO. It is not useful for purposes of applying to Juilliard.

Your Dossier

A dossier is defined as a collection of files and materials on the same subject. For musicians, this is a combination of performance and biographical materials that can be used for promotional and professional uses and is similar to an Electronic Press Kit.

Your dossier should include the following, as appropriate: 

  • a program bio
    • A program bio can include your background information, performance and education experience, career highlights and achievements, and any additional descriptions about your musical style.
  • a representative repertoire list from the past two years, including examples of important works from the contemporary literature
    • The representative repertoire list should include the pieces you have performed within the last two years, along with contemporary and classical literature in your repertory.
  • press clippings/reviews
    • As part of the dossier, you may include press clippings or reviews from any performances or recordings that received media coverage. This can include quotes from an album review, a venue, or a musician you’ve collaborated with, as well as any additional articles discussing your performance or work.
  • a list of recordings
    • The list of recordings may include any pieces that you have professionally recorded.
  • a link to your website 
  • a press kit
    • The press kit can include the above materials listed, along with any additional promotional materials that you have that are related to your music career.

All of the required materials for the dossier should be combined into one PDF file and uploaded to your application status page by February 16. Please note that you will not be able to upload the dossier until you have received an official audition invitation.

Your Essay(s)

Juilliard’s Admissions Committee uses your essay(s) to learn more about you as an individual and gain a sense of who you are beyond your application, transcript, and audition.

 

Essay Requirements

  • 1–2 pages, double-spaced, 12-point font
  • written in English (not translated from another language)
  • must be your own original work
  • submitted within the online application

 

Topics
You must provide an essay on both of the following topics:

  1. Many artists experience a moment that crystallizes their career goals. Describe what that moment was for you. Give us specific details about the setting, about what you were doing at the time, and about how that moment continues to affect your actions to this day.
  2. Explain your motivation for pursuing the D.M.A. degree and how your experience in the doctoral program will be relevant to your performing and/or academic career.

 

Additional Essay Requirements
Additional essays are required for:

 

Required Graded Paper

All DMA applicants are required to submit a graded academic paper by uploading the PDF to your application status page by February 16. The paper must be written in English, must have been written in the final year of the applicant's current or most recent program, and must be at least 1,200 words in length. The subject must be a musical or general humanities topic; papers on scientific, technological, engineering, and mathematical topics are not acceptable. Please include instructor comments if not evident on paper itself.

 

Optional Essay
Should you have a personal or academic circumstance to share that you feel can provide context for a particular point on your resume - for example, a gap year, unusually low grades in a semester or year, etc. - you have the option to submit an additional short essay.

Your Introduction Video

A one-minute video uploaded to the application in which you record yourself giving the following information:

  • Your name
  • Your major (i.e. flute, composition, organ). Voice applicants: please include your voice type
  • Your current music teacher
  • Your current school and level of study (for example, first-year undergraduate, 12th grade, etc.)
  • One fact that you want the faculty and Admissions Committee to know about you that they cannot learn from your application materials, and that would give the faculty more insight into who you are as a person.
  • Tell us about one piece of music that excites you and why.

In order to record your video via the online application, please use one of the following web browsers that support the ability to record your video: Chrome, Firefox, Safari, Opera, or Microsoft Edge. Please note that a computer should be used to upload your video (mobile devices are typically not supported for this functionality). To record your video, navigate to the "Music Introduction Video" tab in your application. There you will find instructions for starting the recording. Because the video will be recorded directly from the application, not uploaded as a video file, we recommend allowing yourself ample time to prepare and test your recording in the application module. You can record and save your video at any time before submitting your application, and can delete and re-record your video as needed prior to submission. 

Your Transcripts

Transcripts are an important component of the decision process. They help us determine if you have sufficient scholastic competence to succeed in coursework at the level for which you are applying. Please send your transcript by the requested deadline found in the application timeline above.  

The Juilliard School accepts both official and unofficial transcripts during the application process. Students who are admitted and plan to enroll in the fall will be required to submit a final official transcript of their studies. 

We understand that the current academic year has not ended, and that, if you are currently enrolled, you have not yet completed your program. Please submit your incomplete transcript as is by the deadline; an official final transcript will be required later, if you are admitted and choose to enroll. 

You may view the status of transcripts at any time by logging into your application account. Please note that it may take the Office of Admissions up to 7 business days to process your transcript after it has been received 

 

Unofficial versus Official Transcripts  

  • An unofficial transcript is one that you upload to your application or status page.  
    • In addition to what is listed below in Transcript Requirements, unofficial transcripts must include your name and the name of your institution. 
    • Unofficial transcripts must be uploaded to your application or status page as a PDF. 
  • An official transcript is one that is sent from your school directly to Juilliard. You should follow the process outlined by the Office of the Registrar at your school. If your school does not have an Office of the Registrar, please work with the school department or administrator that oversees course registration, grades, and the conferral of degrees. 
    • Many schools use secure electronic sending services such as National Student Clearinghouse, Parchment, eSCRIP-SAFE, or other systems. Electronic sending services must use this email address: [email protected]. 
    • Alternatively, your school can send us your official transcript via regular or express mail. Mailed transcripts must be sent in a sealed envelope directly from the issuing institution(s) to the Juilliard Office of Admissions. 

          Office of Admissions
          The Juilliard School
          60 Lincoln Center Plaza
          New York, NY 10023

 

 Transcript Requirements 

  • Your transcript(s) must show all prior and current post-secondary coursework. 
    • For students studying outside of the United States, your coursework must be equivalent or similar to a U.S. undergraduate curriculum. Typically, this includes at least 24 credits of liberal arts courses. 
    • You will be notified if an official evaluation of your transcript is required in order to verify your academic level. Companies such as The Evaluation Company (use this link for a discounted evaluation: SpanTran Pathway - The Juilliard School), WES, or ECE can provide this service for a fee. 
    • If you are pursuing post-graduate studies, you must send us both your undergraduate and graduate transcripts. 
  • If you have already completed your program of study, your transcript must also include the degree/diploma conferred and your graduation/completion date. 
  • If your transcript is not in English, we require the transcript in its original language as well as a certified translation. 

Your Recommendations

In your application you will be required to identify two individuals who will provide your recommendations. The recommendations should address your academic and performance potential for the Doctor of Musical Arts program.*

*Please note that currently enrolled Juilliard students are also required to have two letters of recommendation in support of their application. These letters can come from internal faculty members or those not affiliated with The Juilliard School.

The recommendations themselves are not due until later in the application timeline. Recommenders will receive an email with a link to securely upload their letters to our application system. We will only accept recommendations received through our application system.

You may view the status of recommendations at any time by logging into your application account

Your Teacher Preferences

A key element of your study at Juilliard is your major teacher assignment. Music students receive 15 one-hour lessons per semester with a Juilliard studio faculty member.

 

How to Indicate Your Preferences

 

How Your Preferences are Used

  • Your teacher preferences are confidential and do not affect admissions decisions. Studio faculty are not advised of teacher preference selections until after admission decisions are finalized by the committee
  • We aim to confirm studio assignments with notification of admission
  • If admitted, your teacher assignment will be based on your preferences to the greatest extent possible. No teacher assignment can be made without a documented request for a specific teacher

 

Researching Teachers

If you are not familiar with our faculty, we strongly recommend researching the teachers in your major prior to the application deadline, as follows:

  • Review the teachers’ online bios in our directory and listen to recordings of each artist
  • Ask your current teacher(s) for recommendations
  • Consult with friends who may have studied with them
  • Optional: Set up a meeting or lesson with the teacher(s). Although not all faculty are available to meet with applicants due to their teaching and performing commitments, you may use this form to request contact information for up to four teachers. Scheduling the meeting and payment of any lesson or meeting fee is your responsibility.

Scholarship & Financial Aid Forms

This program provides a scholarship for the full cost of tuition plus a small stipend. If you are a US citizen or permanent resident, you may apply for federal student loans to assist with additional required fees and living expenses by completing the FAFSA.

Visit the Office of Financial Aid for more information. 

Prescreening

Prescreening Type

Format

You are required to upload your files in a Video format. Acceptable file types include:

  • .3g2, .3gp, .avi, .m2v, .m4v, .mkv, .mov, .mpeg, .mpg, .mp4, .mxf, .webm, .wmv

PLEASE NOTE: Some .mov files use a codec which is not supported by the application. We recommend that .mov files be converted to another accepted format to avoid uploading difficulties.

We support media files as large as 5GB, but please be advised that larger files will take longer to upload from your Internet connection and may stall if you are on a wireless connection or one that cannot sustain a connection for the necessary period of time. 

Prescreening Requirements

Your major is required to submit prescreening recordings within the online application by the appropriate deadline.

Procedures

  • Upload and arrange your recordings so that the file that represents your best work is first.
  • Individual movements or excerpts should be uploaded as separate digital files.
  • Clearly label each of the uploaded files with the name of the composer and work/movement.
  • Complete your uploads well in advance of the appropriate deadline, as upload times vary depending on file size and internet signal strength.
  • Insufficient or incomplete audition repertoire may affect consideration for admission.
  • Where specific works are required, substitutions are not allowed.
  • Please note that audition requirements which state a complete piece or work are indicating all movements must be prepared.
  • Unless otherwise specified in the prescreening requirements listed below, all works written with accompaniment must be accompanied for your recording.

Quality

  • Please note that submitted prescreening recordings do not need to be filmed in a particular setting. Videos filmed in a practice room, a living room, a concert hall, a recording studio, or any other setting may be submitted. 
  • Recordings must be genuinely performed by you. Composition applicants: live recordings of your works may include others.
  • Recordings must not be edited, nor should any effects such as “reverb” be added.
  • Play back and check your entire recording for any distortion or excessive “buzz”.  
  • If accompaniment is required, ensure that it does not drown out your playing.
  • Review your recordings before uploading to ensure that they are of good quality and represent your best work to date.

You will be notified as to whether or not you have passed the prescreening round by the date on the application timeline. Please note that prescreening materials become the property of The Juilliard School and will not be returned. We encourage you to keep copies for your records.

Additional Instructions

Prescreening Repertoire

  • It is highly desirable to use piano accompaniment for your repertoire. However, please put safety first during this pandemic. If you are unable to record with an accompanist, you will not be penalized; your recording will be given the same consideration as all other applicants.
  • In addition to the video pre-screening listed below, if applicable, applicants must submit Proof of English Language Proficiency. 
  1. Two contrasting etudes or works for solo clarinet showing the applicant’s level of technical and musical ability
  2. One major solo of the applicant’s choice. Must be performed from memory.
  3. One movement of a complete concerto from the standard repertoire. Must be performed from memory.
  4. A work composed since 1970. This may be a concerto, a work with piano, or one for solo clarinet
  5. Three contrasting orchestral excerpts

Additional Requirements

English Language Proficiency

Requirement

The ability to speak, read, and understand English fluently is an important factor in admissions decisions. You are required to show proof of English language proficiency by the application deadline if your native language is not English, regardless of citizenship. The Juilliard School defines native language as the language first spoken as a child and the primary language spoken at home. 

 

Exemption

An exemption from the ELP requirement automatically excuses an applicant from the requirement to provide proof of English language proficiency. Exemptions are determined by your answers to questions on the application form. 

 

You are exempt from this requirement if ALL of the following are true:* 

  1. You have attended an English language high school/secondary school for four years AND
  2. You have attended a three- or four-year undergraduate degree at an English language institution AND
  3. You have completed or will complete a two-year master's degree at an English language institution 

*Note that this is a TOTAL of NINE or TEN years of instruction at English language institutions, including high school AND undergraduate degree studies AND master’s degree studies. 

An exemption to provide a test score as proof of English language proficiency is granted automatically if you meet the aforementioned criteria.

 

Waiver

A waiver excuses an applicant from the requirement to provide a test score as proof of English language proficiency. Waivers are granted by Juilliard upon request of the applicant, and following a review by the School’s Director of ESL of the materials submitted by the applicant in support of their request for the waiver.

A waiver of the ELP requirement may be granted at the school’s discretion if the following criteria are met:

  1. The applicant has attended schools where the language of instruction is English for a TOTAL of SEVEN to EIGHT years: 2 consecutive years of high school + 3-4 years of bachelor’s degree study + 2 years of master’s degree study AND
  2. The applicant submits two academic papers written in English for review by our Director of ESL. The papers must have been written in the applicant’s most recently completed academic term. Each paper must be a minimum of 1200 words in length AND
  3. The applicant submits an unofficial transcript for review.

To request consideration for a waiver, follow the instructions on the application form.

 

Helpful tool: To see if you may qualify for an exemption or a waiver of the requirement to submit a test score as proof of English language proficiency, our online form can help you. Although this form does not grant exemptions or waivers, it can help you plan ahead should the result indicate that you need to schedule an ELP test.

 

English Language Proficiency Assessment Criteria

We assess your English language abilities using the following criteria:

  • The results of a standardized English language proficiency test
  • An online interview with staff from our English language office
  • Your previous academic record

 

Note that your test score alone is not sufficient for admission; you must still meet our artistic and academic standards. 

 

Test Scores

You must submit one of the following test types to document your current level of English language proficiency. If your score falls below the minimum scores listed here, you should carefully consider whether to continue the application and audition process. We reserve the right to deny an audition based on scores that fall considerably below our minimum. 

Test TypeMinimum Score
Cambridge EnglishC1
TOEFL 102
IELTS Academic Test  7.5

The official test results must be sent directly from the testing company and received in the Office of Admissions by the appropriate deadline.

Formerly Enrolled Juilliard Students

Definition
You are considered a former Juilliard college student if you have not been in attendance during the previous academic year.  You must submit all required application materials, in addition to the requirements below. 

 

Essay
As a formerly enrolled Juilliard student, you are required to submit an additional essay explaining your motivation for resuming your studies or applying to another major at Juilliard. You may choose to address academic, artistic, or professional goals that you believe could be accomplished by returning.

 

Transcript Requirements

  • You are required to provide transcripts from all institutions attended after Juilliard
  • Transcripts are already on file from your time at Juilliard and do not need to be submitted

 

Proof of English Language Proficiency
As a formerly enrolled Juilliard student, you do not need to submit proof of English proficiency (TOEFL, IELTS, PTE, ITP Plus).

 

Decisions
We reserve the right to review your Juilliard enrollment record to assist with admissions decisions.

Currently Enrolled Juilliard Students

Online Application
You must apply if you meet one of the following criteria:

  • You are seeking to change majors
  • You are applying to a new program of study (changing your degree level)

 

Application Fee
As a currently enrolled student in the College Division, you are not required to submit an application fee as long as you submit your application by the appropriate deadline.

 

Essay
You are required to submit an additional essay explaining your motivation for continuing your studies at Juilliard. You may choose to address academic, artistic, or professional goals that you believe could be accomplished by remaining at Juilliard.

 

Recommendation(s)
Currently enrolled Juilliard students are also required to have recommendation(s) in support of their application. This can come from an internal faculty member or someone not affiliated with The Juilliard School.

 

Transcripts
As a current student, you do not need to provide your transcripts, as they are already on file.

 

Prescreening Requirement
Prescreening is required only if both of the following are true: 

  1. You are applying to a new major AND
  2. The major to which you are applying is prescreened 

 

Proof of English Language Proficiency
You do not need to submit proof of English proficiency (TOEFL, IELTS, PTE, ITP Plus).

 

Decisions
We reserve the right to review your Juilliard enrollment record to assist with admissions decisions.

Applicants with Disabilities

In compliance with the Americans with Disability Act of 1990 (ADA), The Juilliard School is committed to creating an inclusive and accessible application and audition process. Through our Office of Academic Support and Disability Services (OASDS), Juilliard can provide reasonable disability accommodation to applicants and auditioners with disabilities. 

Juilliard will not make pre-admissions inquiries about whether an applicant has a disability, which has no bearing on acceptance. Applicants who meet the technical requirements of the program or course are encouraged to apply regardless of disability. However, applicants to the College Division with documented disabilities who require reasonable accommodations to participate in the application/audition process must follow these steps:

  1. Submit the Disability Request Form. This form is available to applicants who need accommodations in order to audition.
  2. Submit all supporting documentation.  
  3. Schedule and complete an intake meeting with an OASDS representative. Intake appointments may be conducted via Zoom, phone, or in person.  

The Disability Accommodation Request Process is private and confidential. All records are securely stored in the Juilliard Accommodate Portal and are not included with any "permanent" record. Only qualified OASDS staff can access this information, ensuring your privacy is respected. Applicants who are offered admission and who choose to enroll must schedule and complete an intake meeting with an OASDS representative to discuss accommodations needed as a student.

For more information on the Disability Accommodation Request process, please visit the OASDS webpage. If you experience an online or on-campus disability barrier, please complete this form so that we may address the issue.

Auditioning for Juilliard

Audition Repertoire Guidelines and Resources

A dedicated group of studio faculty chairs and other leaders in The Music Division joined together to create Music by Black Composers: An Introductory Resource, a document that seeks to expand knowledge and build a more inclusive approach to repertoire. Repertoire and pedagogical choices can often grow out of habit and a narrowness of knowledge, shaped by a history of exclusion and diminished voices. In the Music Division, we are taking important steps to broaden our knowledge by creating a faculty-researched list of works by Black composers to embrace and work toward a more representative world of classical music. When you have an elective choice, we encourage you to include a work in your audition repertoire by a composer from historically underrepresented gender, racial, ethnic, and cultural heritages.

 

We are also happy to recommend the following as additional resources that expand our knowledge of a wider breadth of repertoire:

 

As part of the online application, you are required to submit your proposed audition repertoire for review and approval. Should you need to update your repertoire after you submit your online application, you can do so by submitting a form on your application status page.

  • Insufficient or incomplete audition repertoire may affect consideration for admission
  • Where specific works are required, substitutions are not allowed
  • Audition requirements which state a complete piece or work are indicating all movements must be prepared

You should first consult with your private teacher to determine the suitability of your proposed repertoire. If there is any concern regarding the appropriateness of a particular piece, submit your questions through this form

Audition Scheduling

After successfully passing the prescreening portion of the audition process, you will receive an invitation to attend an in-person audition. 

Auditions are scheduled based on a combination of the following:

  • Your ordered teacher preferences (if applicable)
  • Your audition day request (in cases of multiple audition days)

Important things to know about your audition:

  • You will receive an email confirming your audition date and time at least one month before your audition
  • Auditions take place only at The Juilliard School in New York City. Audition day details, including practice room availability, will be sent prior to your audition
  • Video auditions are not accepted 

Audition Repertoire

Fall 2025 Auditions

Music auditions at The Juilliard School are held in person on our New York City campus; limited funds are available for need-based travel grants. All applicants invited to audition are expected to attend on their scheduled date and time, and are expected to have the entire audition repertoire prepared. While faculty may not hear entire works, they may ask you to perform any part of a required work.

 

Audition Repertoire

  1. A varied recital program including at least one work composed after 1970. At least one of the works must be performed by memory.
  2. A complete concerto to be performed by memory
  3. Three contrasting orchestral excerpts
  4. A work by a composer from historically underrepresented gender, racial, ethnic, or cultural heritages such as but not limited to the following:
  • Solo Clarinet
    • Solhi al- Wadi: Piece "-5" for Clarinet Solo 
    • Andile Khumalo: Tracing Hollow Traces 
    • Jessie Cox: OR/UN for B-flat Clarinet
    • Adolphus Hailstork: Three Smiles for Tracey 
    • Ed Bland: For Clarinet  
    • Sakari Dixon Vanderveer: Two Thoughts and a Fixation 
    • Paquito d’Rivera: “Lecuonerías” from The Cape Cod Files
    • Chen Yi: Monologue (Impressions on the True Story of Ah Q) 
    • Anna Clyne: Snake and Ladder 
    • Isang Yun: Piri  
    • Germaine Tailleferre: Sonata for solo clarinet
    • Coleridge-Taylor Perkinson: Finale for solo clarinet
  • Clarinet and piano 
    • Akira Miyoshi: Perspective en Spirale for clarinet and piano
    • Alice Mary Smith: Sonata for Clarinet and Piano
    • Zenobia Powell Perry: Sonatine for Clarinet and
      Piano
    • Dorothy Rudd Moore: Night Fantasy for clarinet and piano 
    • Alvin Singleton: 50 Times Around the Sun 
    • David Baker: Clarinet Sonata
    • James Lee III: Ad Anah 
    • Miguel del Águila: Pacific Serenade for clarinet and piano
    • Valerie Coleman: Sonatina 
    • Reena Esmail: Desire
    • Zenobia Powell Perry: Sonata
    • Jeff Scott: Toccata 
    • Toru Takemitsu: Fantasma/Cosmos
    • Takashi Yoshimatsu: Four Pieces in Bird Shape

Callbacks

Doctor of Musical Arts Callback Interview and Exam

  • You may be invited to a required interview with members of the Doctoral Governance Committee, based on the recommendation of the audition panel.
  • DMA interview callbacks will take place on the day following the first round of auditions.
  • The DMA application process has several steps, including the audition and possible testing and interviews. You must participate in all portions of the audition process in order to be considered for admission.
  • DMA applicants must also take a written exam in music theory and music history; the exam includes exercises in harmonization and counterpoint, as well as a music history component. 
  • If you are not invited to the interview, you may reasonably conclude that you are no longer under consideration for admission.

Accompanist Information

  • Works with piano accompaniment must be accompanied for the in-person audition
  • A list of accompanists will be provided approximately one week before auditions. You must contact an accompanist from the list as soon as you receive the information but no later than one week prior to your audition and provide them with a piano score of the repertoire for the audition
  • We encourage you to use an accompanist from our list for your audition
  • Accompanists will be provided free of charge for the audition; please note that accompanists charge fees for rehearsals
  • If you wish to bring your own accompanist, you may do so. However, Juilliard will not pay them, nor can your Juilliard audition be rescheduled around your accompanist's availability
  • If you plan to play with a Juilliard-provided accompanist, please carefully consider general familiarity of your repertoire. Juilliard cannot guarantee accompanists will know unusual or non-standard repertoire. Please be particularly mindful to select contemporary works that have become standard repertoire or have piano parts which can be sight-read easily. If the Juilliard accompanists hired for your audition day are unable to learn or sight read a non-standard work, you may need to play that work unaccompanied

Decisions & Enrolling

Decisions

There are three possible outcomes to the audition process:

Admit

  1. The faculty recommends you to the Admissions Committee based on your potential and artistry as demonstrated in the audition.
  2. The Admissions Committee evaluates your academic record and supplemental materials in order to determine your capacity to succeed at Juilliard.
  3. The Admissions Committee makes the final determination of whom to admit based on their own evaluation, faculty recommendations, and the number of available openings in your major.
  4. The Office of Admissions releases your decision letter.

Waitlist

  1. The faculty recommends you to the Admissions Committee based on your potential and artistry as demonstrated in the audition.
  2. The Admissions Committee evaluates your academic record and supplemental materials in order to determine your capacity to succeed at Juilliard.
  3. You are placed on the waitlist because, although you are found admissible to the school, we have a limited number of openings.
  4. Should a place become available, the Admissions Committee evaluates the waitlist, making offers of admission as necessary.  

Deny
During the application process, there are three points at which you can be denied admission:

  1. As a result of prescreening
  2. At various points in the application and audition process
  3. Following review by the Admissions Committee 

A denial at any of these stages results in notification that you are no longer under consideration for admission.

These decisions will be posted to your application status page as noted on the timeline.