
Course Lecture Titles
- The Voice in the Wilderness
- The Baroque Italian Concerto
- Baroque Masters
- Bachs Brandenburg Concerti
- Mozart, Part 1
- Mozart, Part 2
- Classical Masters
- Beethoven
- The Romantic Concerto
- Hummel and Chopin
- Mendelssohn and Schumann
- Romantic Masters
- Tchaikovsky
- Brahms and the Symphonic Concerto
- Dvorak
- Rachmaninoff
- The Russian Concerto, Part 1
- The Russian Concerto, Part 2
- The Concerto in France
- Bartok
- Schönberg, Berg and the 12-Tone Method
- Twentieth-Century Masters
- Elliott Carter
- Servants to the Cause and Guilty Pleasures
Author

Robert M. Greenberg is an American composer, pianist and musicologist. He has composed more than 50 works for a variety of instruments and voices, and has recorded a number of lecture series on music history and music appreciation for The Teaching Company. Greenberg earned a B.A. in music, magna cum laude, from Princeton University and received a Ph.D. in music composition from the University of California, Berkeley. He has served on the faculties of UC Berkeley, Californiz State University, East Bay, and the San Franciso Conservatory of Music, where he was chairman of the Department of Music History and Literature as well as Director of the Adult Extension Division. Dr. Greenberg is currently Music Historian-in-residence with San Francisco Performances.