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25% of students drop out or transfer from this specific course. Consider asking why on an open day.
BA Music Production
About this course
Music production is the craft of taking musical ideas and realising them in recorded form, a process that spans composition, arrangement, sound design, recording, mixing, and mastering. It is a technical and creative discipline that sits at the centre of the modern music industry, where the producer's role has expanded far beyond the recording studio to encompass songwriting, performance, and the creation of self-produced work across genres. The rise of digital audio workstations has lowered barriers to entry, but deep production skills, aesthetic judgment, and technical understanding remain what distinguish excellent from merely competent recorded music. This three-year programme at the University of Northampton is designed to prepare you for a growing and ever-evolving industry, covering a broad range of potential paths including working in the video game industry, live music production, education, and as a self-producing artist. You will develop skills across the digital domain, the studio environment, and academic study, giving you the versatility that a field of considerable and ongoing change demands. The programme develops both the technical proficiency to operate at a professional standard and the conceptual and critical understanding to make well-informed creative decisions. Graduates from music production programmes go on to work as music producers, recording engineers, sound designers, composers for screen and games, music supervisors, educators, and content creators. The combination of technical knowledge and creative ability the degree develops is applicable across a wide range of audio and media contexts. Many graduates build independent or collaborative production careers, while others work within recording studios, post-production companies, game audio departments, or music publishers. Further study at postgraduate level in music production, sonic arts, or audio technology is an option for those who wish to specialise or develop a research practice.
Syllabus & Modules
Typical curriculumStudent Satisfaction
National Student Survey - 15 respondents (80% response rate)
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