

BMus Music
About this course
Music as a university discipline asks you to engage with sound, composition, performance, and the cultural, historical, and theoretical contexts in which music is made and received. It is a subject that spans an enormous range: from the analysis of Baroque counterpoint and the notation of complex contemporary scores to the study of folk traditions, global music, and the music industries that shape what people listen to today. University music is not simply about developing performance skills, though performance matters; it is also about understanding what music is, how it works, and why it matters to human beings across every culture. At the University of Huddersfield, a conservatoire-inflected institution with a strong reputation in music, this three-year full-time programme includes a sandwich placement year and work placements, ensuring professional experience is woven into the degree. You will have the opportunity to work in a music-related context before you graduate, whether in the music industry, a venue, an educational setting, a recording studio, or a community music organisation. Huddersfield's creative and industrious character as a city, and the university's strong connections with the broader music world, provide a stimulating environment for this kind of applied music education. You will develop both your musical knowledge and your technical and professional skills, engaging with music history, theory, composition, and performance alongside the practical realities of working in music today. The typical entry tariff of 120 points reflects the programme's expectations. Music graduates pursue careers across a remarkably wide range of fields. Many go on to work as performers, composers, music educators, music therapists, music producers, music journalists, and managers and promoters. Others find that the skills music develops, discipline, creativity, teamwork, and the ability to communicate complex ideas, transfer into careers in broadcasting, arts administration, therapy, and the wider cultural sector. Postgraduate study in composition, performance, musicology, music therapy, or music education is a common next step for those who want to develop specialist professional expertise.
Syllabus & Modules
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