

BA Music
About this course
Music at Oxford is one of the most intellectually demanding and wide-ranging undergraduate degrees in the arts. It is built on the conviction that engaging with music seriously means developing multiple interconnected capacities: the ability to listen with analytical precision, to understand the historical and theoretical traditions that have shaped Western and other musical cultures, to work creatively through composition, and to engage with the scholarly and critical debates that surround all of these activities. The degree at Oxford does not separate performance from intellectual inquiry but treats them as complementary modes of engaging with the same deep questions about what music is and how it works. Studying music at the University of Oxford, you will explore music through harmony, counterpoint, and analysis; through music history from the medieval period to the present day; through music theory and the broader intellectual traditions of musicology; and through composition and creative practice. The tutorials and small-group teaching that characterise an Oxford education give you the opportunity to develop your ideas in sustained and critical conversation with expert teachers. Performance is valued and supported, and Oxford's rich musical life, including its orchestras, choirs, ensembles, and regular concerts, provides an exceptional environment in which to develop as a practising musician alongside your academic work. The three-year structure demands breadth as well as depth, and you will engage with music as both a historical phenomenon and a living practice. Oxford music graduates go on to careers across a remarkable range of fields. Professional musical careers in performance, conducting, and composition are pursued by those who develop their practical skills alongside their academic study. Arts administration, arts journalism, music publishing, and roles in broadcasting and music media draw others. The academic skills developed in an Oxford music degree, including close analytical reading, clear writing, and the ability to construct and evaluate complex arguments, transfer widely into law, finance, consulting, and the public sector. Many graduates continue to postgraduate study in musicology, composition, or performance, and Oxford's music degree provides an excellent foundation for doctoral research.
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