Music 2018/19 Undergraduate Guide

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Undergraduate study 2018/19

Music


Our trophy cabinet

What’s inside

The awards we’ve won don’t just make us feel proud. They give you an idea of what the University is like.

Study with us

4–5 Our courses

Meet us

Apply to us

Chloë Fenech’s student journey so far

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Open Days

Hear from Dr Bryn Harrison on composing experimental music

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University of the Year The Times Higher Education named us as their University of the Year in November 2013. They liked our “bold, imaginative and innovative initiatives.”

Queen’s Award We’ve always supported the international student community. So we were very pleased to win the Queen’s Award for Enterprise: International Trade in 2013.

Queen’s Anniversary Prize The Queen’s Anniversary Prize is a big thing in UK Higher Education. We were delighted to earn one for our role in expanding global boundaries of new music.

in association with

A Four Star University QS Stars have given us four stars. That means we are “highly international, demonstrating excellence in both teaching and research with an excellent environment for students and staff.”

Educate North Award The Educate North Awards celebrate the role of Higher Education in the North of England. We won New University of the Year at the awards in 2015.

Athena Swan We’re serious about gender equality. We want an equal number of men and women on our science and engineering courses, for instance. Our commitment was recognised in 2015 with the Athena SWAN Bronze Award.

Welcome to Music Becoming a student at Huddersfield places you at the heart of one of the country’s most dynamic, creative and diverse university music communities. Not only will you benefit from outstanding facilities for your performance, composition and academic study, but you will also be part of a vibrant and supportive environment that offers an inspiring place to learn.

conducting, early music, world musics, analysis, improvisation, film music, computer composition, music education, and personalised options in later years of study. This flexibility, along with the chance of year-long and shorter placement opportunities, will help you discover new talents and prepare you for your future career and musical life.

Our courses include a wealth of specialist options: solo performance, brass band arrangement, popular music, orchestral

Stewart Worthy Subject Leader

Find out more about our awards at hud.ac.uk/about/our-awards

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What skills does a twenty-first century musician need to be successful? Study Music at Huddersfield and you’ll have plenty of opportunity to prepare yourself for today’s job market and develop your skills and creativity to their full potential.

Study with us The course has opened my mind to new ideas and allowed me to experiment and find strengths in areas I never knew I had. Chloë Fenech, Music BMus(Hons)

Check this out! 100% The UK’s only University where all our permanent teaching staff are Fellows of the Higher Education Academy.*

All our courses include an optional short-term or year-long work placement.

You’ll be taught by leading researchers and musicians covering everything from classical to pop to experimental and beyond. Whether you’re interested in creative, historical, analytical or technical approaches – in performance, composition or musicology – we have a course for you. So if you want to make your own music, study a great work, or gain a thorough understanding of musical history, you can do it all here. You’ll be based in the Creative Arts Building, with its excellent purpose-built facilities. Take your pick from 26 practice rooms, two large piano practice rooms, an early music studio, four pop performance rooms and two superb concert venues. We also have a fine collection of instruments including percussion, organs and historical keyboards, and a range of stateof-the-art studios. So there’s lots of space for you to rehearse, experiment and perform. The Music Department is an exciting, vibrant and supportive place to be. You could play in the University’s regular concert series, take part in

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Placements

Real-World The University is host to the worldrenowned Huddersfield Contemporary Music Festival.

classical and popular ensembles – Brass Band, Symphony Orchestra, Chamber Choir and Big Band, to name just a few – and even attend the world famous Huddersfield Contemporary Music Festival or the label-defying Electric Spring festival. While you’re here, we’ll encourage you to take a short-term or year-long placement. Previous students have enjoyed placements with the Orchestra of the Age of Enlightenment, Kirklees Music School, West Yorkshire Playhouse, Phoenix Radio and Buxton Opera House. If you fancy going further afield, thanks to our ERASMUS+ exchange scheme you could spend a year studying in Besancon, France. You can also benefit from our close relationships with the likes of Opera North. All of these opportunities to experience and explore music in new ways will help you to develop your skills, broaden your horizons and make lifelong contacts. *Permanent staff, after probation: some recently appointed colleagues will only obtain recognition in the months after their arrival in Huddersfield, once they have started teaching.

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Graduates employed from this course

Music

Graduates employed from this subject area

BMus(Hons)

94%* Key information: UCAS code: W300 Duration: 3 years full-time, 4 years inc. placement year Entry requirements: BBB at A Level including a minimum grade B in Music or Music Technology DDM at BTEC 120 UCAS points from a combination of Level 3 qualifications including a minimum grade B at A Level or Distinction in BTEC Music or Music Technology Additional criteria: Practical and theory music grades are accepted in the total points (see UCAS tariff). Applicants intending to study solo instrumental or vocal performance should have reached at least Grade 8 standard of the Associated Board of the Royal Schools of Music (ABRSM), Rockschool or equivalent at entry and attend an audition. For international students please visit hud.ac.uk/courses

Music is all about collaboration and experimentation, so you’ll have opportunities to get involved in large and small ensembles, choirs and bands, composing for your fellow students, studying and playing with others. We’ll also encourage you to carry out your own creative projects and research, and you’ll have the opportunity to develop a wide range of transferable skills. You will be based in the purpose-built Creative Arts Building, with its many practice rooms, rehearsal spaces and recording studios. Our two concert halls provide you with contrasting acoustics and environments in which to perform and hear others, and we have a large instrument collection including historical keyboards, organs, early music resources, percussion and electronic instruments. You’ll be taught by leading composers, performers and researchers, and our team of part-time instrumental and vocal teachers includes internationally recognised professional performers from across the region.

During your studies you’ll be able to specialise in composition, performance or musicology, or mix it up and explore the connections between all three. We want to hear your work too, in recitals, concerts, masterclasses and workshops. As a composer, you’ll also have the chance to hear your work performed by professionals and you may also have the opportunity to spend a day playing in the Orchestra of Opera North. In musicology, you’ll be able to study the development of music across history and in different historical and cultural contexts. You could choose to specialise in subjects like baroque music, experimental music, opera and musical theatre, or film music, guided by staff who are experts and enthusiasts in their field. In your third year, you could choose to take a year-long placement with an employer. Previous students have taken placements with the Orchestra of the Age of Enlightenment, Kirklees Music School, West Yorkshire Playhouse, Phoenix Radio, Stagecoach Theatre Arts, Buxton Opera House and Huddersfield Contemporary Music Festival.

“This was the perfect course to help me prepare for a job as a professional musician. My module choices of the final year alone now transfer directly into my daily work and the tuition I received was second to none. The flexibility and selection of modules Huddersfield offers gives you the chance to get experience in any area of music you can imagine.”

For detailed course and employability information, including full entry requirements, please visit hud.ac.uk/courses

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BMus(Hons)

90%* Key information: UCAS code: W3W3 Duration: 3 years full-time, 4 years inc. placement year Entry requirements: BBB at A Level including a minimum grade B in Music or Music Technology DDM at BTEC 120 UCAS points from a combination of Level 3 qualifications including a minimum grade B at A Level or Distinction in BTEC Music or Music Technology Additional criteria: Practical and theory music grades are accepted in the total points (see UCAS tariff). Admission to this course is strictly by audition at which a high standard of performance ability must be demonstrated. Applicants intending to study instrumental or vocal performance must have reached at least Grade 8 standard of the Associated Board of the Royal Schools of Music (ABRSM), Rockschool or equivalent at entry. For international students please visit hud.ac.uk/courses

Ben Roberts graduated Music BMus(Hons) in 2013 and is now a Musician in the Band of the Household Cavalry *Percentage of graduates from this course who go on to work and/or further study within six months of graduating (Destinations of Leavers Survey 2014/15).

Music Performance

If you are excited about our BMus Music course but wish to focus especially on Performance – solo performance, band or ensemble playing, other modes of performance, and the historical and cultural aspects of performance – then this course is for you. It is designed for expert performers with a passion for performing across a variety of styles and contexts. Students are already at Grade 8 standard or equivalent and have a wide range of performance experiences from which to develop their skills. You’ll be taught by expert academic staff, many of whom are also professional performers with active international careers as soloists and ensemble members. You’ll have up to 20 hours of individual tuition provided by our team of instrumental and vocal tutors, who are also experienced professional musicians, performing regularly with orchestras such as the BBC Philharmonic, Royal Liverpool Philharmonic and the Orchestra of Opera North. Visiting masterclasses and workshops are a regular feature of the course, given by distinguished performers

such as Emma Kirkby (voice), David Childs (euphonium), Martin Roscoe (piano) and Wissam Boustany (flute). We also regularly host concerts and workshops with leading chamber groups, including Ensemble 360. Staff and students give frequent concerts, forming new ensembles and exploring unfamiliar repertoire, whether that be music from over 400 years ago or composed in the last 4 weeks. We have strong links with local, national and international music organisations, so you could have the opportunity to work alongside bands, ensembles and orchestras such as the Orchestra of Opera North and Huddersfield Choral Society. You’ll also have opportunities to study composition and musicology. In your musicology modules you’ll be able to explore how music and performance have developed through history. You could choose to specialise in subjects like baroque music, experimental music or film music, world musics, and opera and musical theatre, helping you to develop your critical abilities and to understand how performance approaches and styles are influenced by changing historical and cultural contexts.

Alex Crick, Music BMus(Hons), placement at Orchestra of the Age of Enlightenment *Percentage of graduates from this subject area who go on to work and/or further study within six months of graduating (Destinations of Leavers Survey 2014/15).

“My placement taught me things about working in the music industry that I would never have learnt in a university lecture. Helping a high profile orchestra put on concerts around the UK meant I got to travel around London (and other places) seeing lots of different kinds of performances and meeting new and interesting people.”

For detailed course and employability information, including full entry requirements, please visit hud.ac.uk/courses

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Graduates employed from this subject area

Popular Music BMus(Hons)

90%* Key information: UCAS code: W3W8 Duration: 3 years full-time, 4 years inc. placement year Entry requirements: BBB at A Level including a minimum grade B in Music or Music Technology DDM at BTEC 120 UCAS points from a combination of Level 3 qualifications including a minimum grade B at A Level or Distinction in BTEC Music or Music Technology Additional criteria: Practical and theory music grades are accepted in the total points (see UCAS tariff). Applicants intending to study solo instrumental or vocal performance should have reached at least Grade 8 standard of the Associated Board of the Royal Schools of Music (ABRSM), Rockschool or equivalent at entry and attend an audition For international students please visit hud.ac.uk/courses

Popular music is a highly competitive industry, but it can be extremely rewarding too, so we’ll do all we can to help you on your way to a career. We’ll give you the opportunity to develop industry-standard practices and techniques that will help you unleash your creativity. You could also find yourself performing as a soloist or part of a group to gain experience and demonstrate your talents. During your studies we’ll look at a wide range of topics in the popular music field, from production and performance through to songwriting and composition. We’ll also look at popular music in its historical, global and cultural contexts. And you’ll be able to try ideas out in our state-ofthe-art studios, which are equipped with the latest hardware and software. You’ll be studying in a hive of creativity, working alongside aspiring classical and pop musicians, recording engineers, audio electronic experts and interface designers.

We’ll also give you the chance to learn from some leading musicians and practitioners – recent workshops have been led by the likes of electronic musician and DJ Richie Hawtin, drummers Mike Heaton, Bill Bruford and Craig Blundell, bassist Jah Wobble, guitarist Alex Hutchins and jazz saxophonists Snake Davies and Andy Scott. Plus you could take part in advice sessions by video conference with leading international figures such as David Sonnenschein, LA-based sound designer and author. Huddersfield really is a great place to study music, not least because of our label-defying festival of electronic music – Electric Spring – and the Huddersfield Contemporary Music Festival. HCMF takes place every November, and is the largest event of its kind in the UK. The University is the main partner of the festival, so you’ll be able to get up-close and experience contemporary music in action. If you’d like to get out into the real world and put your skills into action, we’ll give you the chance to take an optional placement in your third year.

Eleanor Sandbrook graduated Music BMus(Hons) in 2008 and is now a self-employed musician and music tutor

*Percentage of graduates from this subject area who go on to work and/or further study within six months of graduating (Destinations of Leavers Survey 2014/15).

“This is a really exciting course which allows you to develop all aspects of musicianship turning you into a well-rounded and knowledgeable musician with a wealth of experience on completion. It provides ample opportunities for composers, arrangers, music-historians and performers to discover different ways to use your skills. The lectures were always of the highest quality, not only informing but inspiring, and of course, challenging us to achieve and learn. If I had my chance again I would still pick it and go back in a flash.”

For detailed course and employability information, including full entry requirements, please visit hud.ac.uk/courses

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Facilities

At Huddersfield, you’ll have access to a great range of equipment and facilities, including 26 practice rooms, two large piano practice rooms, and dedicated early music and percussion studios. You’ll also find four pop performance rooms and two concert venues – St Paul’s Hall and the Phipps Concert Hall. Throughout your course, you’ll have opportunities to collaborate with composers, performers and musicologists, work with visiting guest musicians and perform in the University’s regular concert series.


My student journey so far

Chloë Fenech Music BMus(Hons)

Chloë decided to follow her heart and study music for a career. “Having sung from a young age, I knew I would flourish if I studied something I really enjoyed,” she explains. “I love the number of opportunities to perform at Huddersfield”, says Chloë. “My most memorable moment was my solo performance in Phipps Hall in front of my peers and our families.” “Here you make your own opportunities”, says Chloë. “As well as numerous open mic nights in town, the University has many directed ensembles you can be part of and if none of these take your fancy you can do your own thing. I joined an a capella choir where I got to meet and work with a group of new people.”

The course has opened my mind to new ideas and allowed me to experiment and find strengths in areas I never knew I had.

“The lecturers are extremely approachable and open to anything you want to try”, adds Chloë. “They seem to know everything there is to know about music.” Chloë spent a one-year work placement at a school, teaching pupils to sing. “It was stressful at times but amazing and very rewarding.” Having made a real impression and some great contacts, Chloë still goes back to sing at their concerts. “I really appreciate my time here”, says Chloë. “The course has opened my mind to new ideas and allowed me to experiment and find strengths in areas I never knew I had. From always being a very classical singer, I now love performing blues.” We asked Chloë what advice she would give future students and she replied, “Stay passionate about what you do – things are really moving forward at Huddersfield and you can move forward with it.”

To hear Chloë talk about her student journey visit hud.ac/profiles

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Meet our staff

Bryn Harrison Reader in Composition

“I grew up in Bolton, and from the age of eleven up to the age of sixteen I was only interested in becoming a rock guitarist, mainly from listening to the music of Led Zeppelin!” explains Bryn Harrison, Reader in Composition. “My interest in composing came later.” Bryn’s expertise is in areas including repetition in music and time perception, and he developed an interest in experimental music whilst studying at Leeds College of Music. “I became particularly interested in the music of John Cage and Morton Feldman, and still feel very close to their way of thinking.”

We’ve got the best composition staff and one of the most challenging and interesting composition programmes on the planet.

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He went on to study for a Master’s degree at De Montfort University. “I studied with Gavin Bryars who has developed an international reputation as a composer. He was very encouraging and supportive of me following my own path. Through my twenties and early thirties I built up a body of compositions that have been performed internationally, broadcast on Radio 3 and, in some cases, commercially recorded.” “My appointment to the University of Huddersfield came mainly through my reputation as a practitioner,” he explains. “I enjoy teaching, particularly expanding the ways in which a first-year student might think about music. In my opinion we’ve got the best composition staff and one of the most challenging and interesting composition programmes on the planet.”

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We hope you’ve found all the information you need to inspire you to become a student here at Huddersfield. Now all you need to do is apply.

Apply to us UCAS If this is your first (undergraduate) degree and you want to study a full-time course, then you’ll apply via UCAS at ucas.com If you’re at a college or school right now, it’s probably already registered with UCAS. The best thing to do is ask your teacher or careers adviser to help with your application. Once you’ve applied we’ll keep in touch with you throughout the application process, so you’re up to speed with what’s going on. When to apply If you want to start your course in September 2018, you can apply to UCAS any time from 1 September 2017 onwards. Make sure UCAS receives your application by 15 January 2018.

Our course codes You have to enter the code for the course you want to study on your application form. You can find our course codes on each of the course pages in this brochure, or on the UCAS website. By the way, the institution code for Huddersfield is HUDDS H60. Auditions If you want to study solo performance on any of our music courses you will be asked to attend an audition. You will be asked to perform two contrasting pieces and talk about your musical interest and experiences.

Open Days Everything starts now

Wednesday 21 June Thursday 22 June Saturday 16 September Saturday 21 October Wednesday 8 November Friday 1 December

Contact us Got a question? Get in touch with us. Music Tel. +44 (0)1484 472007 Email. musicadmissions@hud.ac.uk @huddsunimusic HuddsUniMusic

Important Information This brochure is provided for information only and will not form part of your student contract. For full, up to date details on our courses, including when and how that information may change, visit our website at www.hud.ac.uk/courses

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University of Huddersfield Queensgate Huddersfield West Yorkshire HD1 3DH UK Tel. +44 (0)1484 422288 Email. askhud@hud.ac.uk www.hud.ac.uk

Huddersfield is first in England for professionally qualified teaching staff * *HEFCE, 9 Dec 2016

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in association with

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