

BA Music Production
About this course
Music production is the craft of taking musical ideas from conception to finished recorded work, encompassing the roles of producer, engineer, arranger and sometimes writer in a process that is both technical and deeply artistic. The music producer shapes the sound, the feel and the commercial viability of recordings, working at the intersection of creative vision, technical mastery of recording equipment and software, and an understanding of how music reaches its audience. The field has been transformed by digital technology, making professional-quality recording more accessible than ever but also raising the technical and creative bar for those who want to work at the highest level. At Teesside University this programme is offered part-time, making it accessible to students who are already working in music or related creative fields and want to develop their skills and knowledge without interrupting their professional lives. The part-time structure suits the reality of the music production field, where many practitioners learn through doing and benefit from a programme that allows them to apply their studies directly to real projects. Teesside's description of the programme highlights its collaborative dimension: you will work with course mates on small-scale creative projects in response to subject-specific briefs, developing team-working, communication, project management and negotiation skills alongside technical production expertise. These professional capacities are as important as technical skill in an industry built on collaboration. You will develop skills in recording, mixing, mastering, sound design, music technology and the use of digital audio workstations alongside critical knowledge of the music industry and the contexts in which recorded music is made and consumed. Graduates pursue careers as music producers, recording engineers, sound designers, music technology tutors, studio managers, post-production engineers and audio technicians across music, broadcast, games and film. Many work freelance, building a client base alongside other income streams, while others join studios, production companies or music education organisations. The part-time model means many graduates are already embedded in the industry as they study.
Syllabus & Modules
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