

BA Music Production
About this course
Music production is the craft and discipline of capturing, shaping, and presenting recorded sound. It sits at the intersection of musical creativity and technical expertise, encompassing everything from microphone placement and signal flow to the arrangement, mixing, and mastering processes that turn a raw recording into a finished release. Producers do not simply press record; they make creative and technical decisions that fundamentally shape what a piece of music sounds like and how it communicates. Studying music production at the University of Northampton on a part-time basis, you will develop both the ear and the technical knowledge that professional production requires. You will learn to work within digital audio workstations and recording studios, gaining hands-on experience with the equipment and software used in commercial environments. The curriculum covers recording techniques, sound design, mixing principles, and the physics of sound alongside the musical and compositional thinking that distinguishes a producer from an engineer. Studying part-time allows you to build your skills progressively while maintaining other commitments, whether that is working as a musician, running a home studio, or developing a parallel career in audio. This structure suits students who want to move into production from an existing musical background or who are already working in adjacent areas of the music industry. Music production graduates work across a wide range of roles within the music and audio industries. Studio production, freelance mixing and mastering, and live sound engineering are the most direct pathways. Sync licensing, where music is created or adapted for use in television, film, advertising, and games, is a growing area that values production skills. Some graduates move into music technology, working for software companies developing the tools producers use. Broadcasting, podcasting, and post-production for video and film also draw graduates with strong audio skills. Teaching music production in schools or further education is another route, and some graduates combine production work with performing careers or go on to postgraduate study in music technology or sonic arts.
Syllabus & Modules
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