Master in Sound (Composition and Sonic Art)
Bath, United Kingdom
DURATION
1 up to 2 Years
LANGUAGES
English
PACE
Full time, Part time
APPLICATION DEADLINE
Request application deadline
EARLIEST START DATE
Request earliest startdate
TUITION FEES
GBP 17,065 / per year *
STUDY FORMAT
On-Campus
* international full time | UK part time: £4,413 | UK full time: £8,825
Gallery
Introduction
Explore sound and music at an advanced level, and focus on the areas that interest you most. This course develops your core skills, such as working with instruments and sonic objects, notational strategies, soundscape recording, sound design, spatial audio, sound design, and interactive audio (e.g. for live performance, gaming, VR, immersive environments, and installations).
We put your work and practice at the centre of everything we do, offering you a space to experiment, make new music, and explore your potential. Whether your work is based in notation or in digital audio, we’ll help you develop and expand your skills as a composer or sonic artist and deepen your artistic, professional and academic knowledge.
You'll join a vibrant community of creative artists working in music, sound design, production, and the performing arts. Creative practice thrives at Bath Spa in many forms, allowing you to work on new creative collaborations with other artists including musicians, choreographers, filmmakers, and theatre practitioners.
This MA in Composition and Sonic Art caters for those working in a wide variety of styles and approaches, and enables you to develop an individually-tailored portfolio of skills, experience, and artistic practice. By taking this varied approach, you'll be more suited for employment in today's landscape, where many combine traditional roles (such as musician, performer or composer) with technical roles in other media.
Admissions
Curriculum
This course includes or offers the following modules. Please check the programme document for more information on which modules are core, required or optional.
- Sound Skills
- Practice and Research
- Creative Portfolio
- Presenting Practice
- Advanced Audio Workflows
- Production Project
- Major Project
Program Outcome
What you'll learn
Overview
This composition and sonic art course provides a space to experiment with new ideas. We’ll support you to develop your creative practice through practical consideration of both your professional and academic skills.
Weekly discussion seminars and workshops allow your personal development to be contextualised amid the work of others. You'll develop and expand your creative, technical and academic skills, commenting critically on your own and others’ work. We set this against a wider consideration of current music and sonic art, exploring developments in contemporary thought by looking at new work. We also bring in a broad selection of visiting composers and sound artists to talk about their practice and widen your perspective of ways to make work.
You'll have focused time to discuss and develop your own niche interests and technical concerns, as well as explore new directions. The course also provides the breadth necessary, where required, to prepare you for PhD research and beyond.
Course structure
Trimester one
Focus on making new work, develop your skills and explore the contexts in which you work. In the first trimester, you begin two year-long modules, which focus on core technical skills and the mutually beneficial links between research and practice. These support the core module in which you produce a portfolio of creative work.
The Sound Skills module is built on the idea that you’ll already have a set of core technical skills that underpin your practice, and offers you opportunities to extend your capabilities. You can choose a set of projects from a large number of options – including composition, sound art, sound design, sound production and (optional) elements of multimedia.
The Research and Practice module helps you interrogate your own practice and think about how it relates to current artistic and cultural contexts, drawing on our programme of visiting practitioners, who discuss their work. Focusing on developing skills in postgraduate-level research and writing, it's designed to give you the tools to reflect on how you work, what you make, and how it exists in the world. It also helps prepare you for further study as a researcher-practitioner if you continue to a PhD.
In the Creative Portfolio module you make your own work, supported by critique and discussion with the course team and other students. We’ll discuss broader issues as a group through the weekly seminar sessions. The seminars feature themed topics, giving you the chance to widen your knowledge of repertoire and key issues, as well as exploring how they relate to what you do as a composer or sound artist. You’ll produce a portfolio that focuses on your interests while experimenting with new ideas.
Trimester two
In the second trimester you develop your practice further, aiming towards an external presentation of the work you make in our summer SparkFest, which takes place on campus, across the city, and online. You continue to develop your work, supported by the weekly seminars, responding to internal and external opportunities and considering the way your work engages with audiences.
You also continue with Sound Skills, building on the exploration of new ways to work that you began in the first trimester. You’ll complete your Research and Practice module with a project which summarises the contextual artistic research you’ve undertaken.
Trimester three
The course culminates in an independent, creative, large-scale Major Project, which draws together the new approaches you’ve developed over the initial stages of the course. The project is presented at the end of the summer and, alongside the other creative practice you’ve completed, serves as a substantial portfolio piece for the next stage of your career.
How will I be assessed?
The majority of assessment is based on your creative coursework. For each module you'll typically produce a varied portfolio, inspired in part by the opportunities and experiences you encounter on the course, as well as your individual interests and future plans.
Some practical projects are accompanied by short, informal written assignments, and for the Research and Practice module you’ll produce a more substantial paper that investigates your interests as an artist and helps you understand the contexts in which you work.
Program Tuition Fee
Career Opportunities
As well as developing your work artistically and technically, this MA Sound course equips you with a broad range of intellectual, practical and transferable skills for the wider workplace.
We’ll help you prepare for a portfolio career built around your creative practice, drawing in other related areas of work. The course aims primarily to develop your practice as a composer or sound artist, as well as supporting the application of these skills in related areas such as teaching, editing, production, performing, and other areas of the creative industries.
Our aim is that when you graduate, you'll have developed core problem-solving, analytical, and critical skills to support you in the ever-evolving music and sound landscape. Our graduates have had a range of successful careers in production, composition, music for film and TV, sound design for moving image and games, sound art, software development, engineering, teaching, and research.
Facilities
Program delivery
How will I be taught?
Most modules are taught through small-group seminars and workshops, where you’ll benefit from close interaction with tutors and peers. Throughout the year, we bring in composers, sound artists and industry professionals to talk about their work and deepen your knowledge and understanding of current contexts. The Major Project and parts of the other modules are taught through individual tutorials where the focus will be entirely on your own practice.
In the Sound Skills module we make use of a flipped classroom model, where you work through online materials independently and at your own pace, supported by weekly workshops with tutors.
Course length
One year full-time or two years part-time.
Program Admission Requirements
Show your commitment and readiness for Grad school by taking the GRE - the most broadly accepted exam for graduate programs internationally.