If you’re looking for a career in Electronic Music Production as an artist, remixer, writer, programmer or game audio designer, the BA (Hons) Electronic Music Production course can help you get there.
You’ll learn cutting-edge techniques from lecturers who are already successful producers in the industry. You’ll also be taught using our state-of-the-art industry-standard equipment and facilities.
The course will cover practical audio creation, recording, and software skills using a variety of Digital Audio Workstations. It will also cover refined industry knowledge, sound artistry, synthesis, sampling, and effective approaches to creating and answering professional briefs.
All students will learn essential critical skills and knowledge. After building appropriate foundational knowledge, skills and experience in Year 1, you may choose three optional modules in Year 2 and a further four in Year 3 to refine your career direction.
These options prepare you for a successful career in the electronic music, media composition, sound design, and game audio industries, each of which provides numerous opportunities for when you graduate. The route you choose to take is up to you.
You’ll also have the opportunity to network and collaborate with students on other BIMM degree courses. You’ll work directly with them to help diversify your skills and enhance your portfolio. This collaboration will widen your list of valuable industry contacts and prove incredibly useful as your career develops and flourishes.
So, what are you waiting for? Start your career in Electronic Music Production today.
Course specification
Mode of attendance: Full-time
Length of course: This course is taught as a three-year course at levels four, five and six.
Awarding institution: BIMM University
Campus delivery: London, Brighton, Bristol, Birmingham and Manchester
UCAS code: W383
Language of study: English
Final award: BA (Hons) Electronic Music Production
Admissions Criteria: Minimum of 2 A-levels at Grade C or above (64 UCAS points), OR BTEC Level 3 equivalent, and normally three GCSEs at a minimum grade C/4, including English Language.
Minimum requirements
Successful completion of a BIMM admissions assessment.
Minimum of 2 A-levels at Grade C or above (64 UCAS points), OR BTEC Level 3 equivalent, and normally three GCSEs at a minimum grade C/4, including English Language.
IELTS 6.0 with a minimum of 5.5 to be achieved in each band.
Progression
Graduates can progress directly to employment in the music industry in roles such as an artist, remixer, writer, programmer, or game audio designer.
Course fees
Please visit our Fees page for information on access to student loans. Please note, UK students eligible for loans are able to borrow the full course fee for BIMM Music Institute degrees.
Our undergraduate degree courses allow you to define your own route to success via a range of optional modules. First, you’ll learn the necessary employability skills and find where you’ll fit in the industry. Then, you’ll be able to build your course according to your interests and career aspirations.
We are currently undertaking a review of modules on this course as we believe there are a number of improvements we can make to enhance the overall student experience. Please be assured that we are not making significant changes to the overall course content. We are collaborating with our current students to redesign assessments to better equip our graduates for the evolving needs of the industry.
To view the latest undergraduate course overview document for 2024/25 entry, please click here.
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Year
1
Semester
1
The Creative Industries
The first Creative Industries module will introduce you to the strategies and tools to set you on the right path toward pursuing a successful career. Whether focused on a particular career goal or considering several future possibilities, you will broaden your knowledge of the opportunities available to you as a future creative industry professional.
Audio Capture Methods & Equipment
This module will look at recording audio practically for the modern engineer. It will complement the theories studied in Audio Fundamentals. We will focus on modern engineering essentials and apply them to any setup from large format consoles to bedroom studios. We will focus on gain staging, use of analogue and digital equipment, Mic placement and techniques and running a recording session.
Creative Music Sequencing
Summary
In this module, you will learn sequencing and arranging techniques to facilitate your development as a producer and composer. There will be a focus on the use of foundational music theory concepts which underpin the rhythmic, harmonic, and melodic aspects of composition.
The module positions arrangement as the main lens through which the selection and application of tools and techniques are viewed- where the study of song form and structure will guide your choices of DAW programming and sequencing approaches used for achieving a coherent arrangement.
Module Aims
Utilise midi protocols in a DAW
Apply fundamental sequencing techniques
Develop listening and arrangement skills using fundamental music theory to underpin creative choices
Sample Based Production
Summary
The module will introduce the theory and practice of sample-based music production through practical exploration and applied theory. You will learn a variety of audio editing, audio manipulation, and sampling techniques, as well as digital audio theory.
Module Aims
The module will encompass the fundamentals of sample-based production, such as sample types, sampling techniques, and audio editing methods. You will learn how to manipulate samples and incorporate them into your own arrangements, as well as how to generate unique sounds using various processing techniques which meet the standards of the modern music production industry.
Semester
2
The Creative Industries & You
In this module, you will further develop your investigative skills, exploring relevant underlying concepts and principles and interpreting these within the context of your area of study. You will explore the nature of creativity, the wider context of the industry and practice reflective techniques.
You will also evaluate sources and consider issues such as potential biases and cultural diversity. This evaluation will contribute to developing an enhanced awareness of your creative identity and greater insight into the topics that inspire and motivate you. In addition, you will improve your understanding of how your area of interest intersects with the wider creative industry.
Using academic enquiry, you will develop a reflective journal to evaluate your strengths and areas for self-development in relation to your studies, careers and personal aspirations. This investigative work will help establish a connection between the skills you have identified concerning specific careers and areas of the industry, enhancing your understanding of what is required to be a successful professional practitioner.
Multitrack Mixing
Summary
This module will introduce the art and techniques of mixing multiple sources of audio into a cohesive-sounding ‘mix.’ The skills developed in this module will allow you to mix multi-track electronic compositions, multi-mic’d live performances or soundtracks for visual media. You will identify areas of the original audio that require improvement, such as sonic quality, arrangement, or performance. You will utilise a variety of tools and techniques related to level balance, spatial image, and frequency balance, and will apply creative processing techniques as relevant to your chosen field of work.
Module Aims
During this module, you will develop your ability to mix multitracked recording projects. This module will also help you develop the following graduate attributes:
Employability
Self-Awareness
Resilience and Adaptability
Creativity, Collaboration and Connectedness
Composition Toolkit For Producers
Summary
This module introduces composition techniques and music theory as they apply to contemporary music production as a key part of the modern producer's toolkit. Through developing critical listening skills and researching practitioners, you will apply these ideas to your own creative work.
The module develops critical listening skills and encourages students to actively analyse and deconstruct different musical genres. Students will learn contemporary music theory by identifying compositional elements like harmonic progressions, melodic structures, and rhythmic patterns.
The module encourages students to research influential practitioners and their work. Students will learn about composition's many possibilities by studying these artists' methods. This practice-based research-driven approach allows students to expand their creative horizons and apply their newfound knowledge to their own production. They will also gain a deeper understanding and appreciation for the art of composition itself.
The module empowers students to become confident and skilled self-produced artists by exploring influential practitioners' work, expanding creative horizons, and applying new knowledge.
Module Aims
To facilitate the development of your competence and confidence in using music theory to support your composition
To build awareness of the impact of your compositional choices on the music you make
Applied Synthesis
Summary
This module will provide you with an exploration of the theory and application of music synthesis. You will learn about the principles and techniques of sound synthesis, including the several types of synthesis methods and the use of synthesizers in contemporary music production.
Module Aims
The module will explore the fundamental concepts of synthesis, including subtractive synthesis, additive synthesis, wavetable synthesis, and frequency modulation synthesis. You will also learn about the several types of synthesisers, including analogue, digital, and software synthesizers, and their use in contemporary music production.
Year
2
Semester
1
Defining Your Practice in Context
Summary
This module will build on the skills you developed in your first year. In The Creative Industries and You module, you utilised concepts and principles to explore the nature of creativity, developing a short and longer-term plan for your personal and professional practice.
In this module you will carry out an individual investigation, utilising secondary research to investigate the lineage of your creative practice. You will directly apply ideas to your own discipline and development, selecting an area of investigation relevant to your own practice, and communicating your argument in writing or via a narrated slide presentation. The concepts you explore in this module, including your positionality and identity, are themes you will encounter frequently as a creative professional.
Module Aims
By examining existing case studies and undertaking a research case study you will further develop secondary research skills and contextualise your professional identity. The research methods and study skills you develop throughout this module will prepare you for next year’s Final Project, in which you will self-direct a significant piece of academic, creative and/or professional practice. Additionally, this module will help you develop the following graduate attributes:
Global Awareness
Self-awareness
Intellectual curiosity
Professionalism
Creative Production Techniques
Successful contemporary electronic music producers employ a wide range of tools, techniques and processes in their quest for a stand-out sound.
This module will introduce you to a wide variety of creative tools, techniques and processes that will develop your skills and abilities in electronic music production. You will develop creative approaches to compositional, sound-design and mix issues, developing inventive strategies that will help you to achieve a more unique production signature.
You will engage in technical and aesthetic analysis of contemporary production works that are of relevance to your own creative practice, using appropriate analysis tools and techniques to make informed interpretations and appraisals of the works. You will use the outcome of this analysis to inform your own production, stretching your abilities and aiding the development of your own creative work.
Advanced Synthesis
Advanced Synthesis is an in-depth exploration of cutting-edge synthesis techniques within electronic music production. This module delves into various synthesis methods beyond the basics, fostering a deep understanding of sound design and its application in contemporary music contexts. Through hands-on projects, you will develop skills in creating complex sounds and textures, using both hardware and software synthesisers.
Select an optional module
Semester
2
Exploring Practice Through Collaboration
Summary
In the Defining Your Practice in Context module, you evaluated the lineage and traditions of your creative practice, investigating how it connects to artistic and industry practices. This module will require you to utilise your acquired knowledge to plan and create, collaboratively, a piece of work that links to your practice. Collaborating with others can help you develop new and innovative ideas and can also help you develop confidence as a creative practitioner whilst practising your communication, project management, reflection and feedback skills.
Module Aims
To develop collaborative working practices.
To plan and execute a creative project.
To document your creative process including the nature of your collaboration.
Seek and use developmental feedback.
Evaluate the nature of teamwork, communication and collaboration.
Appraise your professional values, ethics and goals.
Additionally, this module will help you develop the following graduate attributes:
Employable and Entrepreneurial.
Creative, Collaborative and Connected.
Socially Responsible.
Self-awareness.
Professionalism.
Electronic Composition In Context
Full module detail available soon.
Electronic Mix Techniques
Full module detail available soon.
Select an optional module
Year
3
Semester
1
Final Project
In this module, you will undertake a significant project of your own choosing. It’s your chance to explore your passion within the industry and creative arts: experiment, take risks, strengthen your skills and create a product/cohesive portfolio of work that you are proud to showcase at the end of your degree.
This module will support you in consolidating the broad learning and development from the course so far, building a bridge into the industry, the workplace and future opportunities. You will be supported to self-direct your own learning through a series of lectures, seminars and 1:1 tutorials with expert supervisors.
Concept Led Practical Production
The overall ethos of this module is to combine all the learning you have experienced to synthesize a new, contemporary output, in the sense of an auteur producer, applying a highly centralized and subjective control to many aspects of collaborative creative work.
This module is about exploring, learning and implementing the technologies and approaches to production by a variety of contemporary practitioners. Enabling you to integrate and combine some of the processes and techniques implemented by these practitioners to synthesise an original production, enabling you to develop your own voice as a producer.
At the end of this module, you shall be confident enough to create technically exciting projects that fulfil their creative intentions outside the realms of conventional music production aesthetics.
Electroacoustic Composition
Contemporary electronic music ranging from Techno to Modern Classical utilises many of the cutting-edge processes developed by pioneering electroacoustic composers.
This module will introduce you to electroacoustic practices, advanced software tools and compositional strategies that will develop your creative abilities in electronic music production. You will engage in technical and aesthetic analysis of exploratory electroacoustic sound works, which will equip you with the necessary skills to make informed interpretations and appraisals. You will develop both practical and theoretical prowess, enabling you to create bold and challenging contemporary electroacoustic sound works.
Select an optional module
Semester
2
Final Project
Module Summary:
This module will enable you to apply the skills and knowledge that you have gained during your studies at BIMM
University and produce an extended piece of work exploring your creative practice. You will generate a project idea then extend and develop this project through to completion.
You can choose from three approaches:
Practice research
Enterprise work
Extensive text-based output
You are advised to consider the approach for your project choice carefully and think about how It aligns with your personal and professional objectives. Please refer to Final Project: Glossary of Terms and Definitions
Module aims:
You will be able to deliver an extended piece of work that explores your creative practice
You will be able to contextualise your project with reference to previous practices and existing literature.
You will be able to link your work to a methodological framework.
You will be able to critically reflect on the strengths and weaknesses of your work.
You will be able to share your work and ideas in a supportive and inclusive environment.
The Art of Mastering
Mastering is the process of taking final mixes and preparing them for delivery to potentially multiple formats. The “Art” of mastering is in successfully meeting both the technical and aesthetic requirements to deliver the artist’s vision to the highest possible level.
In this module, we will build upon your knowledge of equalisation, dynamics, stereo, noise removal and assorted saturation tools from previous core modules and refine this to enable the delivery of high quality, aesthetically appropriate masters for a variety of genres and formats.
Professional Portfolio
This module is the final step in your journey and will support you as you look to enter your chosen field as a creative professional. Drawing on evidence from throughout your time here. you will critically self-evaluate your personal learning journey and industry engagements to date. You will explore concepts and theories of personal and professional development to support, challenge and test your assumptions, to determine your readiness for work in the creative industries. You will have the opportunity to discuss this with your peers and learn from your collective experiences in both small degree path groups and large mixed discipline sessions.
With this position in mind, you will then be challenged to create and consolidate creative assets to give you the edge over the competition in your chosen field. Specialist workshops will be offered throughout the module, informed and delivered by our wide-reaching connections and specialist lecturers in the creative industries. This culminates in the creation of a portfolio which tells the story of your personal and professional journey so far, communicating your unique professional identity and future career plans in the creative industries.
Select an optional module
The option modules advertised as available for BIMM Music Institute courses are subject to variation dependant on minimum student numbers and the availability of specialist resources at each college (Please refer to our terms and conditions for further detail).
For any questions regarding our courses or if you’d like more information on how to apply to BIMM Music Institute, please contact our Enquiries Team on 01273 840 346 or email [email protected].
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