The Faculty of Music has one of the largest and liveliest communities of graduate students in the United Kingdom. Usually about 40 new students enter every year, coming from countries all around the world. Graduate students have the benefit of a team of international experts to supervise their research, access to outstanding libraries, and the stimulus of a committed group of like-minded students and scholars in many subject areas. The University, the colleges and the city of Oxford provide a lively, supportive and diverse musical, academic and cultural atmosphere.
Subject areas, approaches and modes of study are very varied. Students may concentrate on any aspect of music history, source studies, music theory, analysis, criticism, aesthetics, psychology, anthropology, ethnomusicology, sociology, organology, composition, musical performance and interpretation. Many individual research projects are unique in their blend of approaches; frequently they extend into other academic disciplines within the Humanities and beyond (especially Social Sciences and Psychology).
The graduate program in musicology offers rigorous and broad training in the intellectual history of the field. Students benefit from...
Learn MoreThe PhD prepares professionals for leadership roles in music research and prepares them for work within or outside the professoriate....
Learn MoreThis program is for students interested in developing original research projects that bridge traditional methodologies with new critical and/or digital...
Learn MoreHave ambitious goals for your music career? Reach them. NAU’s Kitt School of Music is proud to offer a Master...
Learn MoreThe School of Music offers training toward two specific graduate degrees in music: Master of Music requiring a minimum of...
Learn MoreThe Music Department offers degrees at both the master’s and doctoral levels. The PhD is offered in ethnomusicology. Coursework takes...
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