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Master of Music in Performance (MMus) and Master of Performance [Guildhall Artist] (MPerf)
Studying for a Master of Music in Performance (MMus) or Master of Performance [Guildhall Artist] (MPerf) prepares you for entry to the profession at the highest level, offering training in the following areas: Advanced Instrumental Studies (for Strings, Wind, Brass, Percussion, Keyboard), Historical Performance, Jazz, Opera Studies, Piano Accompaniment, Repetiteur, Vocal Studies, and Orchestral Artistry in association with the LSO.
Application deadline: Wednesday 2 October 2024
Those applying for an overseas audition, should refer to the Music Auditions Overseas webpage for information about application deadlines.
Key information:
- Art form:
- Music
- Fees:
- Application Fee: £127 GBP; Tuition Fees: See Fees section below
- Deadline:
- Apply by 2 October 2024 for September 2025 entry
- Level of study:
- Postgraduate
- Mode of study:
- In-person
- Contact details:
- music_applications@gsmd.ac.uk
About the Master of Music (MMus) and Master of Performance (MPerf) programmes
Studying for a Master of Music (MMus) or a Master of Performance (MPerf) prepares you for entry to the profession at the highest level. These programmes will develop you as an individual, insightful musician and practitioner; they will challenge you to take risks within your field of expertise. They will give you the technical facility and musical flexibility to explore and refine your individual artistic voice.
The school will provide you with a learning environment that enables you to recognise and nurture your strengths. As part of the Masters programmes, there are also great opportunities for professional exposure.
Our teaching staff includes world-class performers and innovative practitioners. Your final recitals will be assessed by leading experts. You will learn from internationally renowned artists and you will perform in some of the country’s finest venues.
Many specialisms within these programmes work closely with our partner organisations, particularly the Orchestral Artistry specialism delivered in association with the London Symphony Orchestra. As part of this development process, you will receive feedback from a variety of sources. To ensure you gain self-reliance and the confidence to further your career, we prioritise individual study alongside enhancing your ability to independently evaluate your own musical identity and growth, and guide your gradual, independent engagement with the outside musical scene.
See our Principal Study pages for further information on instrument-specific tuition and performance opportunities.
Professional specialisms
Within the Performance pathway, students study one of our professional specialisms according to instrument and area of interest:
Programme Structure
MMus – One year full-time or two years part-time
MPerf – Two years full-time or two years part-time and one year full-time^
The MMus programme meets all the criteria for a Masters level (level 7) award and a student successfully completing their studies will be awarded a Master of Music (or a Postgraduate Diploma, according to the modules taken). This programme concentrates on the student’s intense activities in Principal Study, but also includes core Contextual Studies and a wide range of Elective opportunities.
The MPerf shares the first year with MMus students, with the second year representing progression for the student in terms of depth and breadth of repertoire within a project-based structure that mimics, in a controlled environment, professional practice at the highest level. Students who successfully complete the programme will be awarded a Master of Performance (Guildhall Artist).
^Opera Studies is full-time only, and MMus takes two academic years
MMus concentrates on your intense learning in Principal Study. The curriculum includes a core module (Reflective Practice) where you discuss and closely monitor your own aims and artistic and professional development. MMus also includes a number of elective subjects, some led by Principal Study departments, while others are more academic or practical/ professional.
Reflective Practice
This core module supports Masters students in making the transition from student to professional, providing resources and the space for students to develop goals and strategies as they progress through the programme. It encourages reflective thinking, helping students become independent and creative musicians. The module includes:
- Lectures exploring topics such as: musical identities and contemporary professional pathways; effective strategies for coping with intensive demands on mind and body in performance; tools and processes of reflective practice; contemporary research interests of performers, composers and leaders
- Workshops introducing the musician as producer
- Discussion groups to complement these activities and offer the students peer support
Electives
Students choose two or three electives. See the list of electives below.
Part-time study for MMus
Please note that studying MMus part-time provides you with the time to develop your performance and academic skills over a two-year period; it does not mean that you will be required for half of the time. It is not possible to engage part-time for ensemble rehearsals and performances. Therefore, while your academic workload will be less, your performing and rehearsal schedule will be as busy as if you were a full-time student.
Building on the shared first year with MMus students, as well as continuing Principal Study-based activities from the first year which focus on further development of technical and artistic abilities, you will be given more autonomy in arranging part of your own assessed projects. Breadth of repertoire, individual creative output and professional experience are also key features of MPerf. In addition to Principal Study work, you will write a critique of your personal development as the culmination of reflective work in year one.
Part-time study for MPerf
It is also possible for MPerf students to study the shared first year with MMus students part-time. Please note that studying part-time provides you with the time to develop your performance and academic skills over a two-year period; it does not mean that you will be required for half of the time. It is not possible to engage part-time for ensemble rehearsals and performances. Therefore, while your academic workload will be less, your performing and rehearsal schedule will be as busy as if you were a full-time student. The final MPerf year is full-time only.
Body Matters
The module consists of classes and individual study on the interaction between the psyche and the soma (body) in the context of musicians’ performance and creation. The taught content of the course will include a range of issues relevant to learning, practising, creating, making and performing music. The links between mind and body will be explored. Students will have the opportunity to build upon ideas disseminated in class by choosing, in negotiation with their tutor, a particular focus for their own assignment. Examples of study topics are: maintenance of good health and fitness; how to perform to maximum potential; facilitation and inhibition of musical creativity; managing competition in the profession; the ’inner critic’; stage presence.
Chamber Music
After initial sessions in which postgraduate students come to know each other, groups are formed from amongst the student body with support from the Co-ordinator of Chamber Music and departmental staff. Groups have lessons, coaching and masterclasses with internal staff and visiting groups in residence. Groups are encouraged also to seek external opportunities for performance as well as internal concerts.
Composition for Media
The class content includes the study of mainstream techniques (use of sequence, picture painting, juxtaposition, transition, tempo, synchronisation, association, emotive description) and practical application of these within a simulated professional context (use of timecode LTC/SMPTE, conducting to picture/click track, synchronising to picture, industry overview, performing rights, production processes).
Conducting
The module is taught in classes where students receive group and individual tutorials. The content includes conducting technique, score preparation and interpretation, and a knowledge of instruments and style with consideration of historical context; organisational, management and communication skills. There are eight places in this class every year. Students requesting this module are selected through practical assessment of abilities and potential at the beginning of the year.
Contextual Studies: The Forbidden Saxophone
This module is compulsory for Masters saxophone students in Wind, Brass & Percussion, and open to other Masters students, up to a maximum of 20. It presents issues which are core to the learning experience for saxophone students at this level. Charting the narrative of the saxophone’s development, and as a mirror to developments in twentieth-century art, the lectures encompassing subjects including social, racial and gender.
Electro-Acoustic Music
The aims of this module are to build on an existing foundational level of understanding and skill in electronic music, to pursue practical expertise in various instruments of music technology as appropriate to an individual student’s area of speciality, to equip students with all-round production skills appropriate for a project in the recording/production studio, to equip students with further technological skills that will enable them to respond creatively to state-of-the-art developments in electronic music technology.
Historial Performance: Performance
This module offers second study in historical instruments and vocal ensembles. It provides students an opportunity to explore different sound worlds and styles of performance through individual lessons and participation in ensembles. No previous experience in historical instruments is needed although an audition on either historical or modern instruments is required. Vocal ensembles are allocated in collaboration with the Vocal Department.
Interpretation through Improvisation
The work proceeds through fortnightly classes of small groups. Content is approached as class workshops in which students interact in performance with the tutor and with other students. The teaching/learning process also normally includes analysis of video and audio recordings of lessons. Students are encouraged to have access to some relevant theoretical knowledge, but no writing up is involved. The work is practical and covers normally the following areas: improvised dialogues and counterpoints against an unprepared harmonic background, and improvised simple dance forms in baroque and classical styles without embellished repeats. Students also participate in one of the Music and Drama collaborative projects (Circus or Storytelling projects). Each one of the two projects is one term long and includes a showing.
Jazz Composition and Arranging (for jazz students)
Content includes melody writing, harmonic development, chord voicing, counterpoint, orchestration, style, and presentation of scores and instrumental parts. Non-Jazz specialists need to demonstrate adequate skills to join this class. The class uses a variety of teaching and learning methods, including presentation of examples and techniques by the tutor, group analysis of musical examples, and the realisation and analysis of the students' own compositions and arrangements. The first half of the course concentrates on techniques employed in small ensembles, whilst the second half concentrates on arranging for larger forces. Arrangements are rehearsed and recorded both for the purposes of assessment and for formative feedback.
Jazz Improvisation (for jazz students)
The teaching and learning strategies are experiential, employing a range of environments including improvisation within forms (with specific skills and applications) through to free improvisation. Non-Jazz specialists need to demonstrate adequate skills to join this class. Topics covered will include:
- Design and motivic development
- Linear independence; rapid cadential movement; rhythm as an improvisational resource; improvising within non-functional harmony; constructive dissonance; "time-no-changes"; the relationship between language, form, concept and spirit
- Awareness of factors affecting the practice of improvisation
Music, Philosophy and the Arts
The aims of this module are to give students an understanding of music in the context of the arts and culture in general, to ground students in techniques of philosophical analysis and critical reading, thinking and writing, to develop students’ understanding of their musical/performance studies in the context of contemporary society, and to develop students’ abilities in written presentation and abstract thinking.
Opera and Theatre (for singers)
This elective aims at familiarising singers with the performance of repertoire designed for the stage, and is so structured that experiences may be derived from any one of three areas (opera associates, music theatre, opera ensemble) or may be formed from involvement in separate projects from two of the three areas. Teaching and learning is through class activities, ensemble rehearsals and performances both in directed and undirected groups, and personal practice and research. One project from either Music Theatre or Opera Associates or Opera Ensemble or a summer term of professional work (role, cover or chorus) with an approved Opera company: Glyndebourne Opera, Garsington Opera, Holland Park Opera, Grange Park Opera, or other professional opera company approved by the Head of Vocal Studies.
PianoWorks (for pianists)
The aim of the module is to develop expertise in preparing and performing contemporary repertoire, encouraging curiosity and a level of familiarity with this area of repertoire and its cultural background.
Pianists choosing this module can choose between a number of extant projects. These include the New Music Ensemble, VoiceWorks, Composer Workshops and the various opportunities for developing and performing new works written by the postgraduate composers.
The projects on offer will vary from year to year, but there will always be at least three to choose from. Each will have its own schedule of classes, coaching and rehearsal, and each will culminate in a performance, usually open to the public.
Research project
The aims of this module are to further develop students’ appreciation of and engagement with musicology, to promote students’ independent study in musicology and increase their confidence in this work by developing their research skills (from identifying and refining a personal topic of enquiry to producing a final paper on this subject), to promote students’ critical faculties in reading, thinking, discussion and writing on musicological topics, and to develop a sophisticated understanding of the relevance of musicological study to the practice of performance artists.
Social Arts Practice
This module aims to foster and support a growing community of socially aware, creative, collaborative, independent artists within the School. It allows students to gain experience and skills in leading, supporting, creating and collaborating in music- or sound-based activity in different participative contexts, to develop the capacity to respond creatively, sensitively and openly, and to develop strategies and processes for broadening, repurposing or adapting existing skills as an instrumentalist, composer, singer or electronic musician. It aims to inspire students to develop a personal, enquiry-based approach, with an appreciation of and engagement with artistic practice as research.
Song Accompaniment (for pianists)
Pianists will be helped to find singer partners from the postgraduate vocal training programme. They will then prepare, rehearse and be coached on relevant repertoire. They will be encouraged to work with their singers beyond the precise limitations of this module, taking part in vocal performance platforms, song classes, singers’ assessments and in masterclasses taken by internal or visiting professors.
Techniques in Composition
This module develops an understanding of historical composers’ practices which will aid students’ own performances, and develops skills that will complement and enhance learning in other elective subjects. Students choose one of five pathways: Analysis, Counterpoint, Fugue, Orchestration, and Stylistic Composition.
Vocal Repertoire (for singers)
This elective module is available to singers only. This module aims to develop understanding of the distinct technical and stylistic demands of vocal repertoire related to the major sung European languages. Teaching is in the form of performance projects on key areas of vocal repertoire. In consultation with the Module Leader, students select from a list of projects that changes from year to year. This covers a variety of repertoire in different language, commonly including song in English, French & German; and song or opera/oratorio in Italian & Russian.
Voiceworks (for singers)
This module enables creative collaboration between postgraduate singers, composers and pianists. After a series of introductory workshops and seminars held jointly by the Vocal, Composition and Keyboard Departments, the following projects are offered:
- Wigmore Voiceworks: new song repertoire for voice(s) and piano or instrumental chamber ensemble is produced in collaboration between Guildhall singers, composers and writers from the MA in Opera Making. This is written with the specific acoustic and space of London’s Wigmore Hall in mind and performed at a Voiceworks concert in Wigmore Hall.
- New Song Voiceworks: an exploration of the wealth of new song repertoire composed in recent decades through special projects designed each year to illuminate particular areas of this repertoire. Appropriate repertoire is selected in consultation with course tutors and coached in a series of group and/or individual workshops.
Wind, Brass & Percussion Additional Solo Recital
This module provides students of the Wind, Brass & Percussion department, whose professional and artistic focus is normally chamber or ensemble performance, with the opportunity to develop further the repertoire, and the artistic and professional skills for recital performance.
Applicants may be offered a place on the extended programme if their Principal Study is not yet at Masters entry level. This extended programme comprises an initial year almost entirely focused on the development of Principal Study, which students must pass before progressing to the Master of Music in Performance or Master of Performance (Guildhall Artist) programmes.
Applicants may be offered a place on the Extended Guildhall Artist Programme if their Principal Study is not yet at Masters entry level. This extended programme comprises an initial year almost entirely focused on the development of Principal Study. At the end of the year, students can progress to Part One if they achieve the minimum necessary requirements. Students who don’t progress to the full programme are awarded a Graduate Certificate.
Students who are enrolled on the Extended Guildhall Artist programme will need to pass an introductory year before progressing to Part One.
The Master of Music in Performance programme is one year full-time or two years part-time and the Master of Performance (Guildhall Artist) is two years full-time or two year part-time and one year full-time. Although they are different programmes, MPerf students study their first full-time year (or their two part-time years) with the MMus students.
Please only submit one application even if you are unsure which programme is the right one for you. You can then discuss which programme would suit you best at audition.
Programme Specification Master of Music in Performance
See the full MMus programme specification, including module specifications and assessment criteriaProgramme Specification Master of Performance (Guildhall Artist)
See the full MPerf programme specification, including module specifications and assessment criteriaPerformance & Collaboration
Studying music at an internationally-renowned conservatoire means you can become immersed in a world of performance from day one. Whatever your instrument or specialism, Guildhall School provides a host of opportunities for you to perform, record and collaborate.
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