The Diploma in Music Production and Sound Engineering is an intensive one year program which is taught across 48 weeks. The course is then divided into three terms, with each term building on the knowledge and skills you learnt in the previous term.
Using our progressive continuous learning method each module will cover historical and theoretical content alongside practical and technical skills so you develop a rounded knowledge and skill set within each area.
The breadth of the course means that alongside learning what equipment, techniques and microphones to use you also learn why you use them. This will help you develop your own expertise and understanding of how to create different sounds and effects.
Within the diploma we cover all of the following subject areas: Acoustics, Computer, Copyright and Legal issues, Digital Audio Technology, Electronics and Analogue Equipment, General Business (Publishing & Marketing), Management Skills, Mastering, Microphones, Mixing and Critical Listening, Music Theory and Production, Production, Recording, Sound Theory, Studio Equipment and Signal Processing, Studio Etiquette and Musicianship.
Below you can browse through the three terms and see the breakdown of the courses for each term.
Production Tools teaches students to categorize the basic equipment used in music production; identify and operate different types of equalizers; appraise equalization from a musical, i.e. not solely technical, perspective, correlating bandwidth, slope and cut-off /centre frequency to pitch; describe the function of dynamic range processors; identify and operate different types of dynamic range processors; apply dynamic range processing creatively; categorize and operate different types of effects processors; identify the different types of audio signals encountered in music production environments; recognize the different types of cables used in analogue and digital audio signal chains; identify the different types of audio signals encountered in music production environments; and recognize the different types of cables used in analogue and digital audio signal chains.