Research degrees with the London College of Music
Research specialisms in the London College of Music
Staff and postgraduate students at the London College of Music are engaged in a range of research specialisms that combine practice-led research and advanced professional practice with theoretical and technical analyses of various types.
Find out more about our research specialisms below:
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Musicology
LCM has a highly diverse approach to musicology. We are concerned with the craft of creating, interpretating and manipulating sound through an engagement with and refiguration of different traditions that incorporates composition, musical historiography, theory and analysis, creativity/aesthetics, biographical studies, opera studies, hermeneutics, artistic research, pedagogy and performance studies.
Our work is engaged with evolving traditions and practices in western art music, jazz and popular music and contemporary electronic music, as well as topics such as gender, race and ethnicity, exoticism and the role of AI.
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Practice as research
LCM embraces difference forms of practice as research including composition/performance, improvisation, music-industry/events, audio engineering, recording/production and practices in theatre and dance.
The department is highly involved in the development of new approaches to documenting and analysing practice as research in a range of disciplines. One feature of this has been the extensive program of industry speakers invited to give guest lectures, workshops and masterclasses about their professional practice.
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Record production
LCM is a world leader in research into record production, and our staff have founded and continue to run several global research networks. Further details can also be found in the sections on 'Practice as research', 'Musicology' and in the 'Current research projects section', but we also have cutting edge research being conducted into recording and mixing practice, expert systems (including haptics), 3D audio, gender/diversity/creativity within music production and mixing.
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Sound Synthesis (Townshend collection)
Legendary musician Pete Townshend endowed his extensive collection of vintage instruments to UWL. This collection includes (amongst many others): EMS Synthi 100, Yamaha GX1, Moog: Model 15 and System 35, ARP 2500 and AS Colossus. The collection facilitates a large range of PhD research trajectories including performance, composition and synthesiser methodology and practice.
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Theatre and Performance research
Performance is the life blood of LCM, forming the base of the school. PhD students and staff are continuously conducting research into new performance techniques in order to push performance at LCM further, as well as to positively impact the teaching and learning process at the University.
Areas of research:
- Applied and socially engaged theatre (including community theatre and wellbeing)
- Performance Studies (dramaturgy, social justice, identity politics, casting politics)
- Improvisation and Gesture
- Space, place and environment
- Cultural exchange practices
- Translation and adaptation studies
- New play development and writing for performance
- Literature, Narrative and Music
- Music Theatre
- Opera
- Anglo-Spanish Musical Theatre
- Festival Studies
Research degrees
The London College of Music offers a PhD research degrees, which can be either a thesis-based study or also involve practice as research. Research PhDs are focused on producing new knowledge and understanding about creative practice.
See our PhD research degree in Music:
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PhD Music (West London Campus)
West London Campus
VC PhD Scholarships
The London College of Music welcomes applicants for our full-time Vice Chancellor's PhD scholarships, which are open to all UK students (including EU students with settled status) who qualify and include:
- Waiver of UK PhD tuition fees
- Payment of a tax-free stipend of £22,000 per annum
- Annual allowance of £900 to support conference attendance
PhD scholars carry out teaching duties for a maximum of six hours per week. Scholarships are for three years (subject to satisfactory performance and academic progress).
You can apply for one of our Vice-Chancellor's PhD scholarships as part of your PhD application – please state on the application form that you would like to apply for the Vice-Chancellors Scholarship.
PhD opportunities
Applications are invited for bespoke topics across the range of disciplines supported by the below staff. In addition, there are several targeted projects as follows:
We are offering two industry-linked places supervised by Professor Justin Paterson and co-supervised by the CEO of the collaborating companies:
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Haptics and audio
Co-supervised by Dr Ally Barrow of Generic Robotics Ltd.
This will build on the work of the HAPPIE project and will investigate the deployment of haptic feedback (touch) in audio production and/or music performance systems.
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Technology-enhanced learning for music production and performance
Co-supervised by Professor Rob Toulson of RT60 Ltd.
With a backdrop of RT60’s mobile app design, this work will investigate the intelligent, assistive and educational music technologies of the future, with a vision for identifying ‘technology enhanced learning’ opportunities in music production and performance.
We are also offering other specific projects:
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Artistic research and improvisation
Supervisor: Professor Robert Sholl
Research context:
Our department has a broad interest in artistic research concerning composition, performance, improvisation and the electronic manipulation of sound. We are particularly interested in improvisation to film (connecting to our PRISM Research Centre) and hybrid and interdisciplinary approaches that include hermeneutics, analysis, cultural studies and the use of AI.
Further information:
Questions regarding academic aspects of the project should be directed to Professor Robert Sholl: robert.sholl@uwl.ac.uk
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Cross-channel dynamics
Supervisors: Dr Daniel Pratt and Professor Simon Zagorski-Thomas
Research context:
Also as part of ongoing collaborative research with a well-established plugin company we are looking for a PhD student to conduct research into the interaction between audio processing (particularly compression and transient design) on parallel streams of audio. The research would involve a range of music genres and the research aim would be to identify general principles which allow various musical goals to be achieved in the mix process.
Further information:
Questions regarding academic aspects of the project should be directed to Dr Daniel Pratt: daniel.pratt@uwl.ac.uk
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French music
Supervisors: Professor Robert Sholl and Professor Nicholas McKay
Research context:
We are particularly interested in topics in twentieth- and twenty-first century western art music. Interdisciplinary approaches that involve aspects of biography, analysis, cultural studies, psychoanalysis, gender studies and engagements with non-western music (including neo-colonial studies) are all welcome.
Further information:
Questions regarding academic aspects of the project should be directed to Professor Robert Sholl: robert.sholl@uwl.ac.uk
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Future Noise record label – immersive pedagogy
Supervisor: Dr Daniel Pratt
Research context:
In addition to UWL’s London Noise record label (in collaboration with AWAL), we are establishing a second inclusive arts project called Future Noise, run by undergraduate students, which will work with school sixth forms and further education colleges to develop new up-and-coming artists. This PhD student would document and analyse the process whereby the staff and students engaged with the label develop their knowledge and understanding of this community of practice.
Further information:
Questions regarding academic aspects of the project should be directed to Dr Daniel Pratt: daniel.pratt@uwl.ac.uk
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Harmonising history: A taxonomy of vintage synthesizers
Supervisor: Professor Justin Paterson
Research context:
Utilising the unique and extensive Pete Townshend synthesiser collection at UWL, this project will develop a extendable taxonomy to catalogue and analyse the sonic and functional properties of the synthesisers (and others) and develop a digital open-access archive that includes high-quality recordings and detailed analysis of each synthesiser’s capabilities. It will also investigate the role of these instruments in shaping various music genres and cultural movements, fostering a dialogue between past innovations and future creations.
Further information:
Questions regarding academic aspects of the project should be directed to Professor Justin Paterson: justin.paterson@uwl.ac.uk
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Keyboard studies
Supervisors: Dr Annie Yim, Dr Angela Shepherd, Dr Liz Pipe and Professor Robert Sholl
Research context:
LCM has strengths in keyboard studies – piano and organ – and we would be particularly interested to hear from students wishing to pursue a doctorate through practice (through recitals with partial thesis) on any element of 18th-21st century keyboard music, including repertoire, organology, culture, improvisation, pedagogy and extended techniques.
Further information:
Questions regarding academic aspects of the project should be directed to Dr Annie Yim: annie.yim@uwl.ac.uk
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The musical principles of mix preparation
Supervisors: Dr Daniel Pratt and Professor Simon Zagorski-Thomas
Research context:
As part of ongoing collaborative research with a well-established plugin company we are looking for a PhD student to conduct research into the musical principles behind mix preparation. The project would involve an ethnographic study of the practice of professional mix engineers in order to establish a range of general principles about how they conceptualise various components of a mix, how they establish various forms of signal path and any structuring principles that they employ when preparing session files for mixing.
Further information:
Questions regarding academic aspects of the project should be directed to Dr Daniel Pratt: daniel.pratt@uwl.ac.uk
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Music and health, somatic studies
Supervisor: Professor Robert Sholl
Research context:
LCM has a strong interest in strategies that increase performance potential and well-being to enhance and sustain careers. We are particularly interested in topics concerning music and health and somatic techniques (including development of the Feldenkrais Method and the Alexander technique) and topics that make interdisciplinary connections that expand the horizons of theory and practice in these areas that concern issues of longevity, public health and specific conditions such as Alzheimer's disease.
Further information:
Questions regarding academic aspects of the project should be directed to Professor Robert Sholl: robert.sholl@uwl.ac.uk
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Music business/industry
Supervisor: Dr Danny Hagan
Research context:
LCM has a substantial depth of knowledge in the music business and music industry practices. We have cutting edge research being conducted into:
- artist management and mental health
- political economic and social structures
- the importance of popular music practices on identity and place
Research topics on both recorded and live music are equally valued and supported. We would welcome enquiries and proposals into all related areas.
Further information:
Questions regarding academic aspects of the project should be directed to Dr Danny Hagan: daniel.hagan@uwl.ac.uk
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Practical musicology methods
Supervisor: Professor Simon Zagorski-Thomas
Research context:
As part of his work with the 21st-Century Music Practice network and his forthcoming monograph on Practical Musicology, Simon Zagorski-Thomas is looking for one or more PhD students to explore methods of documenting and representing tacit knowledge and developing an aesthetic approach through their own practice research.
The student will explore documentation and analysis of practice and aesthetics through four types of representation: temporal, spatial, deconstruction and internal narrative. The research aim is to match various principles of representation with types of knowledge and contexts.
Further information:
Questions regarding academic aspects of the project should be directed to Professor Simon Zagorski-Thomas: simon.zagorski-thomas@uwl.ac.uk
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Self-production, creativity and identity
Supervisor: Dr Paula Wolfe
Research context:
Given the continuing rise in students who are looking to higher education to develop skills as self-producing artists, there is a need to explore the many and interconnecting creative, technical and cultural facets associated with the art form. In addition, the growth in awareness of how creative processes and outputs, afforded by the practice, are influenced by issues of cultural identity and societal positioning, highlights the need for research.
We would welcome enquiries and proposals in any of these related areas.
Further information:
Questions regarding academic aspects of the project should be directed to Dr Paula Wolfe: paula.wolfe@uwl.ac.uk
Theatre and performance practice
Performing arts research covers a range of thematic interests in contemporary performance practices, global performance cultures and histories and collaborative research projects with the Music team. We are keen to support applications in any of our research areas:
- Applied and socially engaged theatre (including community theatre and wellbeing)
- Theatre in and for the workplace
- Performance studies (dramaturgy, social justice, identity politics, casting politics)
- Improvisation and gesture
- Space, place and environment
- Cultural exchange practices
- Translation and adaptation studies
- New play development and writing for performance
- Literature, narrative and music
- Music theatre
- Anglo-Spanish musical theatre
- Festival studies
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We would also be pleased to receive enquiries regarding the following specialisms:
- Anglo-Spanish musical theatre (Dr Alejandro Postigo)
- Applied and socially engaged theatre (including community theatre, corporate theatre and wellbeing) (Dr Cathy Sloan, Dr Gavin Baker)
- Composition and medievalism (Dr Litha Efthymiou)
- Composition for opera, musical theatre and experimental opera, orchestration, interdisciplinary approaches to composition (Dr Litha Efthymiou, Dr Simone Spagnolo)
- Phenomenology of music, popular music analysis, collaborative creativity, 4E cognition and music, audience research (Dr Remy Martin)
- Film music & Italian post-WWII opera (Dr Simone Spagnolo)
- Festival Studies (Dr Danny Hagan)
- Instrumental composition (Dr Litha Efthymiou, Prof David Osbon, Dr Simone Spagnolo)
- Messiaen and twentieth-century French music including Spectralism, twentieth-century music and religion/spirituality including the music of Arvo Pärt (Prof Robert Sholl)
- Music of the African Diaspora (Dr Tim Hughes, Prof Sara McGuinness)
- Music production, self-production, songwriting, creativity, gender, representation (Dr Paula Wolfe)
- Performance studies (dramaturgy, social justice, identity politics, translation and adaptation, casting politics, gender in Shakespeare) Dr Giselle Garcia, Dr Isla Hall, Dr Cathy Sloane, Dr Gavin Baker, Dr Alejandro Postigo
- Performance studies/practice research, somatic and embodied practices and music, improvisation (Prof Robert Sholl)
- Popular music analysis, songwriting, soul, funk, R&B, hip-hop (Dr Tim Hughes)
- Popular music performance and gesture, music education (Dr Liz Pipe)
- Recording, record production, audio technology (Prof Justin Paterson, Dr Dan Pratt, Prof Simon Zagorski-Thomas)
- Twentieth-century music, Stravinsky, music semiotics, music theory and analysis, opera, music theatre (Prof Nicholas McKay)
Please feel free to contact potential supervisors directly via email to discuss the details of your proposal before submission.
General enquiries about the scholarships can be addressed to postgraduate.admissions@uwl.ac.uk
Applying for a PhD
If you are considering applying for a PhD, the first step is to contact a supervisor in a relevant research area - contact emails are listed against projects above.
Find out more about the funding we offer, the application process and other frequently asked questions.
If you have any questions please contact us by email: postgraduate.admissions@uwl.ac.uk
Find out more
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Research Centres and Groups
Find out about our multi-disciplinary areas of expertise, research, and teaching.
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Research impact
Learn how our research has helped communities locally, nationally and internationally.
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The Graduate School
If you are interested in studying for a PhD or Professional Doctorate, the Graduate School is here to support your research.