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Durham University Department of Music

Coordinates: 54°46′30″N 1°34′29″W / 54.775082°N 1.574678°W / 54.775082; -1.574678
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54°46′30″N 1°34′29″W / 54.775082°N 1.574678°W / 54.775082; -1.574678

University of Durham
Department of Music
Established1969[citation needed]
Address
Durham University
Palace Green
Durham
DH1 3RL
, ,
AffiliationsUniversity of Durham
Websitewww.dur.ac.uk/music/

The Department of Music is the music school of the University of Durham.

Durham is one of the leading university music departments in the UK. The Department of Music offers innovative undergraduate and postgraduate courses, but also carries out world-leading research in musicology, analysis, music technology, music psychology, ethnomusicology, composition and performance.

History

Until 1890 all music degrees were honorary. Recipients of the honorary doctorates were John Bacchus Dykes in 1862 and John Stainer in 1885.

There were four musicians who received a DCL prior to 1890; these were George Grove in 1875; Hubert Parry and Charles Villiers Stanford in 1894; and John Stainer in 1895.

During Edward Bairstow's tenure of the Professorship, four composers were made honorary Doctors of Music; these were John Ireland in 1932; Arnold Bax in 1935; William Walton in 1937 Thomas F. Dunhill in 1940.[1]

Programmes

Department of Music offers a three-year undergraduate degree. The curriculum covers all key areas of music with particular strengths in music analysis, music history, ethnomusicology, music and science and performance and composition.

From 1890 until 1980 the University offered degrees by examination only to non-resident , "unattached", students.,[2] something which had been happening in the university since 1871[3]

Reputation

Department of Music has been ranked as the best music department in the UK by the Complete University Guide for 2018,[4] and have appeared number one position for two years running in the Sunday Times.[5] The department has also been ranked 3rd in the UK for the quality and impact of its research, according to the most recent Research Excellence Framework (REF) in 2014.[6]

Research

Major areas of research

  • Music history
  • Music analysis
  • Composition
  • Performance
  • Ethnomusicology
  • Music technology
  • Music cognition

Staff

Present staff include the renowned Stanford and Parry expert, Jeremy Dibble.

The first professor of music was Philip Armes held office from 1897 to 1907, and had previously been resident examiner since 1890. He had been appointed organist of Durham Cathedral in 1862 and was granted a Mus. Bac. ad eundem from the University in 1863 and Mus. Doc. similarly in 1874 having received them in 1858 and 1864 respectively from the University of Oxford. In 1891 he was granted an honorary MA.[7]

The second holder of the office was Joseph Cox Bridge, whose tenure ran from 1907 to 1929. He had been organ scholar of Exeter College, Oxford and then organist of Chester Cathedral.

Edward Bairstow was professor there from 1929 to 1946, a position he held alongside his tenure of the organist post at York Minster. He was not required to be resident in Durham. Both Bridge and Bairstow died in office. During his time at Durham, Bairstow produced his Counterpoint and Harmony in 1937.[1]

Other notable staff have included Arthur Hutchings, Jerome Roche and Brian Primmer.

Buildings

The department occupies three buildings in the city of Durham, two on the Palace Green and one on North Bailey. The main building, Divinity House, was built in 1661 and until 1844 was home to Durham School. Until recently the adjacent former Diocesan Registry housed the department library; it is now the computer room. The building on North Bailey, numbers 48-49, comprises two inter-connected Georgian townhouses.

Alumni

Some well-known alumni of the Music Department include[8]

Most of these alumni were "unattached" and completed their papers away from Durham.

References

  1. ^ a b Jackson, Francis (1997). Blessed City: The life and works of Edward C. Bairstow (second ed.). York: Sessions. pp. 131, 174–176. ISBN 1850721920.
  2. ^ "University of Durham Music Exercises".
  3. ^ "Historical Note" (PDF). Durham University. 2002.
  4. ^ "CUG League Tables - Music".
  5. ^ ""Sunday Times University League Table"".Sunday Times University League Table
  6. ^ "REF2014 results".
  7. ^ Bridge, Joseph Cox. p. 1912 https://en.wikisource.org/wiki/Dictionary_of_National_Biography,_1912_supplement/Armes,_Philip. Retrieved 29 January 2021. {{cite web}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)
  8. ^ http://reed.dur.ac.uk/xtf/view?docId=ark/32150_s1mk61rg97p.xml. {{cite web}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)