MD6054 - Music Production Portfolio Development (2025/26)
Module specification | Module approved to run in 2025/26 | ||||||||||||
Module title | Music Production Portfolio Development | ||||||||||||
Module level | Honours (06) | ||||||||||||
Credit rating for module | 15 | ||||||||||||
School | School of Computing and Digital Media | ||||||||||||
Total study hours | 150 | ||||||||||||
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Assessment components |
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Running in 2025/26(Please note that module timeslots are subject to change) |
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Module summary
In this module, you will have the opportunity to cultivate your professional skills and practice by considering the wider implications of your work. By developing your work into a professional portfolio, you will be able to showcases your work in a manner suitable to your chosen music genre or professional marketplace.
In doing so, you will need to consider and evaluate the positioning of your work in the music marketplace and therefore explore best practices in marketing and promotion in relation to music production and freelance careers.
Through developing your project work into a professional portfolio, you will examine competitors and research approaches to exhibiting and representing you work. By doing so you will have gained knowledge and experience vital to working within the music industries and begun taking the steps needed to gain employment and work following graduation.
On successful completion of the module, you will have created a website as a platform to promote your work, developed the branding and identity for your work, completed a portfolio, and identified and explored approaches to connecting with audiences for your work.
The aims of this module are:
● Position and identify your creative work as a marketable artefact within its relevant field.
● Develop creative portfolios, demonstrating competencies to secure work.
● Examine strategies for promoting the release of music as either EP’s, singles, or albums, including ways in which music producers use their original works to demonstrate skill.
● Further expand students’ employability and professional skills in networking and communicating with audiences and potential clients.
● Develop abilities to a graduate-level, fostering a deeper understanding of critical, commercial, technical, and creative processes.
Syllabus
● Social Media and Music marketing (LO1, 2)
● Project management and organisation (LO1, 2, 3)
● Market research and analysis (LO1, 2, 3)
● Genre and artist profiles (LO1, 2, 3)
● Branding, websites, and identity (LO1, 2, 3)
● Proficiency portfolios and showreels (LO1, 2, 3)
● Networking and communicating with audiences (LO1, 2, 3)
● Client research (LO1, 2)
Balance of independent study and scheduled teaching activity
The balance between independent study and scheduled teaching activities within this
module is 70% and 30% respectively. Scheduled learning & teaching covers the first 6 taught weeks of project specific content the student requires to achieve, subsequently followed by weekly one-to-one tutorials and seminars. The scheduled teaching is divided in Lectures, Workshops, and Seminars and they take place in the classroom and Computer Labs.
Independent study provides students with the opportunity to work independently to effectively present and promote their work. For example, by developing their strategies for self-promotion, marketing and researching audiences.
Throughout the module, students have access to the entire Music Studios facilities via online booking system, and Library facilities at London Met. Blended Learning is maintained via Weblearn Course and Module pages with full documentation of the activities developed in class.
Opportunities for reflective learning/PDP are promoted through feedback and written reports, embedded in all assessments with emphasis on reflection of their work. Formative assessment and feedback is planned to address their learning development needs and to capture their learning achievements with a regular request of reflective commentaries in all written submissions.
Learning outcomes
At the end of this module, you should be able to:
LO1. Demonstrate an understanding of the wider contexts of your work in relation to the music and creative industries.
LO2. Carryout market research and develop strategies to promote your work.
LO3. Develop a website and branding for your work as part of a portfolio.
Bibliography
https://rl.talis.com/3/londonmet/lists/EB72EB87-1A2F-88DF-C784-C9F8DBFB6240.html?lang=en&login=1
Core Reading:
● Bargfrede, A. (2017) Music law in the digital age: copyright essentials for today's music business. 2nd edition. Boston, MA: Berklee Press.
● Barrow, C., Barrow, P. and Brown, R. (2021) The business plan workbook: a step-by-step guide to creating and developing a successful business. Tenth edition. London, United Kingdom ; New York, NY: Kogan Page.
● Borg, B. (2020) Music marketing for the DIY musician: creating and executing a plan of attack on a low budget. Second Edition. Lanham, Maryland: Rowman & Littlefield.
● Fitterman Radbill, C. (2017) Introduction to the music industry: an entrepreneurial approach. Second edition. New York, NY; Abingdon, Oxon: Routledge.
● Harrison, A. (2021) Music: the business: the essential guide to the law and the deals.
● Hepworth-Sawyer, R. et al. (eds) (2020) Gender in music production. 1. New York: Routledge (Perspectives on music production).
● Media, M. (2021) Social Media Marketing 2021.
● Passman, D.S., Organ, C. and Glass, R. (2021) All you need to know about the music business.
● Stewart, P (2018) The live-streaming handbook: how to create great live video on your phone, for Facebook and Twitter. London: Routledge.
● Tschmuck, P. (2021) The economics of music. Second edition. Newcastle upon Tyne: Agenda Publishing (The economics of big business).
● WikstroÃàm, P. (2020) The music industry: music in the cloud. Third edition. Medford: Polity (Digital media and society series).