Wednesday, July 8, 2026

[research report] The Benefits of Enhanced Music and Sport Provision

The Benefits of Enhanced Music and Sport Provision 

Research and report by Hazel Baxter, Lecturer in Primary Education, UCL Institute of Education
Professor Graham F Welch, Chair of Music Education, UCL Institute of Education
Commissioned by the Neville Abraham Foundation

a comprehensive review and analysis of 133 empirical studies across 35 countries 1995-2025 on children’s development during their Primary and Secondary school years

📖 Read the Executive Summary here: Click here to read the report 

Full Report: Click here to read the full report 

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Fwd: Postdoctoral Research Fellowship announcement - University of Oslo

Dear all,

I am pleased to announce a postdoctoral position, available at RITMO, University of Oslo:
Postdoctoral research fellowship in gesture-vocalization relations in song performance

This position is connected to the project, SongGesture, led by Lara Pearson, which aims to advance knowledge on how expert vocalists use gesture in support of their performance goals. The successful candidate for this position will investigate multimodal correspondence between gesture, vocalization and vocal production movements through computational analysis, and will explore the implications of the results for sense-making.

Deadline: 17 August 2026
https://www.jobbnorge.no/en/available-jobs/job/301742/postdoctoral-research-fellowship-in-gesture-vocalization-relations-in-song-performance    

Feel free to get in touch with any questions: larapear@imv.uio.no  

All the best,
Lara
---
Prof. Dr. Lara Pearson (she/her)
Institute of Musicology
University of Cologne
Albertus-Magnus-Platz
D-50923 Köln
Germany

Research Professor at RITMO, University of Oslo
https://www.uio.no/ritmo/english/people/tenured/larapear/index.html

Tuesday, July 7, 2026

Fwd: Call for Submissions to Organised Sound Vol 32(2) - Sonic Art and the Future of Education: Cross-disciplinary perspectives - deadline 15 September 2026



ORGANISED SOUND

Call for Submissions – Volume 32, Number 2
Thematic Issue Title: Sonic Art and the Future of Education: Cross-disciplinary perspectives
Date of Publication: August 2027
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Issue co-ordinators: David Holland (d.w.holland@ucl.ac.uk) and Ross Purves (r.purves@ucl.ac.uk)


>>>>Deadline for submission: 15 September 2026 <<<<


https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/organised-sound/announcements/call-for-papers/sonic-art-and-the-future-of-education-cross-disciplinary-perspectives

Sonic Art and the Future of Education: Cross-disciplinary perspectives

Since the 1960s there has been an ongoing relationship between the sonic arts and education. This is evident in the work of educators and composers such as R. Murray Schafer in Canada and Trevor Wishart in the UK, who were influential as community artists working on community-based music initiatives in and outside schools. More recently in the UK, there has been important research at De Montfort University around introducing sound-based music into schools. As also evidenced by a recent issue on radical education in electronic music (issue 29/2), such projects often involve innovative technology and approaches to teaching that influence practice in formal educational contexts while also highlighting social, economic and cultural issues related to inclusion (or lack thereof) in conventional music education.

This thematic issue seeks to explore how partnerships and relationships between sonic artists and educators (in both formal and informal contexts) are currently developing and asks: what contribution could sonic arts practices make, or what role could they play, in education in the future?  As lines between disciplines become more blurred, what could sonic arts practices offer and contribute to a variety of future curricula? The skills that are needed for being a sonic artist can be applied across multiple disciplines, for example as a foley artist or as a sound designer for computer games; these creative areas do not necessarily fit or align with the music curriculum currently, but could these sonic skills cross curriculum boundaries and broaden the sense of what it means to be a 21st century musician or sonic artist and the subject’s potential societal impact?

This issue seeks to explore how skills, innovation and creativity in the field of sonic arts can influence or enhance the future of education, not just in music but across a broad horizon of subject areas. Furthermore, in a field that has traditionally been dominated by white, male, middle class composers, can sonic arts education offer a more inclusive and democratic alternative to traditional approaches to music education? One of the areas that is likely to become more important and more contested in education as AI develops will be creativity. Many of the past projects run by sonic artists in education have emphasised creativity, but in the future will the creative skills that are central to composing sonic art become redundant or will they flourish? Additionally, with a resurgence in interest in analogue tools, could this sort of approach offer a welcome relief from the increasingly dominant and homogenous world of digital music making? Or what could a synthesis of digital and analogue approaches offer across a curriculum that emphasises STEM? Could this help the curriculum develop more towards a STEAM approach? Despite subject divisions that are reinforced by current political support for a knowledge-based curriculum, there is much discussion around the blurring of these divisions through cross-disciplinary partnerships. This reflects the future need for an education that fosters creativity and making across the curriculum. This could be a curriculum that understands the need for creative scientists, as well as for artists who understand the possibilities and the opportunities afforded by new technologies.


Potential topics:
Submissions may engage with, but are not limited to, the following topics in relation to sonic arts and education:

•       Collaboration
•       Community-based initiatives involving the sonic arts that point to future directions in music education
•       Innovative approaches to pedagogy using sonic art
•       Sonic creativity and its role in education
•       Acoustic ecology and the future of education
•       Cross-disciplinary partnerships involving sonic arts in educational contexts
•       Sonic arts and the STEAM curriculum
•       Teacher education involving sonic arts projects
•       Gender in sound and/or music education
•       Democracy and inclusion in sound and/or music education
•       The evolution of assessment in sound and/or music education
•       Ownership and authenticity in sound and/or music education
•       Extended reality (VR/AR/MR) in sound and/or music education

Furthermore, as always, submissions unrelated to the theme but relevant to the journal’s focus areas are always welcome.

Please note that Organised Sound seeks issue-driven submissions relevant to the journal’s readership. It does not seek artists’ statements or work/project descriptions without an underlying central question and broad contextualisation.

---

SUBMISSION DEADLINE: 15 September 2026

SUBMISSION FORMAT:

Notes for Contributors including how to submit on Scholar One and further details can be obtained from the inside back cover of published issues of Organised Sound or at the following url: https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/organised-sound/information/author-instructions/preparing-your-materials.

General queries should be sent to: os@dmu.ac.uk, not to the guest editor.

Accepted articles will be published online via FirstView after copy editing prior to the full issue’s publication.

Editor: Leigh Landy; Associate Editor: James Andean
Founding Editors: Ross Kirk, Tony Myatt and Richard Orton†
Regional Editors: Liu Yen-Ling (Annie), Dugal McKinnon, Raúl Minsburg, Jøran Rudi, Margaret Schedel, Barry Truax
International Editorial Board: Miriam Akkermann, Marc Battier, Manuella Blackburn, Brian Bridges, Alessandro Cipriani, Ricardo Dal Farra, Simon Emmerson, Kenneth Fields, Rajmil Fischman, Kerry Hagan, Eduardo Miranda, Garth Paine, Mary Simoni, Martin Supper, Daniel Teruggi, Ian Whalley, David Worrall, Lonce Wyse

Friday, July 3, 2026

Fwd: [DMRN-LIST] Two Research Fellow positions (application deadline: 5th July 2026) at the University of Surrey, UK.



Applications are invited for two Research Fellow positions (application deadline: 5th July 2026) at the Centre for Vision Speech and Signal Processing & Surrey Institute of People Centred AI, University of Surrey, UK.
Research Fellow on Machine Learning for Perceptual Quality Prediction of Spatial Music
https://jobs.surrey.ac.uk/vacancy.aspx?ref=026926
Research Fellow on Perceptual Evaluations and Data Curation for Spatial Music
https://jobs.surrey.ac.uk/vacancy.aspx?ref=026826

CVSSP is an International Centre of Excellence for research in Audio-Visual Machine Perception and AI, with over 180 researchers. The Centre has state-of-the-art audio and video capture and analysis facilities supporting research in real-time video and audio processing and visualisation. CVSSP has a compute facility with 300 GPUs and >2PB of high-speed secure storage. The post-holder will also have access to the compute resources from Surrey Institute of People Centred AI, including 200+ state-of-the-art GPUs.
The post-holders will be based in CVSSP, and work under the direction of the Principal Investigator Prof Wenwu Wang, and in collaboration with the industrial partner.

Research Fellow on Machine Learning for Perceptual Quality Prediction of Spatial Music
The role
The focus of this post will be to develop machine learning and AI models and signal processing algorithms for perceptual quality prediction and rating of songs reproduced using 3D rendering algorithms.
About you
The post-holder is expected to have a PhD degree (or equivalent) in machine learning, spatial audio, audio signal processing, audio perception, audio quality assessment, or a related area in electronic engineering, computer science, applied mathematics, or statistics. Preference will be given to those who have experience on machine learning/AI, spatial audio, but candidates who have experience in audio perception and signal processing are welcome to apply. The post-holder is expected to have strong analytical and programming skills in Python, Matlab or C/C++.
https://jobs.surrey.ac.uk/vacancy.aspx?ref=026926
 
Research Fellow on Perceptual Evaluations and Data Curation for Spatial Music
The role
The focus of this post will be to organise and perform listening tests to evaluate the perceptual quality of spatialised music audio, record the listening scores from each subject, perform statistical analysis of the listening test data, and organise the data files.
About you
The post-holder is expected to have a PhD degree (or equivalent) in electronic engineering, computer science, psychology of hearing, or a related field. Preference will be given to those who have experience on listening test, data curation, audio perception, psychoacoustics, but candidates who have experience in spatial audio and music audio are welcome to apply.
https://jobs.surrey.ac.uk/vacancy.aspx?ref=026826

Please feel free to forward to those who might be interested. Many thanks. 

Apologies for cross-posting. 

Best wishes,
 
Wenwu
 
 
--
Wenwu Wang

Professor of Signal Processing and Machine Learning,
Centre for Vision Speech and Signal Processing (CVSSP)

Associate Head of External Engagement, 
School of Computer Science and Electronic Engineering

AI Fellow,
Surrey Institute for People Centred AI

University of Surrey
Guildford, GU2 7XH
United Kingdom
Phone: +44 (0) 1483 686039
Fax: +44 (0) 1483 686031
Email: w.wang@surrey.ac.uk

Wednesday, July 1, 2026

Fwd: Royal Musical Association Composer-Performer Study Day and Concert


Royal Musical Association Composer-Performer Study Group: Study Day
Are you a musical practitioner and/or researcher with interests in collaboration? Join us at Royal Birmingham Conservatoire on 10 July for the second Study Day of the Royal Musical Association’s Composer-Performer Collaboration Study Group. The day includes a keynote with composer and vocalist Dr Laura Bowler, as well as conference papers, lecture-recitals, and some time for networking and conversation.
The study day concludes with a concert of new works for guitar and electronics, performed by Katalin Koltai with computer music designers from IRCAM.
Tickets for the study day include entry to the concert in The Lab at 5pm.

Separate free tickets for the concert alone can be booked here: https://www.bcu.ac.uk/conservatoire/events-calendar/guitar-augmentations-10-07-2026




Dr Edmund Hunt

Lecturer and researcher, Royal Birmingham Conservatoire

Assistant Editor, The Computer Music Journal

Research Catalogue Administrator, Birmingham City University Portal

Module Leader: Music Technology in Context (MUS7176)
Lecturer: MMus Orchestration (MUS7153), Music Technology in Performance (MUS7177), BMus2 Professional Portfolio 2: Pedagogy and Practice (MUS5065), Contextual Studies: Performance Traditions in Music Tech / Composition 2 (MUS5064), BMus1 Music Technologists' Studies: Composing.

Researcher and Composer in Residence at Integra Lab, Royal Birmingham Conservatoire

edmund.hunt@bcu.ac.uk

www.edmundhunt.com

Monday, June 15, 2026

Fwd: Invitation to Music, Mental Health, and Human Flourishing symposium

Dear colleagues,

With apologies for cross-posting, we are delighted to invite you to attend Music, Mental Health, and Human Flourishing, a joint symposium hosted by the University of York's Centre for Music Education and Human Flourishing (CeMEHF) and the Institute for Mental Health Research in York (IMRY)

The symposium will take place on Friday 26 June 2026 (11:00–15:00 BST) at the Ron Cooke Hub, University of York, and will be available in a hybrid format (in-person and online). The event brings together three internationally recognised scholars:

The symposium is free to attend. It will explore how music can support mental health, wellbeing, and social connection across diverse contexts and stages of life. 

Programme

  • 10:30–11:00 – In-person arrivals and refreshments

  • 11:00–11:45 – Talk: Professor Kira Vibe Jespersen

  • 11:45–12:30 – Talk: Professor Liesl van der Merwe

  • 12:30–13:15 – Lunch (provided for in-person attendees)

  • 13:15–14:00 – Talk: Professor Kelly Jakubowski

  • 14:00–15:00 – Roundtable discussion with all guest speakers and audience contributions

The event is open to researchers, practitioners, students, and anyone with an interest in music, mental health, wellbeing, and human flourishing.

Registration (free): https://tftv.ticketsolve.com/ticketbooth/shows/873687739

We would be very grateful if you could share this invitation with colleagues, students, and relevant networks!

With best wishes,
Andrea, Caroline, and Pete


--

Dr Andrea Schiavio (he/him/his) 

Senior Lecturer 
Co-Director of the Centre for Music Education and Human Flourishing - CeMEHF
Principal Investigator of ERC Synergy Project 101167101 - REM@KE
Past President of the European Society for the Cognitive Sciences of Music - ESCOM
School of Arts and Creative Technologies - Office: RCH 224
University of York, UK

Saturday, June 13, 2026

Fwd: Teaching Fellow in Music Psychology at Durham University


We have a part-time, 1-year post for a Teaching Fellow in Music Psychology available at Durham University, UK (to start in mid-September 2026). 


I'd be happy to speak to any prospective applicants who have questions about the teaching content and/or Music Psychology research at Durham (kelly.jakubowski@durham.ac.uk). 

All the best,
Kelly Jakubowski

---
Professor Kelly Jakubowski (she/her)
Co-Leader of Music Psychology Lab
Department of Music 
Durham University

Monday, June 8, 2026

Fwd: Share Request


Sonic Illuminations

Event Type: Music and Immersive Projection

 

Sonic Illuminations is a project by violinist Hannah Perowne and live visual artist Marian Saunders creating immersive, unique and site specific performances which captivate and inspire audiences.

 

For this bespoke performance, the musical centrepiece is the monumental Partita no.2 by J.S.Bach with its mighty ‘Chaconne’.

Bach’s music moves like a cell at work – intricate, self-contained, and quietly alive. Tiny motifs repeat and reshape themselves into ever richer patterns. Each melodic line threads through the others with purpose, distinct yet inseparable. What begins as something small and simple grows into a complete, breathing form – an architecture of sound where order feels organic, and complexity blooms from the smallest seeds.

 

Marian adopts an improvised, experimental approach to creating abstract visual interactions that respond directly to Hannah’s music. Her hand-crafted imagery draws inspiration from cellular structures, patterns, rhythms, and organic forms. Echoing the metamorphosis of a living environment, the visuals continuously transform and evolve over time.

 

Recommended for 14+

 

When: 12th June, 6.00pm or 7.30pm

Where: Centre of the Cell, Blizard Institute, 4 Newark Street, Whitechapel, London, E1 2AT

Cost: £4/£5

More information:  June - Sonic Illuminations - Centre of the Cell

 

 

 

Richard

 

Richard Davies (he/him)

Operations Manager

 

Centre of the Cell

Queen Mary University of London

Blizard Institute, Newark Street, London, E1 2AT

Tel: +44(0)20 7882 2562

Email: rdavies@qmul.ac.uk 

www.centreofthecell.org

 

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Blizard Institute EDI Professional Services Representative

 

Thursday, May 21, 2026

Building a Sustainable Future for Music, Making and Coding in Schools

On 14 May 2026, the UCL Centre for Climate Change and Sustainability Education (CCCSE) and the Science Education Special Interest Group hosted a joint seminar showcasing eight years of interdisciplinary research at the intersection of music, engineering, and sustainability. Dr Alison Kitson, CCCSE Programme Director, opened the session by introducing the Centre's Teaching for Sustainable Futures CPD modules, including "Where to Start in Primary Music" (developed with Hazel Baxter), which explores soundwalks, music inspired by nature, and instruments made from natural and upcycled materials. A secondary music module follows in September. The main presentation, "Let's Play! Music, Making, Engineering and Sustainability in Schools," was delivered by the core research team: Dr Nicolas Gold (UCL Computer Science), Dr Ross Purves and Prof Evangelos Himonides (both UCL IOE, Department of Culture, Communication and Media). Drawing on constructionism, "hard fun" and computational thinking, the trio traced their project from a 2018 LEGO guitar prototype through school workshops with pupils aged 11–14, where children built acoustic and digital instruments programmed in Python. Responding to increasingly pressing environmental and cost factors, the team has now developed a more sustainable platform: a recycled cardboard block construction system, paired with open-hardware BBC Micro:bits and Raspberry Pi. Recent primary-school field testing proved the platform to be robust and engaging, with further secondary-school trials planned for July 2026. Supported by a HEIF grant, the team is now exploring social-enterprise routes to make the platform accessible to educators and the wider public.

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Wednesday, May 6, 2026

Fwd: Singing in balance convention - call for contributions until 11 May

Singing in Balance Convention: 

A two day exchange on increasing the accessibility and inclusivity of group singing practices


9th-10th September 2026

The Priory Street Centre, 15 Priory Street, York YO1 6ET

Call for contributions open until 11th May.


About the Convention


The Singing in Balance Convention (SiBCon) will bring together group singing practitioners and researchers to change the face of accessible and inclusive singing by sharing research and practice. It is an opportunity to spark conversations, learn from each other and develop connections through our shared interest in accessible singing practice and research. 


The two-day convention will consist of workshops, flash talks, themed sessions, demonstrations and discussions with opportunities for networking throughout. The convention will include leaders in the field representing practice and research. 


Call for Contributions


We’re welcoming contributions from practitioners and researchers showcasing and analysing accessibility and inclusivity in group singing. We are keen to hear from representatives of choirs and singing groups, conservatoires, universities and associated organisations in other environments such as healthcare. Contributions are invited which relate to the broad theme of accessibility and inclusion of group singing practices. We are keen to amplify the voices of specific groups, such as those with mental and physical health challenges, diverse cultural and singing backgrounds, LGBTQ+ singers, and a range of lived experiences. 


Online presentation and contributions will be supported where possible, although this may not suit all aspects of the convention. We will be actively seeking to initiate collaboration between contributors for session delivery and will be designing the convention programme to reflect this. See the website of the convention for further details. 


The convention is organised by members of the Singing in Balance WRoCAH PhD network

PhD researchers: Dana Greaves, Bruna Martins, Emily Cooper 

Academic staff: Helena Daffern, Freya Bailes & Renee Timmers 

Practitioners: Kate Wareham, Emma Baylin, Mir Jansen