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Royal Northern College of Music

Music school in Manchester, England

Royal Northern College of Music

Summary

Music school in Manchester, England

FieldValue
nameRoyal Northern College of Music
other_namesRNCM
image_nameRoyal Northern College of Music - geograph.org.uk - 1963552.jpg
captionThe RNCM building on Oxford Road
logoRNCM logo.png
logo_altRoyal Northern College of Music logo
established1973 by the merger of the Northern School of Music (established 1920) and the Royal Manchester College of Music (established 1893)
endowment£23.3 million (2025)
budget£28.7 million (2024/25)
typePublic, Conservatoire
administrative_staff320 teaching staff
presidentSir John Tomlinson
principalProfessor Linda Merrick CBE
students()
undergrad()
postgrad()
cityManchester
countryEngland, UK
campusUrban
affiliations{{plainlist
* European Association of Conservatoires<ref>{{cite webtitleEuropean Association of Conservatoires - Our Membersurl=https://aec-music.eu/members/our-members/search?type=all&country=GBpublisher=European Association of Conservatoiresaccessdate=28 October 2023language=en}}
website
address124 Oxford Road, Manchester M13 9RD
coordinates
  • University of Manchester
  • Associated Board of the Royal Schools of Music
  • Conservatoires UK
  • European Association of Conservatoires

The Royal Northern College of Music (RNCM) is a conservatoire in Manchester, England. It is one of four conservatoires associated with the Associated Board of the Royal Schools of Music. In addition to being a centre of music education, the RNCM is a busy and diverse public performance venue.

History

The RNCM has a history dating back to the 19th century and the establishment of the Royal Manchester College of Music (RMCM). In 1858, Sir Charles Hallé founded the Hallé orchestra in Manchester, and by the early 1890s had raised the idea of a music college in the city. Following an appeal for support, a building on Ducie Street was secured, Hallé was appointed Principal and Queen Victoria conferred the Royal title. The RMCM opened its doors to 80 students in 1893, rising to 117 by the end of the first year.

Less than four decades later, in 1920, the Northern School of Music was established (initially as a branch of the Matthay School of Music), and for many years the two institutions coexisted. It wasn't until 1955 that NSM principal Hilda Collins, in recognising the importance of performance in training students, met RMCM principal Frederic Cox to raise the question of merging. Discussions continued until September 1967, when a joint committee was formed to oversee plans to combine the two colleges.

The RNCM was formed in 1972, moving to its purpose-built home on Oxford Road in 1973. Its first principal was John Manduell, who had been a music producer and administrator at the BBC; he held the role until 1996, and the Telegraph later wrote "under his energetic direction, it became one of the leading musical academies in Europe, if not the world".

Building

The RNCM western entrance, Booth Street (added 1997–98)

The college building was built on the corner of Oxford Road and Booth Street West between 1968 and 1973 by architects Bickerdike, Allen, and Rich. The two-storey rectangular concrete structure is fronted by tall glazed bays recessed behind an array of square concrete pillars. Originally an elevated walkway ran along the Oxford Road side, connecting the building to the former neighbouring Precinct Centre via a bridge over Booth Street East. Truncated sections of this walkway were the vestigial evidence of an unrealised plan to create a network of high-level "boulevards", providing pedestrian routes on concrete stilts above street level from the RNCM to neighbouring buildings, and extending as far as Hulme and Ancoats. Only the bridges over Oxford Road and Booth Street East were ever constructed.

In 1997–98, the RNCM building was extended by architects Mills Beaumont Leavey Channon, with a new entrance built on the western side, and the walkway was removed.

A major refurbishment of the Concert Hall was undertaken between December 2013 and September 2014 by Scott Hughes Design.

Academics

The college offers both undergraduate (BMus and joint MusB/GRNCM course with the University of Manchester in any of the five specialisations offered) and postgraduate taught programmes (PGDip, MMus) in musical performance and composition. In association with Manchester Metropolitan University the college offers research degrees (MPhil, PhD) in musical performance, composition, musicology and music psychology as part of its Graduate School and also confers awards at Companion, Fellowship (FRNCM), Honorary Member (HRNCM), and Associate (ARNCM) level.

In January 2005, the RNCM was awarded £4.5 million by the Higher Education Funding Council for England to become a recognised Centre for Excellence in Teaching and Learning (CETL), the only UK conservatoire to be selected.

The RNCM currently has 800+ students and 300+ teaching staff, including part-time visiting professors. Many of the staff also teach at Junior RNCM, a Saturday music school for talented young musicians aged eight to 18.

Faculties

The college is divided into 6 schools by area of specialisation.

  • School of Composition
  • School of Keyboard Studies
  • School of Strings
  • School of Vocal Studies and Opera
  • School of Wind, Brass and Percussion
  • Popular Music

There is also a Conducting department within its Graduate School.

Collection of Historic Musical Instruments

The RNCM also holds a collection of historic musical instruments. The collection is an amalgamation of collections originally assembled by Dr Henry Watson (1846–1911), Josiah Thomas Chapman (1843–1907), and the city of Manchester. Collection holdings are listed online as part of the MINIM-UK project.

Student life

The RNCM students' union (RNCMSU) is the main student-run organisation. Besides representing the study body, the RNCMSU also plans and organises social programmes and provides peer support for students. The RNCMSU is member of the National Union of Students.

There is a residential hall, Sir Charles Groves Hall, next to the campus. Alternatively, students may choose to rent a flat at the Manchester Student Homes, a provider of housing for university students in Manchester run by the Universities.

Notable alumni

Main article: Alumni of the Royal Northern College of Music

  • Don Airey, keyboard player/songwriter
  • Christopher Ball, composer
  • Alex Banfield, tenor
  • Barry Banks, tenor
  • Daniel Bartholomew-Poyser, conductor
  • Tim Benjamin, composer
  • Harrison Birtwistle, composer
  • Peter Butterfield, conductor and tenor
  • Arthur Butterworth, composer
  • Cathal Breslin, pianist
  • Telalit Charsky, cellist
  • Jon Christos, singer
  • Chris Craker, clarinettist
  • Peter Maxwell Davies, composer and Master of the Queen's Music
  • Peter Donohoe, pianist
  • Philip Duffy, composer
  • Jane Eaglen, soprano
  • David Ellis, composer
  • Catherine Foster, soprano
  • Alexander Goehr, composer
  • Anthony Goldstone, pianist
  • Carly Hopkinson, classical/opera singer/songwriter and Classic Brit Awards nominee
  • Jean Hindmarsh, soprano
  • Simon Holt, composer
  • Stephen Hough, pianist
  • Elgar Howarth, conductor
  • Rafael Rojas, tenor
  • Gary Hughes, singer/songwriter
  • Darren Jeffery, bass-baritone
  • Olga Jegunova, pianist
  • Adam Johnson, pianist and conductor
  • Sir Peter Jonas, history of music
  • Howard Jones, singer/songwriter
  • Simon Keenlyside, baritone
  • Mary Ann Kennedy, singer
  • Grant Kirkhope, composer
  • Eduard Kunz, pianist
  • Alison Lambert, clarinettist
  • Jeffrey Lawton tenor, tutor, fellow
  • Wilbur Lin, conductor
  • Bernard Longley, Archbishop of Birmingham
  • Steven Mead, euphonium player
  • Sarah Oates, violinist and associate leader Philharmonia orchestra
  • John Ogdon, pianist
  • Annette Bryn Parri, pianist
  • Rosalind Plowright, soprano/mezzo soprano
  • Julie Price, bassoonist
  • Christine Rice, mezzo soprano
  • Martin Roscoe, pianist
  • Andy Scott, saxophonist
  • Ronald Stevenson, composer and pianist
  • Gordon Stewart, organist
  • Iyad Sughayer, pianist
  • Benedict Taylor violist & composer
  • Ben Thapa, tenor
  • Sir John Tomlinson, singer
  • Ian Vine, composer, born in 1974
  • Kristofer Wåhlander, conductor
  • Simon Willescroft, saxophonist
  • Gregg Scott, violinist
  • Conor Collins, visual artist

Directors of the RNCM

  1. John Manduell (1973–1996)
  2. :Edward Gregson (1996–2008)
  3. Jonty Stockdale (2008–2012)
  4. Linda Merrick (2013–present)

References

Citations

Sources

References

  1. "Financial Statements 2024/25". Royal Northern College of Music.
  2. "Linda Merrick :: About :: RNCM".
  3. {{HESA citation
  4. "European Association of Conservatoires - Our Members". European Association of Conservatoires.
  5. (6 November 2014). "RNCM Unveils Refurbished Concert Hall".
  6. (2017-10-26). "Sir John Manduell – obituary". The Telegraph.
  7. Hartwell, Clare. (1 January 2002). "Pevsner Architectural Guides: Manchester". Yale University Press.
  8. (6 September 2018). "Upper Walkways of Oxford Road".
  9. Williams, Jennifer. (19 August 2015). "Revealed: The utopian 1960s vision for Manchester that never took off".
  10. "Ridge and Partners LLP".
  11. "Fellows and Honorary Members – Royal Northern College of Music".
  12. "The RNCM Collection Of Historical Musical Instruments". The North West End.
  13. "Collection: Royal Northern College of Music". MINIM-UK.
  14. "Students' Union".
  15. Code Computerlove. "Royal Northern College of Music Students' Union: Students' Unions: www.nus.org.uk".
  16. "Accommodation".
  17. "Manchester Student Homes".
  18. (2009-04-04). "Ian Vine".
  19. Ward, David. (23 September 2008). "Cool cat in the conservatoire".
  20. "Linda Merrick".
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