The UCM Music Technology program stands at the intersection of audio engineering, music production, computer science, and sonic creativity. At UCM Music Tech we embrace diverse ideas and multiple ways of creating and working with music technology. You are encouraged to explore, experiment, and push the limitations and perceptions within the music technology industry, while working from a solid foundation of practical knowledge coupled with creative engagement.
Graduates of UCM's music technology program are working around the world. Alumni can be found in recording and mastering studios in Los Angeles, Nashville, Denver, Chicago, and elsewhere. They are working on major international tours and on the audio teams of large corporations, concert venues, theatres, and churches. Alumni have started their own successful businesses as composers, audio engineers, sound designers, and private teachers. Many career paths exist for our graduates, and the broad set of opportunities for music technology study at UCM, along with a focus on developing entrepreneurial thinking, help to prepare our students for a wide variety of possibilities.
This is the degree for you. Music Technology Majors Study:
Audio Engineering and Production
Live Sound Reinforcement
Technology-Based Performance
Audio for Film/Video/Game
Sound Design
Interactive Computer Music
Composition
Acoustics
As a music technology major, you will be required to complete an internship in the field. Preparing you for entry to the industry post-graduation, the internship provides real world experience and an opportunity for you to begin building your professional networks. Internships must be connected to music or audio, but you are encouraged to explore a variety of opportunities. Many intern at recording studios or with live sound reinforcement companies, but others have interned at theatres, videogame companies, television production companies, churches, music publishers, and other industry players. You receive guidance on internships from the program director as well as UCM's Career and Life Design Center, which provides assistance with résumés, cover letters, and interviewing skills. Music technology majors have interned with companies across the United States and in Europe, including the following, among others:
Paris: IRCAM
London: Blow Up Records, Kingston Green Radio
Los Angeles: Bell Sound, Emoto Studios, EMI Music Publishing, TrueTalent, Skip Saylor, Smart Post, 4th Street Recording
New York: Dubway Studios
Nashville: Emerald Recording, Castle Recording, Gotee Records, Dark Horse Studios, Omni Sound
Chicago: Engine Studios, Bosco Productions
Portland: Rex Post Production
Branson: Voices Recording
St. Louis: Technisonic, Phat Buddha, AmpSTL, Clayton Recording, 105.7 The Point
Kansas City: Chapman Recording, Kauffman Center, DSS Productions, BRC Audio Productions, Verizon Wireless Amphitheatre, Black Lodge Studios, Awestruck Productions, MIX93.3FM, 98.9 The Rock
Atlanta: Reach Records
Music Technology majors, like all other music majors, must pass an audition on their primary instrument/voice to be admitted to the degree. As part of the degree program, you will take lessons on your primary instrument/voice. Many music technology majors declare a traditional instrument or voice, but you may choose to declare laptop, turntables, or other technology-based instruments and audition on those as well. For more information on audition requirements for any instrument/voice, including applied technology, please see: Applications, Scholarships, and Auditions.
As a Music Technology major, you can perform in a variety of UCM Department of Music ensembles, appropriate to your primary instruments. For specific ensemble information please visit the Ensembles Page. Those students whose primary instruments are technology-based will perform in UCM's New Technologies Ensemble.
At 1600 square feet, Studio A is at the heart of the UCM Center for Music Technology. Large enough for our student audio engineers to record UCM’s Jazz Ensemble (which we do twice a year), Studio A is one of the top recording facilities for miles in any direction.
Featuring a Rupert Neve 5088 mixing console and a wide variety of digital and analog equipment, this studio is equipped to handle anything from voiceover work and solo instrument recording to very large rock band sessions. In addition, as an All-Steinway School, we have a Steinway D grand piano in the studio.
In this studio, you develop and refine your skills as recording engineers.
Rupert Neve Designs 5088 large-format analog mixing console (32 channels)
Avid Pro Tools 2020 Ultimate
Access Indigo
Antares Auto-Tune
Apple Logic Studio X
Compressor
Cycling ’74 Max
D-Fi
D-Verb
Digidesign Revibe
DINR
Drawmer Dynamics
Eventide Factory and Quadravox
Final Cut Studio
Line6 AmpFarm and EchoFarm
Metric Halo Channel Strip
MOTU MachFive III sampler
Plug-ins: McDSP Channel G
ReverbOne
SMACK!
Sony Oxford
Soundtrack Pro
Wave Mechanics PitchDoctor
Waveburner
Waves Diamond Bundle TDM
Orion 32 HD 64 (HDX, MADI, and USB 3.0 Audio Interface)
API 512c (x 2)
API 525 (x 2)
API 550b (x 2)
Bricasti Design M7 reverb
dbx 386
Drawmer 1969 Mercenary Edition (x 2)
Empirical Labs DerrEsser (x 2)
Empirical Labs EL8-SX stereo Distressor w/ British Mode
Furman HDS6 headphone distribution system
Furman IT-1220 balanced power distributor
Great River MP-500NV
Groove Tubes ViPre
Langevin Dual Vocal Combo (x 2)
Lexicon MPX1 multi-effects unit
Manley Massive Passive
MOTU MIDI Timepiece AV-USB
SSL VHD Preamp (x 2)
SSL XLogic channel (x 2)
SSL XLogic G Buss Compressor
SSL XLogic Preamp (x 2)
TC Electronic M3000 studio reverb
Thermionic Culture Phoenix SB
Thermionic Culture Vulture
Vintech X73i (x 2)
2 x Genelec 8250A
Genelec 7260A subwoofer
Genelec AD9200a converter
2 x Avantone MixCubes alternate monitors
Kurzweil K2600XS 88-key w/sampling, studio/orchestra expansions
Moog Sonic Six and other vintage synthesizers available
Alesis ADAT HD24XR digital recorder (24 tracks)
Alesis Masterlink 9600 CD recording/mastering deck
Ampex ATR200 2-track tape deck
Teac 80-8 8-track tape deck
In Recording Studio B, you develop your audio engineering skills in mixing, editing, and mastering. It is also an excellent studio for tracking individuals or small ensembles.
Solid State Logic Matrix2
Avid Pro Tools 2020 Ultimate
Access Indigo
Antares Auto-Tune 4
Apple Logic Studio X
Cycling ’74 Max
D-Fi
D-Verb
Digidesign Revibe
DINR
Drawmer Dynamics
DUY DSPider
Eventide Factory and Quadravox
Final Cut Pro X
Line6 AmpFarm and EchoFarm
Metric Halo Channel Strip
MOTU Digital Performer 4
MOTU MachFive III sampler
Plug-ins: McDSP Channel G
ReverbOne
SMACK!
Sony Oxford
Wave Mechanics PitchDoctor
Waves Diamond Bundle TDM
Grace Design m802 8-channel remote controlled microphone preamplifier
2 x Avid HD preamps (in HD Omni audio interface)
Avid HD I/O audio interface
Avid HD Omni audio interface
MOTU MIDI Timepiece AV-USB
Furman IT-1220 balanced power distributor
SSL X-Rack 24-input summing buss with Total Recall automation, stereo EQ, and G Buss Compressor
JoeMeek SC2.2 stereo compressor
5 x Genelec 8240A
Genelec 7260A subwoofer
Genelec AD9200a converter
2 x Avantone MixCubes alternate monitors
Kurzweil K2600RS rack w/sampling
studio/orchestra expansions
The UCM Electronic Music Composition studio is a great location for experimental and creative practices! Whether you are working on sound design for video and games, synthesis, audio software design, or experimental works, the sonically isolated studio featuring an 8.1 Genelec ring of monitors is the perfect facility.
Slate Raven MTi2
Avid Pro Tools 2020
Apple Logic Studio X
Ableton Live Suite
Final Cut Pro X
Cycling ’74 Max
Finale notation software
Metric Halo ULN-8 interface
Vintage (1973) Moog System 55 modular analog synthesizer (8 VCO modules, VCFs, VCAs, ring modulator, envelope follower, step sequencer, reverb, noise generators, etc.)
Vintage Moog Sonic Six
8.1 Genelec Ring
Intended primarily for students working on editing, mixing, composing, sound design, and other projects that do not need the extensive capabilities of the larger studios, Studio C offers a 5.1 monitoring system and iMac loaded with the primary software titles used in the music tech program.
Avid Pro Tools 2020
Apple Logic Studio X
Ableton Live Suite with Push 2 controller
Cycling ’74 Max
MOTU MachFive III sampler
Unity 3D Game Engine
5 x Genelec 8030A and Genelec 7250A subwoofer (Studio C)
Monoprice 8-inch Powered Studio Multimedia Monitor Speakers (Studio D)
Apogee Symphony I/O (Studio C)
Focusrite Scarlett 18i20 (Studio D)
Dedicated space for the New Technologies Ensemble and Applied Technology lessons.
Housed in the music technology facilities in Wood Hall, this lab is dedicated for your use as a music technology student. It features five 27” iMac computers loaded with all the software titles we teach in the program. Students in studio courses have 24/7 access to this lab, as well as the other music technology facilities.
The music department keyboard lab provides space for students to learn and practice their piano skills. It houses 13 high-quality digital pianos, in an arrangement that allows piano teachers to easily help each student achieve his or her finest.
The UCM music computer lab is home to 20 current-model iMac computers with a variety of MIDI and audio software installed, including Finale and Logic. Each computer also has an Akai MPK25 keyboard attached. Four of the computers are top-of-the-line 27" iMacs, and serve as music technology priority machines. These computers have additional software installed, including Pro Tools and other software used in courses for music technology majors. The lab also features a SmartBoard, allowing music education majors to gain experience with this important pedagogical technology. The lab is open for regular hours, posted on the door.
Hart Recital Hall is the primary music performance space at UCM. Featuring an outstanding 15-channel diffusion system by Meyer Sound Laboratories (eight Meyer UPJ-1P speakers, three MMXP4 speakers, and four UMS-SM subwoofers mounted in surround) Hart is one of the best performance spaces for electroacoustic music and video in the Midwest.
The selection of microphones available to you at the UCM Center for Music Technology is quite extensive, featuring a wide variety of options, including many high-end models. This mic collection is shared by all of the studio facilities in the Music Technology program, ensuring you access to the perfect microphone for any job.
Our philosophy is to train you on equipment used every day by professionals around the world. The microphones below have been chosen time and time again by engineers, critics, musicians, and educators as “the right mic for the job.” In the UCM Music Technology program, you have access to many of the same microphones you will be using throughout your careers as audio engineers, enabling you to start learning the idiosyncrasies of each mic now.
In addition to microphones, other hardware is available for checkout, including: Roli Seaboard, Livid OhmRGB, QuNeo, Ableton Push 2 (x 6), audio/MIDI interfaces, and various other surfaces and vintage tone modules.
AKG C3000B (x 3)
AKG C414B/ULS (x 2)
AKG D112 (x 2)
Antares AMM-1 microphone modeler
Audio-Technica 4033 (x 2)
Audio-Technica 4047
Audio-Technica 4050CM5
Audix D-2 (x 2)
Audix D-4
Audix D-6
Audix i-5 (x 6)
Audix SCX-1c (x 2)
Audix SCX-1hc
Crown PCC-160 (x 2)
Crown PZM 30D
DPA 3511 stereo mic kit w/4011 pair
Earthworks QTC-1 (x 2)
Earthworks SR69
Earthworks Z30X (x 2)
ElectroVoice Cardiline 642
ElectroVoice RE20
Lawson L47MP
Microtech-Gefell UMT70s (x 2)
Mojave Audio MA300 (x 3)
Neumann KM184 (x 2)
Neumann KMS104
Neumann TLM193
Neumann U87ai (x 2)
Oktava MC012 (x 3)
Royer Labs R-121 (x 2)
Royer Labs SF-24 stereo ribbon mic
Røde NT1 (x 2)
Sennheiser MD421-II (x 5)
Shure Beta 181
Shure Beta 52a
Shure Beta57a (x 2)
Shure KSM44 (x 3)
Shure SM27-c (x 2)
Shure SM57 (x 15)
Shure SM58 (x 2)
Shure SM7b
Shure SM81 (x 2)
Yamaha DM2000v2 96-channel digital mixer (in Hendricks Hall)
PreSonus RM32ai iPad-controlled 32-channel, 18-bus digital mixer (in Hart Recital Hall)
Yamaha DM1000v2 (portable)
Mackie SR32•4-Bus VLZ-Pro (portable)
8 x Meyer UPJ-1P loudspeakers
3 x Meyer MMXP4
4 x Meyer UMS-1P Subs (in Hart Recital Hall)
6 x Mackie/EAW SA1530z
2 x Mackie SR1530 triamped 3-way PA speakers
4 x Yamaha S115IV 2-way PA speakers
4 x Yamaha BR15M stage monitors
7 x JBL EON G2 powered 2-way PA speakers
dbx DriveRack 260
Lexicon MPX110 multi-effects unit
PreSonus ACP-88
PreSonus DEQ624 digital 2-channel 31-band graphic equalizer
Onboard dynamics, effects, and EQ on the DM1000v2
13 x Shure Beta58a ULX-P wireless microphone systems
1 SM98 wireless instrument mic system
2 x WL184 wireless lavalier mic systems
2 x PreSonus Digimax
2 x PreSonus D8B 8-channel mic preamps
2 x Radial D8 8-channel DI
Furman PL-8 power distributor
Dr. Eric Honour
Professor of Music Technology and Composition
Utt 111
Tel: (660) 543-4530