Undergraduate BA(hons) or BSc (Hons) Creative Industries Futures (Music) Drums
Apply nowCourse overview
Our exceptional tutors, all seasoned industry professionals, bring specialised knowledge, qualifications, and hands-on experience – covering everything from developing core technique, musicality, cultural knowledge and understanding how the evolution of technology has become part of our instrument.
What sets us apart is not just the comprehensive curriculum; it’s the personalised one-on-one attention that treats you like an industry professional from day one.
At ACM, we understand that your journey is unique, and that’s why our curriculum is finely tuned for industry-ready skills.
Modules
Modules
ACM’s core validated learning provision. These are the building blocks of your degree, through which you will be assessed, accrue credits, and progress towards your final qualification. ACM’s module design blends the rigour of a high-quality academic framework and up-to-date industry knowledge. Students also develop critical professional competencies as they progress through their programme.
Skills Units
Skills units are ACM’s unique delivery model for up-to-date technical and industry knowledge. These are where you will learn everything you need to excel in your chosen discipline, and inform how you approach your assessments.
Modules
MIF – 401 Music Industry Futures
This module gives students an overview of the music industry, past, present, and future. Students learn about the mechanisms, structures, and practices that drive the music industry and where their specialism sits within it, whilst gaining an understanding of key fundamentals of music business, structure, market, and areas of specialism.
MIF – 402 Music Media and Technology
This module enables students to examine the role of music across a range of media, exploring the way that music, media and technology intersect. It prepares students to understand how their specialist skills will be used in the industries of today and tomorrow.
MIF – 403 Impact and influence of Music
This module enables students to explore the varied impact of music, focusing on its ability to influence audiences, create community connections, and support creative practitioners, as well as the physical and mental impact music may have on individuals and wellbeing.
MIF – 404 Music, Culture and Society
This module enables students to understand the cultural and social aspects of music and to connect the theory with the practice, helping students to learn how to navigate the industry whilst being aware of important sociocultural histories, trends, and issues that affect the music industry. This module encourages you to explore these ideas through discussion and debate, developing your ability to critically explain and justify your work. These skills are essential for defining your identity as a creative practitioner and communicating your values within the industry.
CIF – 405 Preparing for Collaborative Projects
This module enables students to prepare and organise themselves and their work to engage in an interdisciplinary collaborative creative project. Students will work on their discipline-specific skills through a suite of skills units and labs, bringing them to the collaborative project to begin working in communities of practice.
CIF – 406 – Engaging in Collaborative Projects
This module enables students to work collaboratively on a shared project brief. Building on 405, it prompts the students to further develop their skills and begin realising larger cross-disciplinary projects with creatives across music and/or digital arts pathways.
Skills Units
SKU-MUS-01 Technical Development (Vocals)
This unit allows you to develop your skills on your instrument/voice, looking at a range of techniques, styles, and approaches across a range of specialist areas.
SKU-COM-02 Theory, Aural Skills & Critical Listening
This unit teaches you the fundamentals of contemporary popular music theory, ear training and critical listening, enabling you to analyse, understand, and reapply concepts across a spectrum of contemporary popular music examples.
SKU-MUS-02 Hybrid Drumming 1
This is the first-ever Roland and ACM Hybrid Drum Module. This course has been in development for a long time, and with the help of the team at Roland, ACM can bring to the classroom complete access to almost every hybrid drum module that Roland makes. This course is designed with students in mind, so every lesson is very hands-on with all of the equipment. Exploration is encouraged, and this gives ACM students a place to explore to their heart’s content!
SKU-MUS-03 Ensemble Skills
Students will develop as successful ensemble musicians in a wide variety of genres with progressively more difficult repertoire. Chart-reading will be an area of focus and will include performance and arranging skills as part of the ensemble work.
Modules
CIF – 501 – Specialist Collaborative Work
This module enables students to contribute through their chosen specialism to an interdisciplinary collaborative creative industries project, and gives them the opportunity to develop more advanced skills through the realisation of highly specialised projects, driven by industry briefs.
CIF – 502 – Professional Collaborative Work
This module aims to enable students to explore, examine, and review the function of a professional project. Students will work in a professional context to deliver a project in their specialism.
CIF – 503 – Specialist Route Skills
This module enables students to use tools, techniques, and procedures to work toward producing work of a professional standard in their chosen specialism. Students will be able to use relevant academic research and sources to critically review and place their practice in a humanities, phenomenology or cultural framework. Crucially, this module provides students with additional advanced technical skills development, through which they are assessed.
CIF – 504 – Professional Route Skills
This module enables students to create a portfolio of professional, specialist work demonstrating transferable skills to meet sector expectations. Students will be able to use relevant academic research and sources to critically review and place their practice in a humanities, phenomenology or cultural framework. Here, the emphasis on specific skills remains; however is realised in a broader context.
Skills Units
SKU-MUS-04 Technical Development 2
This unit follows on from technical development 1, providing a greater depth of development into high-level techniques needed in the development of instrumental/vocal expertise.
SKU-MUS-05 Second Instrument (Keys, Guitar, Drums, Bass, Songwriting)
This unit allows students to study an instrument different to their first study, including keyboards, vocals, and guitar.
SKU-MUS-06 Session Styles
This Skills Unit explores ten contrasting musical styles that are essential for the session musician and ensemble player, arranger, composer and songwriter to know. Each topic will contain an overview of the historical, cultural and musical development of the style. This will provide a more in-depth understanding, appreciation and acknowledgement of the cultural and societal environment in which these developed as “…music is a cultural practice whose production and reception processes are inextricably rooted in the cultural environment within which it evolves (Bennett and Waksman, 2015). This will open the door to and encourage a more sensitive and authentic approach to playing these styles. Though these styles are contrasting, you will soon begin to discover the various threads that weave their way through and into the various styles which help create the diverse tapestry that is the contemporary music industry.
SKU-MUS-07 Improvisation
This unit aims to develop and consolidate students’ existing improvisational technique as well as melodic, rhythmic, and harmonic vocabulary, and its applications in the practical context as a lead performer and as an accompanist. Students will be required to understand and apply improvisatory techniques in a variety of contemporary styles in simulated musical session environments.
SKU-MUS-09 Hybrid Drumming 2
This unit deals with the concept of hybrid drumming, which is the incorporation of acoustic and electronic percussion instruments into one overall drum set or integrated instrument. The Hybrid Drummer is an industry standard now in many genres, and the integrated use of electronic percussion products confined with the traditional acoustic kit instruments requires some rethink of technical and conceptual elements, but can enhance the creative practice of a performer and is now required in today’s evolving music industry practice in many performance and recording environments.
Modules
CIF – 601 – Critical Review
This module includes a research or practical project that critically reviews one or more current issues, constraints or practices that impact your specialism and wider creative industries, the application of your specialism to other industry sectors or broader cultural
or workforce issues relating to your specialism and the creative cultural industries. Students will be able to use relevant academic research and sources to critically review and place their practice in a humanities, phenomenology or cultural framework.
CIF – 603 – Leadership and CPD
This module enables students to engage with continuing professional development and to review and develop their leadership skills in different contexts, whilst also building and maintaining a specialist skills development plan for their chosen specialism.
CIF – 602 – Leading a Professional Collaborative Project
This module aims to enable students to build their leadership and professional skills through an interdisciplinary collaborative professional project. It acts as the student’s final capstone project, and is driven by the student, culminating in a final performance, showcase, professional body of work, or a combination thereof, to a high professional standard.
CIF – 604 – Professional Portfolio
This module enables students to create a portfolio and digital presence that includes course output, work experience, freelance work or volunteering targeted to professional opportunities or further study. Through the delivery of their assessment, students are invited to position their work through the lens of industry, creating a portfolio of work and an accompanying plan for professional development and progression in their chosen field.
Skills Units
SKU-MUS-11 Technical Development 3
The further study of technical development within each instrumental and vocal discipline, which deals with developing greater technical facility and control with a view towards performing more demanding performances and recording repertoire. Different genres will be used as examples for technical development, and the requisite conceptual and theoretical issues that go along with these will be investigated from a technical development perspective with exercises and analysis of industry-relevant material.
SKU-MUS-13 Hybrid Drumming 3
Description: This module will deal with the more advanced applications of hybrid drumming practice with the introduction of many technical requirements designed to perform live and in the studio within a variety of genres, integrating electronic and acoustic practice. More advanced programming, sound creation, technical aspects that interact with acoustic and electronic instruments, and more nuanced performance issues, such as mixing both electronic and acoustic sounds, new sound creations, and the more elaborate live performance and music direction elements that are common within today’s hybrid drumming practice. Many elements, such as triggers and auxiliary hand percussion, will be introduced within the electronic medium.
SKU-MUS-17 The Freelance Musician
This unit serves as the preparatory unit for the critical review project in level 6. Students will explore a range of topics and guided research, critically evaluating the academic work of others.
SKU-MUS-15 Studio Musician Practices
This is focused on recording technologies; it is strongly advised that you work with your recording equipment to apply as many of the tasks and concepts as you can. A basic recording can be put together with the following:
- Computer
- Recording software (Logic, ProTools, Ableton, etc.)
- Digital Audio Workstation (DAW)
- Microphone and lead
You may also choose to use ACM studio facilities to assist you with your tasks.
CIF – 701 – Professional Practice Frameworks
This module enables students to demonstrate a comprehensive understanding of the professional sector-specific expertise required for a creative industries profession. Students here reflect on their own specialist and professional experiences and map to professional standard frameworks. There is the opportunity to engage with additional external qualifications through this module.
CIF – 702 – Applied research
This module enables students to evidence academic expertise in an applied research
context. Students will be able to use relevant academic research to drive their project, over two terms, where they will submit a final portfolio of work. Some examples include: professional portfolios, thesis, creative portfolios, live performances, creative artefacts and products.
CIF – 703 – Ideas into action
Within this module, students will investigate the project management processes needed to develop a project from concept to release, developing their own craft into project(s) which align with their chosen area of study.
CIF – 704 – Making connections
This module enables students to identify, inform, and establish a network of peers and relevant industry and community contacts to develop opportunities and advocacy in key organisations in the local community, research organisations, charities and the creative industries, as well as connect with communities of investors.
Fees & Entry requirements
- Minimum age 17+ for Foundation Learners and 18+ for our Accelerated Degree Courses.
- You will be expected to hold A Levels or Equivalent Level 3 Qualification(s) worth 104 UCAS Points or more **
- You will be expected to hold a GCSE in English Language / Literature at C grade/ 4 (or higher)
- Suitability for the programme will also be assessed through an audition. View audition guides
- Fees & financing information can be found on our Fees page
- Term dates can be found on the Term Dates page
If you do not have A-Levels and require moderation, please speak to our admissions team to explore the options available to you.
This course is presented in conjunction with our partners Middlesex university and is subject to the regulations and policies detailed here.
Progression
Contact our Admissions team to discuss the possibility of switching to an Integrated Masters program or explore a range of our Postgraduate programs here.
Faculty & Visiting Professionals
Joe Yoshida
Diploma Lead
Toby Drummond
Senior Lecturer in Performance & Route Lead for Drums
Ben Scott
Senior Lecturer in Performance
Tobias Alexander
Lecturer in Performance
Student success
Afrika Green is a talented drummer who graduated from The Academy of Contemporary Music (ACM). With a strong passion for music and a focus on drumming, Afrika honed her skills at ACM and now has had the amazing opportunity of drumming for big names such as The Pet Shop Boys, High Contrast, Becky Hill and Fleur East.
Alex Torjussen is a highly accomplished UK-based freelance drummer with credits working with renowned artists like Niall Horan, James Morrison, and Mika. His extensive touring experience has taken him across the globe, performing in a diverse range of venues from intimate clubs to massive arenas and stadiums. Alex has played on esteemed platforms such as Saturday Night Live, The Late Late Show with James Corden, The Tonight Show with Jimmy Fallon, MTV EMA Awards, The Voice, KCRW, and has graced iconic venues including Madison Square Garden, Red Rocks Amphitheatre, The Royal Albert Hall, Wembley Arena, and performed at prestigious festivals such as Glastonbury Festival, Newport Folk Festival, Lollapalooza, and more. Additionally, he has recorded with various artists and producers at renowned studios including Abbey Road, British Grove, RAK, The Village Los Angeles, Air Studios, Konk, The Church, and Maida Vale.




