English and Music BA
Year of entry 2027
2026 course information- UCAS code
- QW33
- Start date
- September 2027
- Delivery type
- On campus
- Duration
- 3 Years (Full time)
- Work placements
- Optional
- Study abroad
- Optional
- Typical A-level offer
- AAB (specific subject requirements)
- Typical Access to Leeds offer
- BBB at A Level including English (Language, Literature or Language and Literature) and Music and pass Access to Leeds.
Full entry requirements - Contact
- englishug@leeds.ac.uk
Course overview

English and Music is a diverse degree that allows you to engage with a variety of literature and music spanning a broad range of periods, cultures and themes. The combination of these two subject areas will allow you to develop advanced academic skills including critical analysis, interpretation and research. You'll also have the chance to enhance practical skills in music composition, performance and creative writing.
You'll study a wide range of texts, both fiction and non-fiction, developing an understanding of the relationships between meaning, interpretation and language. You will also have the opportunity to focus on areas of music such as musicology, performance, composition or music technology.
Our impressive range of academic expertise means that you can choose from a variety of optional modules, tailoring your degree to suit your interests and career aspirations. You could study historical literature from Medieval to Victorian, influential writers from Shakespeare to Jane Austen, or exciting new areas such as representations of apocalypse, companion animals in fiction, or global Africa writing. In music, you could choose to explore a musicology topic linked to an area of staff expertise.
Facilities
Our world-class Brotherton Library holds internationally significant books, manuscripts and archives from the 17th century to the present day. Collections include a Shakespeare First Folio, letters and manuscripts from writers such as Charlotte Brontë, Oscar Wilde and Bram Stoker, as well as more recent archives from Tony Harrison, Simon Armitage and Peepal Tree Press, among many others. We continue to add to our holdings to reflect a broad spectrum of literary creativity, with a particular focus on writers associated with the University and the wider region.
The University Library also offers a comprehensive training programme that will enable you to make the most of our extensive library resources.
The School of English has its own print studio, allowing you to learn traditional typesetting and printing techniques and print your own works.
The School of Music has purpose-built practice rooms, extensive rehearsal facilities, studio spaces, a music psychology lab, percussion instruments and plenty of specialist computing facilities. Clothworkers Centenary Concert Hall, also on campus, hosts a varied programme of concerts during term time, all free to students.
The University and School also have a close partnership with Opera North, as well as hosting the Leeds International Pianoforte Competition, and the University of Leeds International Concert Series.
Explore more of our facilities through our 360 virtual experience.
Course details and modules
A joint honours degree allows you to split your time between two subjects, advancing your knowledge and skills in both areas. In English, a range of core and option modules will allow you to develop your academic writing skills and learn the foundations of English studies. In Music, you’ll choose from optional modules covering the role of music in history and culture, composition, theory, research skills, performance or the sciences of music.
Once you’ve established a good knowledge base, you’ll deepen your understanding over the next two years. In English, you’ll take core modules that address literature’s relationship to the environment and to the self while choosing between a wide range of optional modules that might include everything from Arthurian legends to refugee narratives, from Jane Austen novels to African American literature, from Romantic poetry to the digital humanities.
At the same time, in Music you’ll choose from modules covering topics like editing and source studies, aesthetics or music psychology, or you can focus instead on composition or performance. World-leading research staff offer specialist topics in Music in Context modules, or you can experiment with Music in Practice.
You’ll complete an independent research project in your final year in either subject to demonstrate the research, critical and analytical skills you’ve developed.
Course structure
The list shown below represents typical modules/components studied and may change from time to time. Read more in our terms and conditions.
For more information and a full list of typical modules available on this course, please read Mechanical Engineering BEng in the course catalogue.
Year 1
Year 1 compulsory modules:
You are required to take 120 credits, with a minimum of 40 credits in both English and Music.
Reading Between the Lines (20 credits) - This module equips students with a critical vocabulary for sophisticated literary study. Through close analysis of texts from a range of periods, the module introduces the creative, argumentative, and exciting discipline of ‘English Studies’. Students will encounter some of the theories that have shaped the discipline, and in turn, will discover how an English degree might change how they read the world. Guided critical reading, collaboration with peers in group presentations and seminars, and a variety of assignments will introduce students to the different kinds of assessment required later in the degree.
Literature, Culture and Critique (20 credits) - This module explores how literary analysis can help us read the world around us. It encourages students to think about concepts of ‘literature’ and ‘literariness’ and develop a reflective relationship both to their studies and the wider sphere of culture. Engaging with questions of attention, authenticity and the impact of technology on knowledge and the world, the module prepares students for the next stage of their degree, as well as attuning them to a rapidly evolving society, helping them develop essential skills in critical thinking and nuanced communication.
Music and Society (20 credits) - This module supports the development of research and practice-research skills and sets you on the way to being a critical and creative thinker. Rather than offering a chronological overview of music history, the module provides a thematic exploration of music in historical and contemporary, Western and global contexts (including the specific and diverse musical culture of Leeds), and consideration of how musical practice reflects and shapes society. The development of academic research skills is integrated into this exploration, enabling you to engage in detail with the topics covered, and start to understand and address the challenges and arguments to which they give rise.
Materials of Music (20 credits) - This module brings music theory into the twenty-first century. You’ll encounter materials of music and music theory from across the globe in their cultural contexts – from jazz, popular music, and world musics (such as North Indian classical music and Indonesian gamelan) to Western art music. The module does not assume familiarity with Western notation and harmony. Instead, you’ll develop your listening skills to put theory into practice by learning the fundamentals of improvisation across a variety of musical traditions.
Year 1 optional modules:
- Collaborative Performance (20 credits)
- Composition (20 credits)
- Film Music (20 credits)
- The Music Industries (20 credits)
- Creating Music (20 credits)
- Performance Studies (20 credits)
- Studio Recording (20 credits)
- Talking About Pop Music (20 credits)
- Modern Fictions in English (20 credits)
- Race, Writing, Decolonization (20 credits)
- Drama: Text and Performance (20 credits)
- Poetry: Reading & Interpretation (20 credits)
You can also choose to take a Discovery module in another subject offered elsewhere in the University.
Year 2
Year 2 compulsory modules:
Students may select one or both of the following options:
Writing Environments: Literature, Nature, Culture (20 credits) - This module examines what it means to live as human beings on a more-than-human planet. We’ll investigate how literary texts from different times and places have understood the relationship between nature and culture. We’ll address human impacts on the environment in relation to historical phenomena such as colonialism. And we’ll explore the insights that literature can offer at a time of concern about climate change and other environmental issues.
Body Language: Literature and Embodiment (20 credits) - At the heart of this module are big questions such as: what does it mean to be ‘human’? Does technology change who we are? What are the links between the body and the mind? Tackling the relationships between embodiment, language, and representation in texts from different periods and in different forms and genres, the module examines how writers have imagined the relationship between material bodies and literary representation.
Students also take the following compulsory module:
Researching Music (20 credits) - Music is a multi-disciplinary subject, and musical research employs a diverse range of methods. On this module, members of staff draw on their own research projects to support your development of musicological (text-based, archival, analytical), practice-based (creative practice as research, applied research) and empirical (questionnaires, focus groups, interviews) research techniques, leading to you creating a proposal for your own research project.
You may select up to two further English option modules from the list below:
- Life, Love and Death from Chaucer to Marlowe (20 credits)
- Renaissance Literature (20 credits)
- Modern Literature (20 credits)
- Postcolonial Literature (20 credits)
- The World Before Us: Literature 1660-1830 (20 credits)
- Other Voices: Rethinking Nineteenth-Century Literature (20 credits)
- American Words, American Worlds (20 credits)
- Contemporary Literature (20 credits)
And between one and three option modules in music such as:
- Notations of Music (20 credits)
- Creating and Producing Music for Screen Media (20 credits)
- Marketing for Musicians (20 credits)
- Psychology of Listening and Performance (20 credits)
- Music and Politics (20 credits)
- Cultures of Performance (20 credits)
- Aesthetics and Criticism (20 credits)
- Leading an Ensemble (20 credits)
- Collaborative Performance (20 credits)
- Applied Music Technology (20 credits)
- Sound and Media (20 credits)
- Musical Meaning (20 credits)
- Creating Music (20 credits)
- Performance (20 credits)
- Opera North: Opera in Practice (20 credits)
Students also have the option of taking Discovery modules in another subject offered elsewhere in the University.
Year 3
Year 3 compulsory modules:
Final Year Project (40 credits) - This module, in either English or Music, encourages independent, self-directed learning, and provides the culmination to the research strand emphasised in other modules. Working with their supervisor and supported by a programme of lectures and workshops, students pursue their own intellectual interests by designing, defining and creating their own capstone project. Since this might take a number of forms, it fosters a wide variety of responses to the challenges it offers students. Most importantly, it promotes academic creativity by allowing students the space to explore their own intellectual passions.
Year 3 optional modules
Typical options in Music include: :
- Analysing Music (20 credits)
- The Supernatural in Opera (20 credits)
- Music and Postcolonial Politics (20 credits)
- Music as Performance: People, Bodies and Instruments (20 credits)
- Composition (20 credits)
- Ensemble Performance (20 credits)
- Performance (20 credits)
There are a wide range of option modules representing the breadth of English Studies, led by specialists in these areas. Example modules include:
- Bowie, Reading, Writing (20 credits)
- Crime Fiction Stylistics: Crossing Languages, Culture, Media (20 credits)
- Digital Discourse: language, social media, AI (20 credits)
- Fictions of the End: Apocalypse and After (20 credits)
- Global African Writing (20 credits)
- Home Bodies: Companion Animals in Contemporary Literature (20 credits)
- Language of the Media (20 credits)
- Postcolonial London (20 credits)
- Refugee Narratives (20 credits)
- Sex and Suffering in the Eighteenth-Century Novel (20 credits)
- Shakespeare (20 credits)
- Telling Lives: Reading and Writing Family Memoir (20 credits)
Learning and teaching
You’ll benefit from a wide range of teaching and learning styles across your two subjects, allowing you to make the most of your tutors’ expertise. Lectures, seminars, tutorials, and workshops are among the most common methods used, as well as performance classes and ensemble rehearsals depending on the modules you choose.
Our globally recognised research feeds directly into your course and shapes what you learn at Leeds with the latest thinking. You’ll be taught by inspirational academics who are experts in their field and share your passion for your subject.
Independent study is also an important element of your degree, allowing you to build your skills and follow your own interests.
On this course, you’ll be taught by our expert academics, from lecturers through to professors. You may also be taught by industry professionals with years of experience, as well as trained postgraduate researchers, connecting you to some of the brightest minds on campus.
Assessment
We use different types of assessment, including essays coursework, project and composition portfolios, oral presentations, recitals and performances will also be included in some modules. Support will be on hand throughout your time at Leeds – for example, you’ll be able to attend extra classes on exam technique, structuring an essay and public speaking if you need them.
Entry requirements
A-level: AAB including A in English (Language, Literature or Language and Literature) and B in Music.
Other course specific tests:
Normally students will have taken Music, but if you have not (especially if it isn’t taught at your school or college), you should have at least one essay-based subject. If you want to study performance, you’ll need a minimum of ABRSM, Trinity Guildhall or Rockschool Grade 8 merit/grade 7 distinction (or demonstrate that you are of equivalent standard by the time you arrive in Leeds).
Where an applicant is taking the EPQ in a relevant subject this might be considered alongside other Level 3 qualifications and may attract an alternative offer in addition to the standard offer. If you are taking A Levels, this would be ABB at A Level including A in English (Language, Literature or Language and Literature) and B Music and grade A in the EPQ.
Alternative qualification
Access to HE Diploma
Pass diploma with 60 credits overall, including at least 45 credits at level 3, of which 30 credits must be at Distinction and 15 credits at Merit or higher. An interview and a piece of written work may also be required. This course has additional subject specific requirements. Please contact the Admissions Office for more information.
BTEC
We will consider the level 3 QCF BTEC at Subsidiary Diploma level and above in combination with other qualifications. Please contact the Admissions Office for more information.
Cambridge Pre-U
D3, M1, M2 including D3 in English and M2 in Music.
International Baccalaureate
35 points overall with 16 at Higher Level including 6 in English at Higher Level and 5 in Music at Higher Level
Irish Leaving Certificate (higher Level)
H2, H2, H2, H2, H3, H3 including H2 in English and H3 in Music
Scottish Highers / Advanced Highers
Scottish Highers accepted in combination with Advanced Highers. Contact the Admissions Office for more information.
Welsh Baccalaureate
WJEC Level 3 Advanced Skills Baccalaureate Wales
The WJEC Level 3 Advanced Skills Baccalaureate Wales is accepted in place of a third A-level subject at the same grade.
Other Qualifications
European Baccalaureate: 80% including 8.5 in English and 8.0 in Music.
Alternative entry
We’re committed to identifying the best possible applicants, regardless of personal circumstances or background.
Access to Leeds is a contextual admissions scheme which accepts applications from individuals who might be from low income households, in the first generation of their immediate family to apply to higher education, or have had their studies disrupted.
If you live in a neighbourhood where there is low participation in higher education, we may be able to give priority to your application.
Find out more about Access to Leeds and contextual admissions.
Typical Access to Leeds offer: BBB at A Level including English (Language, Literature and Language and Literature) and Music and pass Access to Leeds.
Arts and Humanities with Foundation Year
This course is designed for students whose backgrounds mean they are less likely to attend university (also known as widening participation backgrounds) and who do not currently meet admissions criteria for direct entry to a degree.
The course will give you the opportunity to be taught by academic staff and provides intensive support to enable your development of academic skills and knowledge. On successful completion of your foundation year, you will progress to your chosen degree course. Find out more about the Arts and Humanities with Foundation Year
Alternative Entry Scheme for Mature Students
If you are a mature applicant (over 21) and you don’t have the required A Levels or GCSE English and maths qualifications, you can complete our Alternative Entry Scheme (subject to meeting the eligibility criteria for the scheme). As part of this, you may be asked to take tests in English and maths and to write an essay.
Contact the Lifelong Learning Centre for more information.
International
We accept a range of international equivalent qualifications. For more information contact the School of English admissions team.
International Foundation Year
International students who do not meet the academic requirements for undergraduate study may be able to study the University of Leeds International Foundation Year. This gives you the opportunity to study on campus, be taught by University of Leeds academics and progress onto a wide range of Leeds undergraduate courses. Find out more about International Foundation Year programmes.
English language requirements
IELTS 6.5 overall, with no less than 6.0 in in any component. For other English qualifications, read English language equivalent qualifications.
Improve your English
If you're an international student and you don't meet the English language requirements for this programme, you may be able to study our undergraduate pre-sessional English course, to help improve your English language level.
Fees
UK: £10,050
International: To be confirmed
The amount of tuition fees you pay is based on whether you are classified as a home (UK) or international student. Find out how we assess your fee status.
Tuition fees for UK students
Tuition fees for UK undergraduate students starting in 2026/27 are £9,790 and £10,050 for students starting in 2027/28.
Subsequent years
The UK government sets the maximum tuition fee caps that universities can charge UK students. This means your tuition fee in future academic years will reflect any changes set by the government.
From 2028/29 onwards, tuition fees are likely to increase annually, at least in line with inflation, and may rise further if the government increases the fee cap.
Tuition fees for international students
The international fee applies for each year of full-time study and will remain the same for the duration of your course.
Read more about tuition fees.
Tuition fees for a study abroad or work placement year
If you take a study abroad or work placement year, you’ll pay a reduced tuition fee during this period. For more information, see Study abroad and work placement tuition fees and loans.
Read more about paying fees and charges.
Additional cost information
There may be additional costs related to your course or programme of study, or related to being a student at the University of Leeds. Read more on our living costs and budgeting page.
Scholarships and financial support
If you have the talent and drive, we want you to be able to study with us, whatever your financial circumstances. There is help for students in the form of loans and non-repayable grants from the University and from the government. Find out more in our Undergraduate funding overview.
Scholarships are also available to help fund your degree. Find out more and check your eligibility below:
Applying
Apply to this course through UCAS. Check the deadline for applications on the UCAS website.
Read our guidance about applying.
International students apply through UCAS in the same way as UK students. Our network of international representatives can help you with your application. If you’re unsure about the application process, contact the admissions team for help.
Read about visas, immigration and other information in International students. We recommend that international students apply as early as possible to ensure that they have time to apply for their visa.
Admissions policy
University of Leeds Admissions Policy 2026
This course is taught by
School of English
School of Music
Contact us
School of English Undergraduate Admissions
Email: englishug@leeds.ac.uk
Career opportunities
A degree in English and Music equips you with a diverse range of skills that are valued by employers.
As well as your subject-specific knowledge and performance and composition abilities, you’ll have strong research, critical and analytical skills, and you’ll be able to work independently or in a team. You will develop flexibility in your approach to working, and be able to use digital resources and tools for learning, researching and communicating. You’ll also have the organisation and time management skills that go with handling two different subjects.
Graduates have gone into careers both within and outside of music and the arts. They’ve gone into areas like performance, composition and the creative industries more broadly.
They have also pursued careers in:
- the heritage sector
- marketing
- education
- civil society and not-for-profit organisations
- journalism
- law
- publishing
- media
- business charity work
- civil service
- management consultancy and leadership
Many others have gone on to postgraduate study or further training.
Top 10 most targeted for 10+ years
by the UK's leading employers
The Graduate Market 2026, High Fliers Research
Careers support
At Leeds, we help you to prepare for your future from day one. We have a wide range of careers resources — including our award-winning Employability Team who are in contact with many employers around the country and advertise placements and jobs. They are also on hand to provide guidance and support, ensuring you are prepared to take your next steps after graduation and get you where you want to be.
Employability events — we run a full range of events including careers fairs in specialist areas and across broader industries — all with employers who are actively recruiting for roles.
MyCareer system — on your course and after you graduate, you’ll have access to a dedicated careers portal where you can book appointments with our team, get information on careers and see job vacancies and upcoming events.
Qualified careers consultants — gain guidance, support and information to help you choose a career path. You’ll have access to 1-2-1 meetings and events to learn how to find employers to target, write your CV and cover letter, research before interviews and brush up on your interview skills.
Opportunities at Leeds — there are plenty of exciting opportunities offered by our Leeds University Union, including volunteering and over 300 clubs and societies to get involved in.
We encourage you to prepare for your career from day one. That’s one of the reasons Leeds graduates are so sought after by employers.
The Careers Centre and staff in your faculty provide a range of help and advice to help you plan your career and make well-informed decisions along the way, even after you graduate. Find out more about Careers support.
Study abroad and work placements
Study abroad
On this course you have the opportunity to apply to spend time abroad, usually as an extra academic year. We have over 300 University partners worldwide and popular destinations for our students include Europe, the USA, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, Singapore, Hong Kong, South Africa and Latin America.
Find out more at the Study Abroad website.
Work placements
This programme gives you the opportunity to undertake an industrial placement year as part of the course.
It’s important to note, work placements are not guaranteed. The job market is competitive – and there may be competition for the placement you want. You’ll have to apply the same way you would for any job post, with your CV and, if successful, attend an interview with the organisation.
Our Employability Team will help you every step of the way. They run a number of placement sessions to discuss opportunities and support you with CV writing and interview preparations. Plus, they’ll be there to answer any questions you may have and offer guidance throughout the process, too.
Benefits of a work placement year:
100+ organisations to choose from, both in the UK and overseas
Build industry contacts within your chosen field
Our close industry links mean you’ll be in direct contact with potential employers
Advance your experience and skills by putting the course teachings into practice
Gain invaluable insight into working as a professional in this industry
Improve your employability
Find out more about Industrial placements.