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    1. Preparatory training
    2. PreCollege Music
    3. Profile Classical Music
    More: Profile Classical Music

    Modules PreCollege Classic

    • Modultafel PreCollege Musik - Klassik instrumental
    • Modultafel PreCollege Musik - Klassik vokall
    • Major subject

      Lessons in the major subject aim to create the basis for the artistic creation of a stylistically broad musical repertoire based on the potential of young students. The focus is on the acquisition of technical skills, the development of artistic personality and the ability to reflect in depth.

      The lessons are based on the individual's different previous training, skills and knowledge, with the aim of successfully passing the entrance examination for a place at a state music university.

    • Arrangement

      Arrangement is intended to familiarize students with the disciplines of instrumentation, orchestration and arrangement. Great importance is placed on developing some knowledge of the history of and technique associated with transposition, score arrangements, notation techniques, how to create percussion parts and the possibilities offered by various arrangement processes. Among other things, this improves students’ ability to place musical works in some kind of stylistic and historical context.

      Dates / Duration

      SAT 07.03.2026 / 14:00 – 17:00 

      SO 15.03.2026 / 10:30 – 13:30

      SUN 22.03.2026 / 14:00 - 17:00

      SUN 29.03.2026 / 10:00 - 13:00

      12 lessons

      Head

      Niko Seibold

    • Recording Techniques and Producing

      This module focuses on the possibilities offered by sound technology during concerts or in rehearsal rooms and on producing music too. It is also concerned with technical aspects of what is possible in recording terms and the various ways of processing audio signals on a computer. Producing music using virtual instruments, samples and sound design enables people to record things themselves and prepare material for various digital media. It also gives people the technical tools they need to compose music and write songs and makes them more aware of the aesthetics of sound.

      Dates / Duration

      SUN 31.08.2025 / 09:00 – 13:00

      SUN 14.09.2025 / 09:00 – 13:00 

      SUN 28.09.2025 / 09:00 – 13:00 

      12 lessons

      Heads

      Luca Burkhalter / Simon Huber

    • Performance Skills

      If you are a professional musician, you will often find yourself in front of an audience. Your performance, however, is not just about the music you make (your core skills), but also how you step out in front of the audience, how you greet them, how you introduce the next piece and how you respond to applause. And these are precisely the things we practise together, under no pressure, so you can acquire or build on these skills too. It is a case of wanting to make an impression as opposed to simply making music.

      We practise your live performances in a playful manner, play out various scenarios and give you tips, feedback and background information about your presentation style. All this makes you more conscious about your public performances, improves your performance skills and takes you one step further down the road towards a professional career in music.

      Dates / Duration

      SUN 15.02.26 / 9:00 - 17:00 Uhr

      7 lessons

      Head

      Tatjana Sebben

    • Bachelor's Semester Choir

      The Bachelor's Semester Choir at ZHdK, besides providing a grounding in choral literature, gives students a chance to train their singing skills, their voice and their listening skills. They also learn how to make music with others and interpret musical texts. Singing in a choir stretches singers both intellectually and emotionally and includes a social dimension too (working towards a joint endeavour, participating in something with real commitment, showing enough consideration to step back when required, making new contacts, etc.). Young students at the PreCollege are very welcome to join the Bachelor's Semester Choir. The Bachelor's Semester Choir rehearses every Tuesday during the university semester from 11:30 to 13:00 h and devises and puts on a cappella choral programmes or programmes for choirs, soloists and orchestras.

      Dates / Duration

      Tuesdays, 11:30–13:00 

      Rehearsing dates as stated in the rehearsing schedule (subject to change).

      54 lessons

      Heads

      Markus Utz / Ernst Buscagne.

    • Sight-reading and Accompaniment

      Sight-reading and Accompaniment is aimed at pianists. It is concerned with the detection of formal, musical and harmonic connections, chord structures and awareness of the strategies needed to read a musical text and reproduce it on the piano. The module also enables students to discover and use various sight-reading strategies, to develop their own sight-reading strategy and to work on general sight-reading skills as well as various techniques for piano accompaniment. Other aspects include the ability to reduce a piano piece (or the art involved in this), the use of an orchestra to reproduce sections of piano music, sensitive and empathetic accompaniment and the sheer pleasure that accompaniment can bring. Collaborations with different instrumentalists or singers are also explored. Students need to train their sight-reading skills (prima vista) outside the module itself too.

      Dates / Duration

      SAT 08.11.2025 / 17:00 - 18:00

      SAT 20.12.2025 / 12:00 - 13:00

      SAT 21.02.2026 / 17:00 - 18:00 

      Further lessons are arranged directly with the lecture

      10 lessons

      Head

      Mathias Clausen 

    • Computer Music – Sound Experimentation

      We come across electronic sounds/music all the time, be it in films, audio plays and games or even online. But what exactly is computer music? And what is electroacoustic music? We try to shed some light on these issues with the presentation and tour of the studio and laboratory at the 'Institute for Computer Music and Sound Technology' (ICST) at ZHdK and by looking at its current research projects. We also offer a brief historical outline of the topic of 'Computer Music and Sound Experimentation' and listen to a few important pieces/examples. The second part of this module focuses on giving students a chance to conduct their own practical experiments with sound on a computer (sound experimentation, workshop). We learn about instruments (software) used for the analysis, processing and composition of sound and their practical applications. The aim is to give students some guidance and intuitive practical experience of working with sound on a computer for compositional purposes.

       

      Dates / Duration

      SUN 09.11.2025 / 17:30 - 19:30 

      SAT 29.11.2025 / 17:30 - 19:30

      SUN 07.12.2025 / 16:30 - 18:30 

      6 lessons

      Head

      Johannes Schütt

    • Conducting

      The course explains various aspects of orchestral conducting to students, based on practical example, and gives them the opportunity to practise these. They include baton technique, i.e. the basic conducting gestures, fermatas, techniques involving the left hand, independence of the arms, dynamics, changes of time, changes of tempo, different musical styles, posture and expressions, bowing techniques, etc., depending on what is possible or required. The main focus is on actually conducting within the group as opposed to any theory taught. Students work with short examples from the concert repertoire as well as special exercises and longer sections of symphonic, classical-romantic repertoire or even contemporary works. Tuition is normally delivered with two pianos or with the help of a small ensemble.

      Dates / Duration

      SUN 14.12.2025 / 14:00 – 17:00 

      SUN 11.01.2026 / 15:00 – 18:00 

      SUN 22.02.2026 / 15:00 – 18:00 

      SUN 01.03.2026 / 15:00 – 18:00 

      SUN 15.03.2026 / 14:00 – 17:00 

      SUN 29.03.2026 / 14:00 - 17:00 

      18 lessons

      Head

      Richard Kogima

    • Complementary Subject: Piano

      Piano as a complementary subject is strongly recommended so students can develop the skills to specialize in music theory and extended cadences on a keyboard. The idea is to learn easy to difficult works from the piano literature.

    • Opening event for PreCollege Music at ZHdK

      The opening event for the academic year for PreCollege Music at ZHdK is the first event involving all young students across the various profiles. In addition to the up-front information provided about the intranet, access options and authorizations, options associated with the Campus Card, ITZ, MIZ, security advice, practice rooms, tutorials, concerts, reservations, the Toni-Areal campus, certificates of enrolment, etc., the Campus Card is also handed to students in person.

      Dates / Duration

      SAT 23.08.2025 / 9:15 - 10:45 

      1.5 hours

      Head

      Xavier Pfarrer

    • Classical Music Aural Training / Solfège

      Classical Music Aural Training/Solfège offers comprehensive and targeted preparation for the oral part of the Classical Music admissions examination (in relation to Music Theory) at a university-level institution specializing in music.

      The aim is to make students familiar and comfortable (in terms of their listening and singing skills) with all intervals, triads and tretrads. Students also learn about the singing of parts from choral compositions by Johann Sebastian Bach, the singing of atonal sequences in the bass and violin key and the written and physical representation of rhythms.

      The focus therefore is on listening to and singing intervals, major and minor scales, church music scales and triads and tetrads in all pitches, atonal and tonal melody dictation (including base tonal dictation with chord progressions), cadences and chord progressions in major and minor on the piano, solmization, singing tonal and atonal melodies, elementary Lied accompaniment and cadence variations on the piano and reading, beating time and voicing in relation to binary and ternary rhythms.

      This module requires students to undertake intensive and regular training at home between individual module sessions.

      Dates / Duration

      SAT 23.08.2025 / 15:00 – 17:00

      SAT 06.09.2025 / 13:00 – 15:00 

      SUN 21.09.2025 / 13:00 – 15:00 

      SAT 04.10.2025 / 13:00 – 15:00 

      SAT 25.10.2025 / 13:00 – 15:00

      SAT 08.11.2025 / 13:00 – 15:00

      SAT 22.11.2025 / 13:00 – 15:00

      SAT 06.12.2025 / 13:00 – 15:00

      SAT 10.01.2026 / 13:00 – 15:00 

      SAT 17.01.2026 / 13:00 – 15:00

      SAT 31.01.2026 / 13:00 – 15:00 

      SAT 21.02.2026 / 13:00 – 15:00

      SAT 14.03.2026 / 13:00 – 15:00 

      SAT 28.03.2026 / 13:00 – 15:00 

      SAT 11.04.2026 / 13:00 – 15:00

      30 lessons

      Head

      Fabian Künzli / Christian Schlumpf

    • Shadowing

      Subject to the agreement of the Head of PreCollege Music, there are options to shadow lecturers at ZHdK and assist them with their tuition.

    • Improvisation

      Participants learn free improvisation in small groups. They are trained to work on and refine their posture and attitude in terms of actions and responses and their ability to listen to and memorize things. They develop an ability to control musical processes and formally create coherent pieces in an ensemble setting. They assume responsibility for their own musical work and develop an anxiety-free approach to risk, while taking pleasure in playing and experimenting. Participants acquire an initial repertoire of material and playing strategies. They increase their powers of concentration and alertness. They understand the importance of openness in terms of their posture and attitude (while playing) and improve their ability to communicate as musicians. Another important aspect is how students broaden their skills in terms of listening analytically and get wider exposure to new and contemporary music.

      The course is very practical, and a lot of music is made. Students are given the opportunity to discuss and analyse the music played as well. Coherent pieces are formally improvised in small groups as a kind of ‘instant composing’ exercise. Students embed the three key creative questions of ‘what, when and how’ into their own playing through practice. Many different facets of improvisation are explored, from tonal and atonal to abstract (including noise-based) atmospheres, and musical material, from miniatures to larger formal sequences, is played with freedom and developed with a genuine sense of joy.

      The dates will be arranged directly with the improvisation teacher after the groups have been assigned.

      8 lessons

      Head
      Niko Seibold

    • Tutorials

      Attendance at tutorials provides students with an ideal opportunity to showcase what they have learned and practise auditions under specific conditions – as well as developing the ability to give substantive feedback informed by attentive listening. In a positive environment, feedback gives PreCollege Music students a chance to further their own personal and artistic development as they listen. Regular attendance at tutorials trains an aptitude for self-critical perception and helps students develop their individual performance skills. Tutorials give young students across all profiles a platform to perform and train as performers. At every admissions examination, artistic presentation is deemed to be a very important or even crucial aspect.

      Dates / Duration

      FRI 26.09.2025 / 17:00 – 20:00 

      FRI 24.10.2025 / 17:00 – 20:00 

      FRI 21.11.2025 / 17:00 – 20:00 

      FRI 12.12.2025 / 17:00 – 20:00 

      FRI 09.01.2026 / 17:00 – 20:00 

      FRI 06.02.2026 / 17:00 – 20:00 

      FRI 27.02.2026 / 17:00 – 20:00 

      FRI 13.03.2026 / 17:00 – 20:00 

      FRI 20.03.2026 / 17:00 – 20:00 

      FRI 17.04.2026 / 17:00 – 20:00 

      30 lessons

      Head

      Xavier Pfarrer

    • Body Consciousness and Health

      It is critically important for all musicians to have some awareness of how certain sequences of movements and posture while playing or singing can damage their health. These days, an understanding of the physiological aspects of music and the importance of exercise and sport, including some knowledge of physical and relaxation exercises, is a very important part of being a musician. Physical training and health promotion, mental training, diet, posture, breathing, luxuries (e.g. alcohol and tobacco) or medicines are serious matters from a health perspective.

      Students try out and explore their own personal approach to looking after their individual physical and mental well-being and are helped by finding out the kind of advice available at ZHdK.

      Dates / Duration

       SUN 18.01.2026 / 10:00 - 17:00 

      6 Units

      Head

      Lisa Gretler / Regula Mahler

      Comment

      Bring comfortable clothes and sneakers.

    • Cultural and Musical History

      This module looks at the history of creativity. But rather than plotting a timeline, the focus is on certain viewpoints or events which left a significant mark in terms of culture, history and society. For example, the issue of the role played by music and art in various political conflicts is examined, and an attempt is made to establish where states like ecstasy or asceticism fit in.

      Students are trained to develop a nuanced perception of cultural events and shown where parallels exist or develop between events and works of art – parallels which may be obscured with a historicist or genre-based approach. The experience acquired is intended to help students understand the present world and reflect upon and place their own creative output in relation to it.

      Dates / Duration

      SAT 23.08.2025 / 18:00 –  20:00 Uhr

      SUN 07.09.2025 / 13:30 – 15:30 Uhr

      SAT 20.09.2025 / 13:00 – 15:00 Uhr

      SUN 26.10.2025 / 10:00 – 12:00 Uhr

      SUN 09.11.2025 / 10:00 – 12:00 Uhr

      SUN 23.11.2025 / 10:00 – 12:00 Uhr

      SUN 07.12.2025 / 14:30 – 16:30 Uhr

      14 lessons

      Head

      Seren Stevenson

    • Lied/Chanson/Aria/Recitative

      This module is targeted at singers from the Classical Music profile. Lieder, chansons, aria and recitatives from the students' own repertoires are sung with accompaniment. New works are learned in consultation with the students’ own lecturers for their major subject.

      It is a case of deepening and extending students’ own repertoires and extending their skills as interpreters or performers. This will enable them to interpret things in different styles and develop a feeling for nuance in terms of vocalization. Students also play together with others, get a feel for research, develop a curiosity for the unknown and start to recognize their strengths and limitations (and how to accommodate these). They learn, too, how to grasp things with precision and how to use their social skills in rehearsal and performance situations.

      While students are learning individual works, they also take a deeper look at issues like the historical and stylistic background, composers and poets, the text itself and the situation as well as synopsis, staging, atmosphere, phrasing, intonation and tonal colour. Various learning techniques are applied, and students work on expression. Exercises in playing together are showcased, various forms of interpretation and presentation are tried out and exercises highlighting different expressive possibilities are offered too. Another aspect of this module is the concert held, which gives the public an insight into the workshop.

      Dates / Duration

      SA 08.11.2025 / 15:00 – 17:00 Uhr

      SA 20.12.2025 / 10:00 - 12:00 Uhr

      SA 17.01.2026 / 15:00 - 17:00 Uhr

      SO 25.01.2026 / 10:00 - 12:00 Uhr

      SA 21.02.2026 / 15:00 - 17:00 Uhr

      SA 14.03.2026 / 15:00 - 17:00 Uhr

      SA 28.03.2026 / 15:00 - 17:00 Uhr

      14 Lessons

      Head

      Mathias Clausen

    • Master classes and encounters with artists

      ZHdK offers students the possibility to attend Master Classes and meet renowned artists. PreCollege Music students can also benefit from this offer.

    • Mentorship

      Students in PreCollege Music with an external major have the opportunity to work together with a mentor from ZHdK. The mentorship will be clarified during a discussion with the Head of PreCollege Music.

    • Contemporary Music

      This module makes a case for understanding the urgency of art and tries to spark students' curiosity and appetite for getting to grips with contemporary music. It also picks up on the beauty and urgency of current art music, promotes students’ ability to listen with an open mind and familiarizes them with some of the key aspects of current art music. Students reflect on the difference between ‘utility music’ and art music and learn about various principles of composition, besides listening to current music.

      Dates / Duration

      SUN 26.10.2025 / 12:30 - 15:30 

      SUN 09.11.2025 / 14:30 - 17:30

      SUN 30.11.2025 / 09:00 - 12:00 

      SUN 13.12.2025 / 14:00 - 17:00 

      12 lessons

      Head

      Olav Lervik

    • Music notation Dorico Classic

      General knowledge of notating music with Dorico, rules of notation and their application with Dorico in different styles (especially classical music) will be taught. Setting up sheet music (layout) and exporting projects (graphics, PDF, audio) are also covered. This module is intended for students in the profile classical music.

      It focuses on topics such as an introduction to the basic rules of music notation, notation with keyboard, keyboard, chords, octaves, voices, rhythm, n-tuplets, articulation, dynamics, technique, expression, polymetrics and rhythm, jazz chords, patterns, repetitions, complex notation (hidden objects, free notation, graphics), layout (voices and score), keyboard shortcuts, playing and pre-mixing or exporting projects (graphics, PDF, audio etc.).

      Dates / Duration

      SAT 30.08.2025 / 10:00 - 12:00

      SAT 13.09.2025 / 10:30 - 13:30 

      SAT 27.09.2025 / 11:30 – 13:30

      8 lessons

      Head

      Joel Schoch

    • Music and AI - new horizons

      In this course we explore the connection between music and artificial intelligence (AI). In three sessions and an in-depth workshop, we will focus on the development of AI in the music industry, explain AI basics and discuss its influence on musical aesthetics and composition. The participants actively engage with the topic through practical exercises.

      Dates / Duration

      SUN 24.08.2025 / 12:00 - 14:00 Uhr

      SUN 07.09.2025 / 16:00 – 18:00 Uhr

      SUN 09.11.2025 / 12:30 – 14:30 Uhr

      SUN 23.11.2025 / 13:00 – 15:00 Uhr

      SA 13.12.2025 / 17:00 - 19:00 Uhr

      10 lessons

      Head

      Philippe Kocher

    • PreCollege Concerts

      The musical/instrumental or vocal work students do is all about developing their individual artistic presentation skills. And during the year or more they spend preparing (before taking music studies at degree level), it is vitally important that they practise these skills as a matter of course and make them part of their own artistic identity. Artistic presentation, or concert craft, is something which can be learned too, and what can be learned has to be practised.

      Besides the numerous tutorials in house, PreCollege Music at ZHdK offers various opportunities to appear in public during concerts on the Toni-Areal campus. These are intended to familiarize students with appearing in public as part of their artistic activity.

      Dates / Duration

      SAT 22.11.2025 / 17:00 

      SAT 17.01.2026 / 15:30 

      SAT 14.02.2026 / 17:00

      SAT 14.03.2026 / 17:00 

      SAT 18.04.2026 / 17:00 Uhr

      15 lessons

      Head

      Xavier Pfarrer

    • Rhythm and Movement

      Working on a feel for pulse and representing and writing out a wide variety of rhythms are some of the core aspects of making music – and are also key components of this particular module. Topics such as pulse exercises (in various basic steps), binary, ternary, polyrhythmics and metrics are intensively explored in practice, and students are encouraged to build on these at home. Rhythmic patterns involving percussion instruments, body percussion or the voice are converted into sequences of movement. Sequences of movements are then given rhythm and recorded, and rhythm dictations are performed. Arrangements for several parts are devised with the voice and percussion instruments, and rhythms and grooves are analysed.

      Dates / Duration

      SUN 16.11.2025 / 10:00 – 14:00

      SUN 07.12.20245/ 10:00 – 14:00

      SUN 11.01.2026 / 10:00 – 14:00

      SUN 01.02.2026 / 10:00 – 14:00

      SUN 01.03.2026 / 10:00 – 14:00

      SUN 08.03.2026 / 10:00 – 14:00

      24 lessons

      Head

      Thomas Viehweger

    • Sinfonietta ZHdK

      This orchestra, which puts on symphonies and chamber music, was founded in the summer of 2015. It gives young students on the PreCollege Music programme the chance to rehearse and play concerts as part of their orchestral training along with students from the Department of Music at ZHdK. The young students get some early contact with the people they will be studying with later, as well as benefiting from an inspiring musical environment and professional rehearsal work with outstanding conductors and soloists (giving them the chance to work at an extraordinarily high level in artistic terms).

      The Sinfonietta (formerly PreCollege Orchestra Zurich) puts together concert programmes two - three times a year – over roughly four weekends each. An additional tour (such as China in 2016) or guest performances are also possible.

      Projects 2025/26

      Project 1

      Rehearsals: 12.10. - 18.10.2025
      Concerts: 17.10.2025 and 18.10.2025

      Project 2

      tba.

      Interested and enthusiastic young orchestra musicians from outside ZHdK are also very welcome to work with Sinfonietta. Rehearsals are held at any time.

      Contact: Xavier Pfarrer, Head PreCollege Music ZHdK, xavier.pfarrer@zhdk.ch 

    • Songwriting Pop

      The wide, creative field between text, harmony, melody and production is the backbone of Western pop culture. The search for hooks, outstanding ideas, and unheard twists is what engages songwriters, producers, and musicians around the world in their everyday work.

      In the course we work on the content and message of lyrics, on arrangements, chord progressions and sketchy productions on the instrument or on the computer. In addition to the collection of working materials, playful exercises and analytical discussions, there is plenty of time for working on your own songs and ideas.

      In the relaxed exchange of the Songwriting Circle we play songs for each other and face the feedback of the group.

      Dates / Duration

      SUN 31.08.2025 / 13:30 – 16:30 Uhr

      SUN 14.09.2025 / 13:30 – 16:30 Uhr

      SUN 28.09.2025 / 13:30 – 16:30 Uhr

      SUN 26.10.2025 / 16:00 – 19:00 Uhr

      SUN 02.11.2025 / 09:00 – 12:00 Uhr

      SUN 23.11.2025 / 15:00 – 18:00 Uhr

      SAT 24.01.2026 / 17:00 – 20:00 Uhr

      21 lessons

      Head

      Luca Burkhalter

    • Special projects

      Within the framework of the PreCollege Music, yet outside of the regular training, special thematic projects are offered, both at home and abroad. In principle, these projects are open to all young people at the PreCollege Music, provided they have the appropriate skills. The special projects are supported by foundations in order to keep individual costs as low as possible. Nevertheless, possible additional costs that are not included in the tuition fees must be expected.

    • Voice and Breathing

      This module helps students develop an understanding of the organic requirements for voice production, of musculoskeletal structures involved in sequences of movements and of sound production and modulation possibilities. The skills acquired are regarded as providing an introduction and a general overview, with students undertaking independent study or seeking further information with a view to broadening their knowledge of the topics. The content relating to anatomy and physiology concentrates on the larynx, vocal tract, thorax, diaphragm and lungs.

      Dates / Duration

      SUN 16.11.2025 / 14:30 - 18:30 

      4 lessons

      Head

      PD Dr. med. Louisa Traser

    • Scene /Music/Stage

      The Stage Presence module is essentially concerned with developing a relaxed attitude to appearing on stage and a convincing stage persona. Limitations are identified, and people learn how to deal with them. Students’ own strengths and weaknesses – in terms of situations on stage – are identified, and they explore a wide range of options for expressing themselves and handling situations in front of an audience. Students are given instructions, tasks and feedback and work on their social skills in rehearsal and performance situations. And when these are teamed with an ability to observe and learn (something else the module teaches), students become more aware of how they present themselves and are better able to coordinate music, the body, breath, text, rhythm and how they think about appearing on stage.

      The emphasis is on exploring and practising perception of space, individual presence and interaction with ensemble members and the public or with space and props. There are various exercises for refreshing attitudes and energy levels, while stage-based improvisation exercises are used to highlight the interface between singing and playing. Playful and coordinated tasks are devised with a view to staging simple works from the students’ own repertoires.

      Dates / Duration

      SAT 04.10.2025 / 15.00 – 17.00

      SAT 25.10.2025 / 15:00 - 17:00 

      SAT 15.11.2025 / 12:00 - 14:00 

      SAT 29.11.2025 / 10:00 - 12:00 

      SAT 13.12.2025 / 11:00 - 13:00

      SAT 24.01.2026 / 12:00 - 14:00 

      SAT 14.02.2026 / 12:00 - 14:00 

      SAT 07.03.2026 / 12:00 - 14:00 

      SAT 21.03.2026 / 12:00 - 15:00 

      20 lessons

      Head

      Alexandre Beuchat, Jeroen Engelsman

    • Classical Music Composition and Analysis

      This module provides comprehensive and targeted preparation for the written part of the Classical Music admissions examination (in relation to Music Theory) at a university-level institution specializing in music.

      The aim is to make students familiar and comfortable (in terms of their writing, listening and descriptive skills) with triads and tetrads and their inversions in all keys, with diatonic melodies and with rhythms of various time signatures in the form of dictation and sight-reading. They are also encouraged to listen to and write pieces for four parts using arrangements involving accidentals.

      To this end, students are trained in formal and stylistic aspects of appreciating and analysing various musical works from the Renaissance to the present and “placing” them accordingly.

      Dates / Duration

      SAT 23.08.2025 / 11:00 – 14:00

      SAT 06.09.2025 / 9:00 – 12:00

      SUN 21.09.2025 / 9:00 – 12:00

      SAT 04.10.2025 / 9:00 – 12:00

      SAT 25.10.2025 / 9:00 – 12:00

      SAT 08.11.2025 / 9:00 – 12:00

      SAT 22.11.2025 / 9:00 – 12:00

      SAT 06.12.2025 / 9:00 – 12:00

      SAT 10.01.2026 / 9:00 – 12:00

      SAT 17.01.2026 / 9:00 – 12:00

      SAT 31.01.2026 / 9:00 – 12:00

      SAT 21.02.2026 / 9:00 – 12:00

      SAT 14.03.2026 / 9:00 – 12:00

      SAT 28.03.2026 / 9:00 – 12:00

      SAT 11.04.2026 / 9:00 – 12:00

      45 lessons

      Head

      Fabian Künzli / Christian Schlumpf

    • Practice strategies, health and stage disposition - impulses from music physiology

      The course serves as an introduction to the basics of physiology (of the brain) and learning strategies suitable for someone studying music. Some of the best techniques – as recommended by scientists – for storing, recalling and consolidating the contents of our memories are outlined. Time management, individual concepts for taking breaks and the basic principles of mental training play a key role. Practical exercises for regeneration, fast relaxation and looking after muscles and fasciae are also demonstrated and performed together (as part of an everyday exercise routine). In addition, students are given information about how to deal with various forms of tiredness and possible ways of managing their own stress levels.   

      Dates / Duration

      SUN 28.09.2025 / 13:30 - 16:00 Uhr und 16:30 - 18:30 Uhr

      SUN 30.11.2025 / 13:30 - 16:00 Uhr und 16:30 - 19:00 Uhr

      SUN 25.01.2026 / 16:30 - 19:00 Uhr

      12.5 lessons

      Head

      Judith Buchmann / Oliver Margulies / Lina Schwob

    • Videoproduction and creative self-imagery

      Crash course with tools and tips for video production of simple, creative (performance) videos for applications, artistic work and social media. Working on the most precise and appealing description, self-presentation and interpretation of your artistic personality is one of the most important and ongoing struggles in the musicians life.

      This video-focused two-part module explains tools and tips on image, technology and sound recording and promotes the content-related examination of a video production with a mobile phone or computer. The collaboration with the professional video producer Claude Gabriel enables exchange and space for questions and feedback on a content and technical level.

      In the first part, we will discuss approaches to video recording in terms of content. Specific exercises and key questions will focus on the fundamental considerations for self-description and presentation of your artistic personality. 

      In the second practical part, divided into ‘basic’ and ‘advanced’ groups, we will work on many tips and tricks with technical introductions using a jointly created, simple performance video.

      Please note that no questions about examination requirements can be answered in the course. 

      Dates / Duration

      SAT 15.11.2025 / 14:00 – 17:00 

      SAT 24.01.2026 / 14:00 – 17:00 

      6 lessons

      Head

      Luca Burkhalter