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This autumn, see Academy students perform alongside world class artists and in a wide range of musical styles, from orchestral and chamber music concerts, to opera, musical theatre, jazz and contemporary music performances.
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This autumn, see Academy students perform alongside world...
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We welcome the finest students from around the world to...
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Finalist in the Royal Swedish Academy of Music’s Soloist...
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Multimedia - Home | Royal Academy of Music
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Departments - Home | Royal Academy of Music
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For 200 years the Royal Academy of Music has been at the...
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A new pilot partnership between SBC and the Academy. In the...
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How to apply - Home | Royal Academy of Music
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The Royal Academy of Music (RAM) in London, England, is one of the oldest music schools in the UK, founded in 1822 by John Fane and Nicolas-Charles Bochsa. It received its royal charter in 1830 from King George IV with the support of the first Duke of Wellington.
We welcome the finest students from around the world to learn and perform alongside globally renowned artists, ensuring they benefit from a music-making environment of the highest quality. Discover more about the various opportunities you will have when you come to study at the Academy.
Visit our Museum to explore unique instruments, manuscripts and art and learn about the role the Academy and its alumni have played in musical development for 200 years.
La Royal Academy of Music (en español: Real Academia de Música o a veces abreviado RAM por sus siglas en inglés) es un Conservatorio situado en Londres (Reino Unido), miembro de la Universidad de Londres, y una de las instituciones musicales más destacadas en todo el mundo.
Royal Academy of Music - YouTube. Into our third century of nurturing the next generation of talent and supporting musicians to realise their potential. Music makes us.
La Royal Academy of Music (Real Academia de Música) fue una compañía fundada en febrero de 1719, durante la estancia de Georg Friderich Händel en Cannons, por un grupo de aristócratas para asegurarse a sí mismos un suministro constante de óperas barrocas u óperas serias.