Institute of Popular Music

Institute of Popular Music Established in 1988, the IPM is a centre for popular music research homed in the Department of Music, University of Liverpool.

Founded in 1988 as the world’s first specialist centre for the study of popular music, the Institute of Popular Music (IPM) provides a hub for interdisciplinary research on popular music, broadly defined. We examine popular music from different perspectives and explore the many varied contexts and processes involved in its production and consumption. While our researchers come from various Univers

ity of Liverpool departments, the IPM is homed in the Department of Music where all staff are to varying degrees involved in popular music studies, making it a unique setting for popular music research. The department sits within the School of Arts and Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences. Much of our research is conducted in collaboration with local, national, and international groups and organisations, including universities in the UK and beyond, and a wide range of non-academic organisations. Among those collaborating on current research projects are English Heritage and BUPA nursing homes. We are also extensively engaged with Liverpool-based organisations such as National Museums Liverpool, the Foundation for Art and Creative Technology, Radio Merseyside, the Open Eye Gallery and Liverpool Sound City, and benefit from strong and long-standing institutional partnerships:

The International Association for the Study of Popular Music: The IPM is the official office and archive of the International Association for the Study of Popular Music (IASPM), an organisation established to promote scholarship in the area of popular music. Former IPM staff played a key role in the foundation of IASPM and IPM researchers have regularly served on IASPM executive and branch committees. National Museums Liverpool: The IPM was founded through a partnership between the University of Liverpool and National Museums Liverpool, and has since collaborated with the museums on a range of projects. Ageing, Communication, Technology: The IPM is a partner for Ageing, Communication, Technology (ACT), a major interdisciplinary and multi-methodological research project that brings together researchers and institutional and community partners to address the transformation of the experiences of ageing with the proliferation of new forms of mediated communications in networked societies.

The Institutes of Popular Music of both Rochester and Liverpool, together with the Society for Music Analysis, are pleas...
12/03/2026

The Institutes of Popular Music of both Rochester and Liverpool, together with the Society for Music Analysis, are pleased to announce their fifth Summer School dedicated to popular music theory and analysis.

The course will be held on Friday 17th – Sunday 19th July 2026 at the University of Liverpool.

The teaching of the course features intensive workshops with leading experts in the field: Michael Buchler (Florida State University), Jocelyn Neal (UNC at Chapel Hill) and Justin Williams (Bristol). Plenary speakers will include: Ben Baker (Eastman), Chelsea Burns (University of Texas), Ralf von Appen (Vienna), and University of Liverpool Staff.

During the course, we will share and explore some of the latest research in popular music theory, making the course ideal for graduate students or early career researchers.

While the course fee is covered by sponsorship, spaces are limited, and we invite applications to be submitted online. The deadline for applications is April 3rd, 2026. Please note that travel, accommodation and subsidence must be covered by delegates.

Apply here:

17th – 19th July 2026, University of Liverpool, IPM-IPM-SMA The Institutes of Popular Music of both Rochester and Liverpool, together with the Society for Music Analysis, are pleased to announce th…

Dr Rachael Drury has written a new report for Independent Society of Musicians about the current impact GenAI is having ...
30/01/2026

Dr Rachael Drury has written a new report for Independent Society of Musicians about the current impact GenAI is having on the creative industries. It’s a cross-sector report marking a collaboration between the Independent Society of Musicians, Society of Authors, Association of Illustrators, Association of Photographers, and Equity. The report evidences job losses, income loss, the impact of data scraping and digital replicas, environmental damage and looks at the value of the creative industries vs AI industry in the UK.

You can check it out here: https://www.ism.org/brave-new-world/

🎶 Liverpool’s Lost Venues – Help us put them back on the map!From legendary clubs to tiny back-room stages, Liverpool’s ...
11/09/2025

🎶 Liverpool’s Lost Venues – Help us put them back on the map!
From legendary clubs to tiny back-room stages, Liverpool’s live music history is full of stories and we want to hear yours.
📍 Join us Thursday 12 September at [](https://www.instagram.com/kazimiergarden/) (12–7pm) for a free drop-in event as part of the British Science Festival.
Bring your gig memories, ticket stubs, posters, photos, or just your stories, and help us mark Liverpool’s lost venues on our giant interactive maps.
Every gig. Every venue. Every memory. Your stories complete the map.

Jacob Simmons and Grace Goodwin both took part in the IASPM PGR conference at the University of Leeds last week where th...
08/09/2025

Jacob Simmons and Grace Goodwin both took part in the IASPM PGR conference at the University of Leeds last week where they both presented some of their current research.

Staff and post graduate researchers from the IPM attended the IASPM international conference in Paris last month where t...
08/08/2025

Staff and post graduate researchers from the IPM attended the IASPM international conference in Paris last month where they presented their current research

There were papers from:
Jacob Simmons
Grace Goodwin
Nina Himmelreich
Cerys Swain
Mathew Flynn
Sara Cohen
Dr Rachael Drury

Earlier this week the IPM Archive accepted a special collection: the operational diaries of a rehearsal studio. As worki...
01/08/2025

Earlier this week the IPM Archive accepted a special collection: the operational diaries of a rehearsal studio. As working documents used to schedule artist bookings the diaries could easily have been thrown away once no longer needed, but were carefully treasured by the studio’s former owner.

While a collecting strategy for the IPM Archive is in development capacity to accept donations is limited and each offer is assessed on a case-by-case basis. In this case, the diaries were accepted because they are unique and a rare survival, providing tangible evidence of an often-overlooked part of the music ecosystem and a valuable primary source for future research into the history of popular music.

The collection will now be processed by the IPM Archivist, safeguarded in the University’s Special Collections & Archives specialist store rooms and packaged in acid-free enclosures to ensure its preservation for future generations.

After a series of online sessions, supported by UoL’s Global Opportunity fund seven UG Music students from UoL joined st...
14/07/2025

After a series of online sessions, supported by UoL’s Global Opportunity fund seven UG Music students from UoL joined students from the Netherlands and Portugal in the beautiful Italian city of Cremona to take part in and Erasmus+ Blended Intensive Programme: A One Week Snapshot of Live Music Mapping. Inspired by the Live Music Mapping Project, and facilitated by Associate Professor Alessandro Bratus, Research Fellow Martin Nicastro & PhD candidate Francesco Brusco, all from University of Pavia, students braved the near 40 degree temperatures to conduct field research and test workflows on the collection of geospatial data related to urban musical practices. Through these collaborative data-gathering sessions, roundtable discussions, concert attendance and keynote presentations, students and staff explored the past and present live music ecosystem of Cremona, and developed skills in a range of digital tools for data visualization and for the creation of multimedia spatial narratives.

The students who took part were
Thea Hobbs
Cali Lannon
Eleanor Lilley
Casey Wade
Kae Wallbridge
Mungo Harding
Charlie Walder

12/07/2025

As part of the AHRC MusicFutures Creative Custer programme at University of Liverpool, this fully funded full-time PhD studentship post will work with the MusicFutures research team and alongside the programmes 27 industry delivery partners to explore, propose, develop, trial and evaluate innovative...

11/07/2025

A PhD scholarship titled 'Innovating Mentoring, Coaching and Training for the UK’s Music Ecosystem' is now open to applications at the University of Liverpool.

As part of the AHRC MusicFutures Creative Custer programme at University of Liverpool, this fully funded full-time PhD studentship post will work with the MusicFutures research team and alongside the programmes 27 industry delivery partners to explore, propose, develop, trial and evaluate innovative, inclusive and sustainable approaches to mentoring, coaching and training within the UK’s music ecosystem

Read more about it here:

As part of the AHRC MusicFutures Creative Custer programme at University of Liverpool, this fully funded full-time PhD studentship post will work with the MusicFutures research team and alongside the programmes 27 industry delivery partners to explore, propose, develop, trial and evaluate innovative...

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