[Apologies for cross-posting]

Lecturer A/B in Audio

University of Surrey
Guildford
UK

Salary:  £34,576 to £46,414 per annum
Post Type:  Full Time
Closing Date:  Thursday 30 June 2016
Interview Date:  Friday 08 July 2016
Reference:  006616-R

We are seeking applications for the post of Lecturer in Audio, to be based in 
the Department of Music and Media’s Institute of Sound Recording (IoSR).  We 
are looking for an enthusiastic academic to teach and support the delivery of 
the undergraduate BMus/BSc Tonmeister® programme in Music and Sound Recording, 
and to conduct world-leading research.

The successful applicant will teach on the prestigious Tonmeister undergraduate 
programme, covering two or more of the following areas: audio signal 
processing, audio programming, computer audio systems, electronics, research 
methods, and sound synthesis. You will be joining a supportive and varied team 
of lecturers drawn from both academic and respected industry backgrounds. The 
programme has a small cohort of high quality students, enabling a highly 
collegiate environment between staff and students. Our students are highly 
motivated and have a strong background in music, maths and physics.

You will have a strong research profile and/or the potential to develop and 
sustain research activities, with a clear vision for how your research will 
progress and an idea of how it might feed into or complement the IoSR's goals 
of engineering perceptually-motivated audio signal analysis, processing and 
control systems. You will be encouraged to develop your own research profile 
and to produce high-quality research outputs, including books, academic journal 
articles or other appropriate forms of research output.

BACKGROUND

Running since 1970, the Tonmeister programme is unique in the way that it 
combines study of audio engineering, music, and practical sound recording.  It 
has produced a stream of successful alumni, including winners of Oscars, 
Grammys and the Mercury Prize. Our graduates work across a wide cross-section 
of the audio industry, from product design to film music composition, and this 
alumnus network enables us to call upon current industry expertise in many 
areas.  Alumni are very keen to give something back to the programme, and our 
biennial summer reunion is an excellent networking opportunity.  The programme 
includes a Professional Training Year, and we have regular placements with many 
high-profile companies including Abbey Road Studios, Focusrite/Novation and Sky 
Post-Production.

Research in the IoSR focuses on human perception of audio quality and uses this 
focus to engineer perceptually-motivated signal analysis, processing and 
control systems. We have projects funded by EPSRC, the European Commission and 
industrial collaborators, involving human listening tests, acoustic 
measurement, statistical modelling and digital signal processing. Current work 
is, for example, developing systems for spatial enhancement of object-based 
audio reproduction, perceptually-optimised sound source separation and timbral 
perception modelling.

There is opportunity to collaborate with many groups across the University; 
previous and current projects involved the Department of Psychology, the Centre 
for Vision, Speech and Signal Processing (CVSSP), and colleagues in Music.

Recent development of programmes in Digital Media Arts, and Film and Video 
Production Technology, have resulted in a significant hub of research and 
teaching at Surrey in the area of media-related engineering, technology and 
production.

The Department of Music and Media hosts a wide range of concerts, regular 
research conferences and colloquia (including hosting the Audio Engineering 
Society international conference on Sound Field Control in July), as well as a 
thriving community of postgraduate research students.

The facilities available in the IoSR for teaching and research include: 3 
recording studios containing industry standard equipment including consoles 
from AMS-Neve and SSL; over 100 microphones for recording and technical 
measurement; an ITU-R BS 1116 standard listening room containing a 22.2 
reproduction system; and a range of test and measurement hardware and software. 
 The Department is home to the Moog Sound Lab UK, and benefits from many links 
with the audio, video and computer games industries.

For an informal discussion you may wish to contact Dr Russell Mason (Tonmeister 
Programme Director) at r.ma...@surrey.ac.uk<mailto:r.ma...@surrey.ac.uk>.

More information available from 
https://jobs.surrey.ac.uk/vacancy.aspx?ref=006616-R.
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