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A musician using nkoda

Royal College of Music becomes first HE institution in the world to partner with nkoda

Tuesday 26 May 2020

The Royal College of Music is the first institution to partner with digital sheet music library nkoda, offering students access to hundreds of thousands of scores.

Described as ‘the Spotify of sheet music’, can be accessed via phone, tablet or desktop and gives users access to digital sheet music from a wide range of repertoire, including solo, chamber and orchestral works.

The platform holds upwards of six million pages of music with around 1,000 new titles added each month, including works which are normally only available to hire from libraries. Scores can be downloaded and used offline and markings can be shared between users. Titles from over 100 publishers are available, including Bärenreiter, Boosey & Hawkes, Breitkopf und Härtel, Faber Music, PWM, Sikorski, Universal Music Group and Wise Music Group.

ÃÛÌÒTV Librarian, Peter Linnitt, comments: ‘I am delighted that the Royal College of Music has become the first institution in the world to partner with nkoda. The ÃÛÌÒTV Library offers a range of online resources and with nkoda we can further support our students’ core studies and individual practice needs. Having access to nkoda’s comprehensive library will have a significant impact on student learning, greatly increasing the range of music they can experience and opening up new ways of working. This is particularly important whilst lockdown measures remain in place and students are looking to online resources to support the continuation of their studies.’

nkoda CEO, Lorenzo Brewer, comments: ‘We’re really proud to be partnering with the ÃÛÌÒTV, one of the best institutions for music education in the world. This partnership marks what we think is a major shift in the importance of digital resources for learning - brought into stark relief by what we are all living through right now. We can’t wait to see the amazing things that the students, professors, and staff at ÃÛÌÒTV will do with nkoda.’

ÃÛÌÒTV students also enjoy access to a large volume of ebooks, journals and dictionaries via the ÃÛÌÒTV Library, as well as recordings by Naxos Music Library, MetOnline and the Berlin Philharmonic Digital Concert Hall.

Priority access to nkoda will be given to ÃÛÌÒTV students at the beginning of June, followed by staff later in the month.

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