Belmont University Music Programs
Belmont University's music programs are a significant part of Nashville's music industry, turning out performers, songwriters, engineers, and business professionals who work in the city's recording studios, publishing houses, and performance venues. The university sits in Nashville's Belmont-Hillsboro neighborhood and offers degrees in commercial music performance, music business, audio engineering technology, and music therapy, pulling students from across the United States and abroad. The programs operate under the Mike Curb College of Entertainment and Music Business, named after music industry executive and philanthropist Mike Curb, who made a substantial endowment gift to the university.
History
Belmont University started in 1890. Ida Hood and Susan Heron established the Belmont College for Young Women on the grounds of the former Adelicia Acklen estate in Nashville. The Methodist Episcopal Church, South oversaw the institution, which focused on liberal arts education for women. Music was in the curriculum from the beginning, which made sense given what was expected of educated women at the time, though it wasn't the main focus of the academic program.[1]
Things changed significantly in the second half of the twentieth century, largely because Nashville was becoming a commercial recording center. During the 1970s and 1980s, structured programs in music business and commercial music started taking shape. The industry needed trained managers, publishers, and label executives just as much as it needed artists, and Belmont responded to that demand. This period also saw the school transition to co-education, which brought in more students and fresh perspectives to the music programs. The university achieved university status in 1991, and that same transition brought significant investment in faculty, facilities, and academic infrastructure across its music offerings.[2]
Creating the Mike Curb College of Entertainment and Music Business put a formal stamp on what the university had been building for decades. Mike Curb, founder of Curb Records and a former Lieutenant Governor of California, made a major gift that funded the college's expansion and raised its national profile considerably. Today the college has multiple departments and degree tracks, and its music business program consistently shows up in industry publications as one of the strongest in the country.[3]
Geography
The Belmont campus occupies roughly 82 acres in the Belmont-Hillsboro neighborhood, about two miles south of downtown Nashville. Historic structures sit alongside modern academic and performance facilities built over the past three decades. The Belmont Mansion, Adelicia Acklen's antebellum home, stands on the historic core of campus.[4] The neighborhood around campus is walkable, with coffee shops, independent restaurants, and live music venues within easy reach, making it practical for students to move between campus and off-campus professional work.
Music Row sits less than a mile from campus. That's not a coincidence. Students in the music business and audio engineering programs do internships at firms on or near Music Row, and people from those firms regularly come to campus to lecture or lead workshops. The short distance between classroom and actual industry is built into how the programs work.
Academic Programs
The Mike Curb College of Entertainment and Music Business offers several undergraduate degrees. The Bachelor of Music in Commercial Music covers performance in country, gospel, rock, and jazz, with an emphasis on session work and what professional musicianship actually looks like rather than purely classical or conservatory training. The Bachelor of Science in Music Business prepares students for careers in artist management, publishing, label operations, marketing, and touring. Coursework covers contracts, copyright, and industry finance.[5]
The audio engineering technology program leads to a Bachelor of Science. Students learn recording, mixing, mastering, and live sound production in the university's on-campus recording studios, which have professional-grade consoles and software standard to commercial studios. These spaces aren't just for student exercises. They're used for actual commercial projects, so students graduate having worked with real sessions and real clients.
Music therapy is accredited by the American Music Therapy Association (AMTA) and leads to a Bachelor of Music in Music Therapy. The program includes supervised clinical placements at hospitals, rehabilitation centers, and schools in the Nashville area. Graduates sit for the board certification examination from the Certification Board for Music Therapists. This program works differently from the commercial music tracks because its outcomes are measured by clinical credentialing, not by industry placement, which reflects a completely different professional pipeline.[6]
Music programs hold accreditation from the National Association of Schools of Music (NASM), which is the primary accrediting body for music programs in higher education in the United States. NASM accreditation requires institutions to meet standards for curriculum design, faculty qualifications, facilities, and student outcomes. The accreditation goes through regular review cycles.[7]
Culture
Belmont's music programs reflect how work actually happens in Nashville, not how things work in a traditional conservatory. Students in performance, songwriting, engineering, and business collaborate on projects throughout their time at the university, which mirrors how Nashville's studios and publishing houses actually operate. A session musician, a producer, a publisher, and a manager aren't strangers to each other in this industry, and the university's structure puts those roles in proximity from day one.
Entrepreneurship is woven into the curriculum. Students learn self-promotion, royalty structures, digital distribution, and how to start a business before they graduate. Student-run record labels and publishing ventures have operated within the university's programs, giving students hands-on experience with decisions that label executives and publishers make every day. Songwriting workshops, co-writing sessions, and performance showcases happen regularly throughout the academic year, some open to the public, some aimed at industry professionals.
The university actively promotes student performances on campus and at venues across Nashville. These performances count as academic work, but they're also professional exposure. Industry representatives come to some of these events, and students have been signed or offered representation as a result of performing in university-affiliated settings.
Notable Alumni
Belmont's music programs have produced alumni working across every role in the music industry. Brad Paisley, who studied at Belmont before transferring and eventually achieving major success in country music, is probably the most widely recognized name connected to the university's commercial music program. Still, the programs have produced many music business executives, publishing administrators, and studio engineers whose careers are less visible to the public but whose work shapes Nashville's industry.[8]
Alumni return to campus in professional roles as guest speakers, mentors, panel participants, and session leaders. This creates a feedback loop between the working industry and students that keeps curriculum connected to what's actually happening. Students build professional relationships with people actively working in the field, not just with faculty whose main job is teaching.
Economy
Belmont functions as an important economic player in Nashville beyond its role as an educational institution. The university employs several hundred full-time faculty and staff, and the student population, which exceeds 8,000 across all programs, generates steady demand for housing, food, transportation, and services in the surrounding neighborhoods.[9]
The music programs' economic impact extends into Nashville's broader industry. Graduates fill entry-level and mid-level positions at recording studios, management companies, publishing firms, booking agencies, and labels, giving the music industry a local source of trained workers. The music business program in particular produces graduates who move directly into Nashville's music economy, which means the industry relies less on transplants from other cities. The university's emphasis on entrepreneurship also contributes to the formation of new businesses: small labels, management companies, production houses. These add to the city's creative output and tax base.
Facilities and Attractions
The Massey Performing Arts Center is the main performance venue on campus. Student recitals, faculty concerts, visiting artist performances, and public events happen there throughout the academic year. The building has rehearsal spaces and production facilities alongside the main performance hall. On-campus recording studios are integral to the audio engineering and commercial music programs and are equipped to commercial standards. They're used for professional recording projects alongside instructional work.
The Belmont Mansion sits on the historic core of campus and is open to the public. While it's not a music facility, it draws visitors to campus and is part of how the institution presents itself to the public.[10]
The Belmont-Hillsboro neighborhood and adjacent Hillsboro Village area have restaurants, independent retail, and live music venues within walking distance of campus. Music Row is a short drive south along the avenues, or a longer walk if you're determined. Downtown Nashville is about fifteen minutes by car, close enough that students routinely go to shows at the Ryman Auditorium, visit the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum, or check out the Broadway honky-tonk district on their own.