Work closely with your peers and professors in our tight-knit, thriving community

The Harp Department’s undergraduate and postgraduate courses cover solo, concerto and chamber repertoire and all aspects of orchestral playing.

'I am so grateful for the rigorous and varied training I had from the Harp Department - I couldn’t have asked for a better foundation for building my career as a musician and harpist.'
Anne Denholm, alumna

From Baroque to jazz, our harpists are trained to take on anything the music profession requires.

The harp is thoroughly integrated into the life and work of the Academy, with students collaborating regularly with composers and other instrumentalists, and new works being commissioned every year by the Harp Department. Our professors include celebrated performers and recording artists. You will have the opportunity to work with specialists in orchestral and contemporary repertoire, early harp, jazz and opera as well as distinguished visiting professors.

Academy harpists have won prizes in international competitions and many alumni hold orchestral and teaching positions worldwide.

The Academy's flag on the front of the building

Introduction to the Harp Department with Catrin Finch

Catherine Beynon

Catherine Beynon

Graduated 1993
Harp

Catherine Beynon

Graduated 1993

Harp

Catherine Beynon began playing the harp at the age of eight and shortly afterwards won a scholarship from Surrey County Council to attend the Royal College of Music Junior Department, where she studied with Daphne Boden. She later gained a scholarship to the Royal Academy of Music, where she continued to study with Boden and also Skaila Kanga. Beynon then completed her studies at the Conservatoire National Supérieur Musique et Danse de Lyon with Fabrice Pierre, where she was awarded a DENSM with ‘félicitations du jury’ and completed her postgraduate course with two performances of the Alberto Ginastera Harp Concerto.

She is an extremely enthusiastic chamber musician and has performed across Europe and in Japan with numerous distinguished artists such as Quatuor Debussy, François Le Roux and Lindsay String Quartet, as well as with her sister, flautist Emily Beynon.

Beynon has given solo recitals at Wigmore Hall, Purcell Room, Fairfield Halls and St Martin-in-the-Fields and in September 1997 made her BBC Proms debut in the Proms Chamber Music Series at the Victoria & Albert Museum.

Among Beynon’s numerous recordings, Flute Mystery by Fred Jonny Berg, together with Emily Beynon, Vladimir Ashkenazy and the Philharmonia Orchestra, was nominated for a 2010 Grammy, while her recording of Debussy’s Deux danses with Emmanuel Krivine and the Orchestre Philharmonique du Luxembourg was released by Timpani in 2012.

As a concerto soloist, Beynon has performed with the English Chamber Orchestra, Philharmonia Orchestra, BBC National Orchestra of Wales and London Chamber Orchestra. In August 1999, she was appointed principal harp of the Royal Danish Orchestra and, in May 2000, she made Associate of the Royal Academy of Music in recognition of her distinguished performance in the profession. Beynon was appointed Principal Harp of the Orchestre Philharmonique du Luxembourg in September 2003, a post she continues to enjoy today.

Meet
our alunni

Magdalena Hoffmann

Magdalena Hoffmann

Graduated 2012
Harp

Magdalena Hoffmann

Graduated 2012

Harp

Magdalena Hoffmann was appointed Principal Harpist of the Bavarian Radio Symphony Orchestra in 2018 and teaches at the Tyrolean State Conservatory in Austria. Previously, she held the same position with the Tyrol Symphony Orchestra for four years. In addition, she played with various other orchestras, including the Münchner Philharmoniker, WDR Symphony Orchestra Cologne and La Monnaie Symphony Orchestra.

Hoffmann studied with Fabiana Trani in Düsseldorf, Cristina Bianchi in Munich and Skaila Kanga in London, while broadening her education in masterclasses with many renowned harpists such as Fabrice Pierre, Isabelle Moretti, Mara Galassi, Alice Giles, Milda Agazarian and Park Stickney.

She has won numerous scholarships and prizes at various national and international competitions, among them two special awards at the prestigious ARD International Music Competition in Munich in 2016.

In high demand as a chamber musician, Hoffmann has been invited as soloist and chamber musician to festivals such as the Davos Festival and Festival Alpenklassik. She regularly performs with renowned musicians, including Karl-Heinz Schütz, Andrea Lieberknecht or Aleksey Igudesman.

Hoffmann not only chooses her concert programmes with the aim of extending the conventional harp repertoire, but she also constantly works on interdisciplinary concepts. Thus, in 2014, she first performed her theatre concert Odyssey on 47 Strings at the Harp Masters Festival in Switzerland, and in 2017 contributed texts and illustrations to Aleksey Igudesman's album Funny Animals. Her first solo CD, Footnotes, was released in 2018.

Hoffmann is cultural ambassador for the project Casa Hogar, which aims at providing education and a home for young girls in the Colombian crisis region of Chocó.

Photo by Julia Wesely

Amy Turk

Amy Turk

Graduated 2014
Harp

Amy Turk

Graduated 2014

Harp

Amy Turk is an arranger, composer, session artist and performer from the UK. She is the most-watched solo harpist on YouTube, attracting thousands of views to her ever-increasing list of video uploads. With special interests in percussion, video-game music, film music and popular music of all styles, Turk has created a unique career path through her presence online, pioneering arrangements for solo harp and ensembles.

Using YouTube as her main platform, Turk has created a worldwide audience for her work, taking the harp out of the concert hall and bringing it straight into people’s homes. Through the use of established and newly discovered extended techniques for harp, she has spearheaded the transformation of the harp into a percussive instrument, and found new ways to encompass a wider range of musical genres, from Vivaldi to Napalm Death. Her arrangements have been regularly broadcast on BBC Radio 3 and shared online through Classic FM.

Classically trained from an early age, Turk has been transcribing music she loves throughout her career, with her first pop arrangement for harp ensemble receiving a world premiere at the Royal Albert Hall when she was 15 years old. While studying for a Master’s degree at the Royal Academy of Music with Karen Vaughan, Turk elected to transcribe and perform JS Bach’s Toccata and Fugue in D minor BWV 565 for her final recital, and a filmed performance of this piece subsequently became one of her first and most successful uploads to YouTube.

In addition to maintaining a regular video upload schedule, Turk writes and performs for remote recording sessions, collaborating with artists across the world from her living room studio space. Her first full-length album, Song of Time, a concept album featuring twenty five arrangements for harp, ocarina, percussion and voice from the classic 1998 video game The Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of Time, is available now for download and streaming.

Photo by Chloe Isherwood

Elizabeth Bass

Elizabeth Bass

Graduated 2017
Harp

Elizabeth Bass

Graduated 2017

Harp

Olivia Jageurs

Olivia Jageurs

Graduated 2014
Harp

Olivia Jageurs

Graduated 2014

Harp

Olivia Jageurs graduated from the Royal Academy of Music’s Master’s course in 2014 after completing an undergraduate degree at the University of Manchester.

Following the London Philharmonic Orchestra’s competitive Foyle Future Firsts scheme, she has gone on to play with the UK’s major orchestras, including the BBC Symphony Orchestra, BBC Concert Orchestra, Britten Sinfonia, Royal Northern Sinfonia, Sinfonia Cymru, Rambert, London Philharmonic Orchestra and The Hallé.

In 2017, Jageurs’s harp-writing resource, 15 Second Harp, was shortlisted for a Royal Philharmonic Society Award. The RPS awards, presented in association with BBC Radio 3, are the highest recognition for live classical music in the UK. That year, Jageurs also founded Bach’n Eggs, London’s first series of classical-music brunch concerts, which is regularly listed as one of London’s top pop-up events.

Last year, Jageurs played at Glyndebourne with the Orchestra of the Age of Enlightenment and the London Philharmonic Orchestra and performed Benjamin Britten’s A Ceremony of Carols at Wigmore Hall with Tenebrae Choir.

From 2013 to 2019, Jageurs has played at the Wimbledon tennis championships, entertaining the guests of the royal box before and after the women’s and men’s finals.

Jageurs records remote sessions regularly from her home studio. Since the Covid-19 crisis, she has started a series of concerts every Friday called Harpy Hour, playing audience requests, which now has audience members in the UK, USA, Mexico, Singapore and Ireland.

Photo by Maximilian Van London

Find out more about the career paths of some of our former students

Meet our alumni

Catherine Beynon

Catherine Beynon

Graduated 1993
Harp

Catherine Beynon

Graduated 1993

Harp

Catherine Beynon began playing the harp at the age of eight and shortly afterwards won a scholarship from Surrey County Council to attend the Royal College of Music Junior Department, where she studied with Daphne Boden. She later gained a scholarship to the Royal Academy of Music, where she continued to study with Boden and also Skaila Kanga. Beynon then completed her studies at the Conservatoire National Supérieur Musique et Danse de Lyon with Fabrice Pierre, where she was awarded a DENSM with ‘félicitations du jury’ and completed her postgraduate course with two performances of the Alberto Ginastera Harp Concerto.

She is an extremely enthusiastic chamber musician and has performed across Europe and in Japan with numerous distinguished artists such as Quatuor Debussy, François Le Roux and Lindsay String Quartet, as well as with her sister, flautist Emily Beynon.

Beynon has given solo recitals at Wigmore Hall, Purcell Room, Fairfield Halls and St Martin-in-the-Fields and in September 1997 made her BBC Proms debut in the Proms Chamber Music Series at the Victoria & Albert Museum.

Among Beynon’s numerous recordings, Flute Mystery by Fred Jonny Berg, together with Emily Beynon, Vladimir Ashkenazy and the Philharmonia Orchestra, was nominated for a 2010 Grammy, while her recording of Debussy’s Deux danses with Emmanuel Krivine and the Orchestre Philharmonique du Luxembourg was released by Timpani in 2012.

As a concerto soloist, Beynon has performed with the English Chamber Orchestra, Philharmonia Orchestra, BBC National Orchestra of Wales and London Chamber Orchestra. In August 1999, she was appointed principal harp of the Royal Danish Orchestra and, in May 2000, she made Associate of the Royal Academy of Music in recognition of her distinguished performance in the profession. Beynon was appointed Principal Harp of the Orchestre Philharmonique du Luxembourg in September 2003, a post she continues to enjoy today.

Magdalena Hoffmann

Magdalena Hoffmann

Graduated 2012
Harp

Magdalena Hoffmann

Graduated 2012

Harp

Magdalena Hoffmann was appointed Principal Harpist of the Bavarian Radio Symphony Orchestra in 2018 and teaches at the Tyrolean State Conservatory in Austria. Previously, she held the same position with the Tyrol Symphony Orchestra for four years. In addition, she played with various other orchestras, including the Münchner Philharmoniker, WDR Symphony Orchestra Cologne and La Monnaie Symphony Orchestra.

Hoffmann studied with Fabiana Trani in Düsseldorf, Cristina Bianchi in Munich and Skaila Kanga in London, while broadening her education in masterclasses with many renowned harpists such as Fabrice Pierre, Isabelle Moretti, Mara Galassi, Alice Giles, Milda Agazarian and Park Stickney.

She has won numerous scholarships and prizes at various national and international competitions, among them two special awards at the prestigious ARD International Music Competition in Munich in 2016.

In high demand as a chamber musician, Hoffmann has been invited as soloist and chamber musician to festivals such as the Davos Festival and Festival Alpenklassik. She regularly performs with renowned musicians, including Karl-Heinz Schütz, Andrea Lieberknecht or Aleksey Igudesman.

Hoffmann not only chooses her concert programmes with the aim of extending the conventional harp repertoire, but she also constantly works on interdisciplinary concepts. Thus, in 2014, she first performed her theatre concert Odyssey on 47 Strings at the Harp Masters Festival in Switzerland, and in 2017 contributed texts and illustrations to Aleksey Igudesman's album Funny Animals. Her first solo CD, Footnotes, was released in 2018.

Hoffmann is cultural ambassador for the project Casa Hogar, which aims at providing education and a home for young girls in the Colombian crisis region of Chocó.

Photo by Julia Wesely

Amy Turk

Amy Turk

Graduated 2014
Harp

Amy Turk

Graduated 2014

Harp

Amy Turk is an arranger, composer, session artist and performer from the UK. She is the most-watched solo harpist on YouTube, attracting thousands of views to her ever-increasing list of video uploads. With special interests in percussion, video-game music, film music and popular music of all styles, Turk has created a unique career path through her presence online, pioneering arrangements for solo harp and ensembles.

Using YouTube as her main platform, Turk has created a worldwide audience for her work, taking the harp out of the concert hall and bringing it straight into people’s homes. Through the use of established and newly discovered extended techniques for harp, she has spearheaded the transformation of the harp into a percussive instrument, and found new ways to encompass a wider range of musical genres, from Vivaldi to Napalm Death. Her arrangements have been regularly broadcast on BBC Radio 3 and shared online through Classic FM.

Classically trained from an early age, Turk has been transcribing music she loves throughout her career, with her first pop arrangement for harp ensemble receiving a world premiere at the Royal Albert Hall when she was 15 years old. While studying for a Master’s degree at the Royal Academy of Music with Karen Vaughan, Turk elected to transcribe and perform JS Bach’s Toccata and Fugue in D minor BWV 565 for her final recital, and a filmed performance of this piece subsequently became one of her first and most successful uploads to YouTube.

In addition to maintaining a regular video upload schedule, Turk writes and performs for remote recording sessions, collaborating with artists across the world from her living room studio space. Her first full-length album, Song of Time, a concept album featuring twenty five arrangements for harp, ocarina, percussion and voice from the classic 1998 video game The Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of Time, is available now for download and streaming.

Photo by Chloe Isherwood

Elizabeth Bass

Elizabeth Bass

Graduated 2017
Harp

Elizabeth Bass

Graduated 2017

Harp

Olivia Jageurs

Olivia Jageurs

Graduated 2014
Harp

Olivia Jageurs

Graduated 2014

Harp

Olivia Jageurs graduated from the Royal Academy of Music’s Master’s course in 2014 after completing an undergraduate degree at the University of Manchester.

Following the London Philharmonic Orchestra’s competitive Foyle Future Firsts scheme, she has gone on to play with the UK’s major orchestras, including the BBC Symphony Orchestra, BBC Concert Orchestra, Britten Sinfonia, Royal Northern Sinfonia, Sinfonia Cymru, Rambert, London Philharmonic Orchestra and The Hallé.

In 2017, Jageurs’s harp-writing resource, 15 Second Harp, was shortlisted for a Royal Philharmonic Society Award. The RPS awards, presented in association with BBC Radio 3, are the highest recognition for live classical music in the UK. That year, Jageurs also founded Bach’n Eggs, London’s first series of classical-music brunch concerts, which is regularly listed as one of London’s top pop-up events.

Last year, Jageurs played at Glyndebourne with the Orchestra of the Age of Enlightenment and the London Philharmonic Orchestra and performed Benjamin Britten’s A Ceremony of Carols at Wigmore Hall with Tenebrae Choir.

From 2013 to 2019, Jageurs has played at the Wimbledon tennis championships, entertaining the guests of the royal box before and after the women’s and men’s finals.

Jageurs records remote sessions regularly from her home studio. Since the Covid-19 crisis, she has started a series of concerts every Friday called Harpy Hour, playing audience requests, which now has audience members in the UK, USA, Mexico, Singapore and Ireland.

Photo by Maximilian Van London