Shared description

The Royal College of Music

A London conservatoire offering training from the undergraduate to the doctoral level in all aspects of Western classical music, the RCM was founded in 1883 and moved to this building in May 1894. Directors have included Hubert Parry, George and David Willcocks and for 40 years Queen Elizabeth The Queen Mother was president. Alumni include Gustav Holst, Ralph Vaughan Williams, Benjamin Britten, Michael Tippett and the guitarist John Williams. Within the college is a fascinating museum Housing a collection of more than 800 musical items.
by Basher Eyre

Created: Thu, 3 Sep 2015, Updated: Thu, 3 Sep 2015


11 images use this description:

TQ2679 : Within the Royal College of Music (7) by Basher Eyre
TQ2679 : Within the Royal College of Music (5) by Basher Eyre
TQ2679 : Within the Royal College of Music (3) by Basher Eyre
TQ2679 : Within the Royal College of Music (12) by Basher Eyre
TQ2679 : Looking from the Albert Hall towards the Royal College of Music by Basher Eyre
TQ2679 : Within the Royal College of Music (3) by Basher Eyre
TQ2679 : Within the Royal College of Music (1) by Basher Eyre
TQ2679 : Within the Royal College of Music (4) by Basher Eyre
TQ2679 : Within the Royal College of Music (2) by Basher Eyre
TQ2679 : Within the Royal College of Music (9) by Basher Eyre
TQ2679 : Within the Royal College of Music (8) by Basher Eyre


Shared descriptions

This shared description

The 'Shared Description' text on this page is © copyright 2015 Basher Eyre.

Shared descriptions are specifically licensed so that contributors can reuse them on their own images, without restriction.

About shared descriptions

These Shared Descriptions are common to multiple images.

For example, you can create a generic description for an object shown in a photo, and reuse the description on all photos of the object. All descriptions are public and shared between contributors, i.e. you can reuse a description created by others, just as they can use yours.


You are not logged in login | register