Nick Gebhardt is Professor of Jazz and Popular Music Studies and is the Academic Lead for Enterprise and Engagement. He is also the Postgraduate Research and Internships lead for Frontiers, the AHRC-funded West Midlands Creative Industries Cluster, and is a core member of the RBC Jazz Studies Research Cluster.
After completing his Bachelor of Arts (Hons) and PhD at the University of Sydney in Australia, he worked for several years as the Music Director at 2SER-FM radio in Sydney before taking up a lecturing post in American Studies at Lancaster University in the UK. At 窪蹋勛圖厙, he has taught on the BA Music Business, the BMus, and the BMus Jazz, and has held several leadership roles, including Director of the Birmingham Centre for Media and Cultural Research and Associate Dean for Research, Innovation and Enterprise in the Faculty of Arts, Design and Media.
His research covers topics in jazz and popular music studies, music industries, cultural theories of music, historiography, musical theatre and film studies. He has published widely in these areas and has presented his work at international conferences in the UK, Europe, the United States and Australia. He was a senior researcher on the HERA-funded Rhythm Changes: Jazz Cultures and European Identities, Co-Investigator the JPI Heritage Plus-funded Cultural Heritage and Improvised Music in European Festivals (CHIME) project, Principal Investigator on the AHRC-funded Jazz and Everyday Aesthetics research network, Co-Investigator on the AHRC-funded Silent Form project and Co-Investigator on the AHRC-funded Musical Theatre and All That Jazz research network. He is a co-editor of the book series (Routledge) and (Intellect) and is also a managing co-editor of the popular music journal .
He contributes to undergraduate and postgraduate modules in a range of subjects areas including jazz studies, musicology, music business, cultural and creative industries, film studies, research methods, and writing skills, as well as supervising PGR students.
- Jazz and popular music studies
- Improvisation
- Cultural theories of music
- Music industries
- Vaudeville and musical theatre
- Music and everyday aesthetics
- Writing about music
- Bachelor of Arts (Hons) (1990, University of Sydney)
- PhD in American History (1998, University of Sydney)
- International Association for the Study of Popular Music (IASPM)
- International Association for Song, Stage and Screen (ISSS)
- Contextual Studies Specialism: Jazz and the American Civil Rights Movement
- Contextual Studies Specialism: The Rock and Roll Revolution
- Postgraduate Certificate in Research Practice
- Jazz cultures and histories
- Festivals
- Cultural and creative Industries
- Creative technologies
- Vaudeville and musical theatre
- Experimental writing about music
Nick is interested in supervising doctoral students researching all aspects of jazz and popular music cultures and practices, particularly those who are focusing on creative practices in jazz and improvised music, cultural and critical theory, music festivals, and the creative industries. His current PhD students are working on topics such as arts festivals, jazz and gender, large improvising ensembles, songwriting careers, and accident and chance in improvisation.
- Gebhardt, N. (2026), Its Never Too Late: Miles Davis and Modernism. In Fagge, R., Pillai, N. and Wall, T. eds. . Oxford: Oxford University Press.
- Gebhardt, N. and Rushton, R. (2024) Music, Miles Davis and Theatricality. In Quick, A. and Rushton, R. eds. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press,2024.
- Gebhardt, N. (2019), Living with Music: departures and returns among early New Orleans jazz musicians.13:1-2:
- Gebhardt, N., Rustin-Paschal, N. and Whyton, T. eds. (2018) . New York: Routledge.
- Gebhardt, N. (2018) Jazz and Popular Music. In Lawson, C. and Stowell, R., eds. . Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
- Gebhardt, N. (2018) Hollywood Musicals Make History. In Edwards, S., Sayer, F., and Dolski, M., eds. . London: Bloomsbury.
- Gebhardt, N. (2018) A Time for Jazz: History and Narrative in Alan Lomaxs Mister Jelly Roll. In Fagge, R., and Pillai, N. eds. . London: Routledge.
- Gebhardt, N. (2017) 9. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
- Gebhardt, N. (2016) Screening the Event: Watching Miles Daviss My Funny Valentine. In Doctor, J., Elsdon, P., and Heile, B. eds. New York: Oxford University Press.
- Gebhardt, N. (2015) Let There Be Rock! Myth and Ideology in the Rock Festivals of the Transatlantic Counterculture. In McKay, G. ed. . London: Bloomsbury.
- Gebhardt, N. and Whyton, T. eds. (2015) . New York: Routledge.
- Gebhardt, N. (2012) Do You Know What It Means to Miss New Orleans? Mythical Realities and Historical Metaphors in Spike Lees When the Levees Broke. 6/2.
- Gebhardt, N. (2010) Crossing Boundaries I: The Historical Context for Ravels North American Tour. In Mawer, D., ed. . Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
- Gebhardt, N. (2001) Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
Nick works closely with the UK-Ireland Jazz Promotion Network, the British Arts Festivals Association, Cheltenham Festivals, Stoney Lane Records, and TDE Promotions.