Anurag Dixit’s Musicology Sec 45 noida Branch
148, SD Block, Sadarpur, Sector-45, Noida, Uttar Pradesh 201303, India
http://www.musicology.net.in/
Nestled in Sector 45, Noida, Anurag Dixit’s Musicology branch is a purpose-built creative hub that feels more like a professional studio than a conventional training school. The moment you step out of the elevator on the third floor of Gold Souk Mall, glass doors slide open to reveal an open foyer washed in soft acoustic panels and neon-blue “M” branding. A reception desk—staffed seven days a week—doubles as a gear library: students check out capos, tuners, cables, spare drum sticks and even studio-grade microphones for at-home practice.
Past the foyer, the corridor forks into five colour-coded lesson labs. The Crimson Room is fitted with five full-scale digital drum kits, mesh heads muted for silent practice while overhead screens loop stick-technique GIFs in slow motion. A slate-gray isolation booth on the left houses the flagship 8-channel Presonus interface used for graded-exam recordings. Adjacent, the Azure Lab features nine wall-hung electric guitars and three aviation-grade booths for vocal processing; instructors patch students’ phones directly into the PA so original song ideas can be layered on the fly. The Emerald Suite is entirely acoustic—spruce-top guitars, Cajóns, ukuleles and a 1950s-style upright piano whose keys were flown in from Hamburg; every Wednesday it hosts the faculty “circle song” session, free for enrolled students to observe or join.
At the far end lies the flagship facility: the Hexa Studio. The hexagonal live room is wired for Dolby Atmos playback and is where advanced students track, mix and master. Microphones are suspended from a motorized grid that lowers on request, and LED mood lighting shifts to match project genres—amber for jazz, violet for EDM, red for metal. A glass-walled control room showcases a 61-key Native Instruments S88, Push 2 controller and a 32-fader Avid console often used by visiting artists. Monthly masterclasses—recent visitors include Dualist Inquiry, Vasu Raina and Meghna Mishra—are live-streamed into a lounge furnished with bean bags and vinyl racks, creating a campus atmosphere inside a shopping complex.
The admin wing, discreetly hidden behind a soundproof door, handles Trinity Rock & Pop, ABRSM and RockSchool enrollments. RFID keycards track class hours and automatically send practice reminders to students’ phones; parents can log in to a portal that displays teacher notes, repertoire links and upcoming recital dates. Monthly band-showcases happen on the mall’s rooftop amphitheatre, where portable stages pack a 5 kW JBL rig and programmable lasers—enough power for 300-plus spectators.
In short, the Sector 45 branch is less a classroom and more a miniature ecosystem: classrooms feed the studio, the studio feeds the stage, and everything is wired to the cloud. Whether you’re a five-year-old plucking your first G chord or an aspiring producer chasing articulate 808s, the facility, curriculum and culture are engineered to make every practice minute musical and measurable.
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- Published: July 27, 2025