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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

'Listen to my voice' : the evocative power of vocal staging in recorded rock music and other forms of vocal expression

Lacasse, Serge January 2000 (has links)
No description available.
2

Exploring Eclectic Styles and Original Compositions in Bluegrass and Acoustic Music

Alexander, Justin 01 May 2023 (has links) (PDF)
In the creation of my thesis project, I aimed to record a collection of music that highlights my influences and creative voice as an artist within the bluegrass/acoustic music genres. In collaboration with friends and colleagues that I have met during my time at East Tennessee State University, I have successfully recorded a project that surveys my current influences and creative voice as an artist, instrumentalist and composer. One goal I had for this project was to highlight compositions that I have written on acoustic guitar. Before attending ETSU, I did play some acoustic guitar, though I was primarily a banjo player. Since then, I have developed a passion for the guitar and have worked to advance my skills as a guitarist. My project includes two pieces that I composed on the guitar, and these compositions are examples of my exploration of harmony and rhythm. I feel that these pieces fit into the “New Acoustic” subgenre of bluegrass and bluegrass-adjacent music. I also chose to include two songs that fit more into the “progressive bluegrass” subgenre. On these two selections, one cover and one original, I played five-string banjo. These two pieces highlight my current interests and influences from genres like Jazz, Indie, and Pop music. The last two pieces included are songs that come from the bluegrass genre, and represent my progress as both an instrumentalist and vocalist. Also on this project, I experimented with different audio recording techniques. I have been studying audio production as my concentration within the Bluegrass, Old-Time, and Roots Music Studies major. This project allowed me to be creative as an audio engineer as well as a musician.
3

Summer Rain Part I Summer Rain - Dawn for Two-channel Tape; Part II After the Summer Rain for Piano and Two-channel Tape

Kawamoto, Hideko 12 1900 (has links)
This dissertation contains five chapters: 1. Introduction, 2. Basic Digital Processing Used in Summer Rain, 3. Part I Summer Rain - Dawn, 4. Part II After the Summer Rain and 5. Conclusion. Introduction contains a brief historical background of musique concrète, Electronische Musik, acousmatic music and music for instruments and tape, followed by basic descriptions of digital technique used in both parts of Summer Rain in Chapter 2. Also Chapter 2 describes software used in Summer Rain including "Kawamoto's VST," which is based on MAX/MSP, to create new sounds from the recorded samples using a Macintosh computer. In both Chapter 3 and 4, Kawamoto discusses a great deal of the pre-compositional stage of each piece including inspirational sources, especially Rainer Maria Rilke's poems and Olidon Redon's paintings, as well as her visual and sound imageries. In addition Chapter 3 she talks about sound sources, pitch, form and soundscape. Chapter 4 contains analysis on pitch in the piano part, rhythm, form and the general performance practice. Chapter 5 is a short conclusion of her aesthetics regarding Summer Rain, which is connected to literature, visual art and her Japanese cultural background.
4

Interprétation musicale participative : la médiation d'un saxophoniste dans l'articulation des compositions mixtes contemporaines. / Participatory musical performance : the mediation of a saxophonist in articulating contemporary electroacoustic music compositions with saxophones

Sousa Bittencourt, Pedro 23 October 2015 (has links)
Étude sur la collaboration et la participation active d’un saxophoniste-chercheur avec plusieurs compositeurs dans la création musicale mixte. Les musiques mixtes combinent un performeur jouant d’un instrument acoustique qui interagit avec des outils électroniques et informatiques, se faisant entendre par des hauts-parleurs. Nous comprenons la participation comme des multiples échanges humains intégrant l’écoute, l’instrument acoustique, l’électronique et les dernières technologies numériques dans la musique. Notre méthodologie s’est nourrie des sciences cognitives, de la systémique, de la recherche-action intégrale et systémique, de la cybernétique de second ordre, de l’opérationnel et de l’émergence contextuelle. Notre démarche propose une réflexion autour de quelques bouleversements de l’écoute musicale au XXe siècle et l’étude des musiques mixtes contemporaines sous le biais de l’approche multi-échelle. Nous faisons partie de notre objet d’étude tout en le modifiant dans un processus dynamique. Quelles connaissances musicales émergent de ces échanges de compétences et peuvent en être élargies grâce à cette rétroaction (feedback) multiple, en boucle créative ? Ces questions, avec nos sources de première main et l’inclusion du compositeur en tant qu’interprète ont fait émerger notre concept d’interprétation musicale participative. Nous proposons que l’analyse de nos propres collaborations peut apporter une connaissance originale sur les pièces musicales mixtes en question et développer une sorte de plasticité dans le faire musical. Comme démonstration, des morceaux ont été créées pendant nos recherches et sont analysées sous cette approche. / This research is about the collaboration of a saxophonist-researcher with several composers in electro acoustic music with saxophones. Mixed music combines a performer playing acoustic instruments (traditional or not) interacting with digital and electronics means of all sort of operations, time scales and technical configurations, diffused by loudspeakers. We understand participation in our case as human exchanges in musical digital environments, and as the creation of new links that didn’t exist before. Our research proposes a reflection on listening approaches through the XXst century and studying mixed music through the multi scale approach. The saxophonist gives a contribution, that enhance a creative perspective for each musical piece that influence the composers’ work. Which techniques and which musical knowledge can be exchanged and enlarged thanks to this multiple feedback ? The work on first sources, the competence exchanges between musicians during the many steps of their process of collaborative work construct what we call participatory interpretation in new music. In some aspects we get close to the integral and systemic action-research, since we take part in our study objet, and we modify it in a dynamic process. We propose that the analysis of the musical pieces from our collaborations can bring forth an original knowledge about them and enhance musical creativity. Participatory interpretation optimizes the musical results and explore new mixed “composable” spaces. As a demonstration, some pieces are though analyzed under this participatory perspective. Our research leads to a conclusion towards the idea of plasticity in music making.
5

Present Absence: A work for string quintet and live electronics

Bell, Jeffrey C. 05 1900 (has links)
Present Absence is a work that integrates electronic processing and live performance. It is approximately 20 minutes long and is divided into three movements. The movements are distinct from each other, but are related through various elements. Incorporating electronic processing and live performance can be cumbersome. The primary objective of this piece is to use electronic processing in a manner that liberates the performers from any restrictions imposed by the use of electronic processing. The electronic processing in the work is accomplished through the program MAX/Msp, a real-time digital signal processing environment. The patch that was created for this piece is called MOO-V. This paper discusses the both the technical details in the construction of this patch, and the aesthetic it serves.
6

LOST & FOUND AN ELECTRO-ACOUSTIC MUSICAL COMPOSITION REFERENCING A DAY IN AN AFRICAN VILLAGE: A COMMENTARY ON A MUSICAL COMPOSITION

Essilfie, George 01 January 2019 (has links)
Electro-acoustic music composition makes it possible for composers to manipulate sounds with the computer with either alone or both live and prerecorded sounds. From the end of the 19th century when the first electronic devices for performing music were developed up till today, transformations in music technology keep surfacing and the possibilities with working with sounds have become endless. Electro-acoustic music has the ability to conjure mental images using vast sound manipulation techniques using the DAW(Digital audio workstation) and sound amplification through loudspeakers. Every space in our environment has its unique sound/s. Lost and found through these techniques provides an insight to a space which seems distant by geographical location but closer through sound.
7

Design de difusores sonoros a partir de processo serial : adequação acustica de pequenas salas a performance e audição musical / Design of sound diffusers by serial procedure : acoustical adequacy of small rooms to musical performance and listening

Mannis, Jose Augusto, 1958- 22 February 2008 (has links)
Orientadores: Jonatas Manzolli, Stelamaris Rolla Bertoli / Tese (doutorado) - Universidade Estadual de Campinas, Instituto de Artes / Made available in DSpace on 2018-08-11T10:18:44Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 1 Mannis_JoseAugusto_D.pdf: 7332479 bytes, checksum: c694f419a7ad3630d709d9c453b80cb7 (MD5) Previous issue date: 2008 / Resumo: Este trabalho é dirigido a soluções de conforto acústico para escuta e performance musical, considerando sobretudo aspectos psicoacústicos da escuta subjetiva de músicos e especialistas nesta área. A partir de critérios de avaliação acústica de salas para música em Beranek e princípios de design e funcionamento dos difusores de Schroeder, a pesquisa apresenta soluções originais de concepção e design de difusores a partir da técnica de composição musical com 12 sons de Schoenberg, e pode ser qualificada como inovação tecnológica. A escuta técnica e de apreciação musicais são ao mesmo tempo base, guia e eixo deste trabalho, assim como a melhoria de condições permitindo escutas de boa qualidade é seu objetivo. Perguntas como: ¿O que acontece no som que é importante para os músicos em performance?¿, ¿Como e o que o músico ouve?¿ e ¿O que é importante para a escuta musical?¿ estão profundamente presentes tanto neste trabalho quanto nos trabalhos de Beranek que, por essa razão, foi, teoricamente, um dos pontos de partida adotados. A pesquisa aqui realizada, bem como este trabalho, situa-se na confluência de três grandes áreas do conhecimento: Artes e Humanidades (Música, Sonologia, Arquitetura), Ciência (Física: Acústica) e Tecnologia (Engenharia de áudio, Acústica aplicada, com alguns recursos de Engenharia Civil e Engenharia Mecânica). Na introdução é destacada a importância do som e do silêncio tanto na música quanto na acústica. Como fundamentação teórica há uma exposição ampla de princípios de acústica relacionados, tipologia das simetrias, elementos da técnica de composição musical serial, aspectos desejáveis e indesejáveis em auditórios, parâmetros de avaliação acústica de salas, princípios e funcionamento de difusores acústicos. São propostas três soluções para novos tipos de difusores, bem como apresentados dois projetos detalhados de adequação acústica de salas para música onde são aplicados, com medição de resultados em um dos casos. É apresentada e discutida uma simulação de desempenho das superfícies seriais através de análise modal, verificando a qualidade e desempenho esperados dos difusores concebidos / Abstract: This study is aimed at acoustic comfort solutions for music listening and performance by mainly considering psychoacoustic aspects related to subjective listening of musicians and specialists concerned with this field of knowledge. Starting from acoustic evaluation criteria of music rooms (opera houses and concert halls) in Beranek and principles of design and operation of Schroeder Diffusers, this piece of research presents original solutions and conception as well as design solutions for diffusers by taking Schoenberg¿s 12- sounds musical composition technique as a starting point. This research can be qualified as technological innovation. Simultaneously, both technical listening and music appreciation listening stand for a basis, a guide, and a main point for this work, as well as the improving conditions that allow good quality listenings makes up its objective. Questions such as: ¿What is important in the sound for performing musicians?¿, ¿How and what does the musician listen to?¿ and ¿What is important for music listening?¿ are deeply present either in this research or in Beranek¿s works, which therefore have been theoretically deemed as one of the starting points in use. The research undertaken ¿ as well as this work ¿ lays within the confluence of three major fields of knowledge: Arts and Humanities (Music, Sonology, Architecture), Science (Physics: Acoustics), and Technology (Audio Engineering, Applied Acoustics, in addition to a few resources from Civil Engineering and Mechanical Engineering). The introduction emphasizes the importance of sound and silence either in music or acoustics. The theoretical basis include an extensive exposition of related acoustic principles, symmetry types, elements of serial musical composition technique, desirable and undesirable aspects in auditoriums, acoustic evaluation parameters of rooms, principles and operation of acoustic diffusers. Three solutions are proposed for new types of diffusers. Two detailed projects of acoustic appropriateness are presented for music rooms and concert halls, where they are applied and, in one of the cases, results therefrom are measured. A simulation of the performance obtained in serial surfaces through modal analysis by checking both quality and performance expected from the conceived diffusers is presented and discussed. / Doutorado / Doutor em Música
8

Three Pieces for Musicians and Computer: Rameaux, Nature Morte, Moiré.

Welch, Chapman 12 1900 (has links)
Three Pieces for Musicians and Computer implements a modular formal structure that allows the performers to experiment with the order and number of movements to arrive at their ideal combination. The piece is a collection of three solo works: Rameaux, Nature Morte, and Moiré for bass flute with b-foot, metal percussion (vibraphone, glockenspiel, and crotales), and clarinet (A and B-flat instruments) respectively. In addition to the original versions, an alternate version of each piece is included. The alternate versions add new performance elements to the original works: live electronics in Rameaux and Nature Morte and an acoustic quintet (flute, viola, percussion, piano and harp) in Moiré. These additions reframe the original works by introducing new harmonic, timbral, and formal connections and possibilities. The compositional process of Three Pieces relies on the notion of Germinal Elements, which are defined as the set of limited, distinct, and indivisible materials used in the creation of the work. Though Germinal Elements are indivisible, they undergo a type of developmental process through expansion and contraction, which is an increase or a decrease in the range or scope of any musical parameter (time, pitch, density, dynamic, duration, etc.) or set of parameters. Analysis of this cycle of works reveals a variety of recombinations of four GE's as well as processes of expansion and contraction applied to multiple parameters of each GE to generate formal relationships within and between works. Two electronics systems, the delay/harmonizer instrument and the live performance system are described both in technical and musical terms with specific examples given to show how the electronics influence and expand both the surface material and the formal structure of the work.

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