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Concerto Carioca 3 de Radamés Gnattali : um estudo analítico / Concerto Carioca 3 by Radamés Gnattali : an analytical studyLobo, Eduardo Fernando de Almeida 08 September 2011 (has links)
Orientador: Antônio Rafael Carvalho dos Santos / Dissertação (mestrado) - Universidade Estadual de Campionas, Instituto de Artes / Made available in DSpace on 2018-08-21T09:51:34Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 1
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Previous issue date: 2011 / Resumo: Esta pesquisa, de cunho musicológico e analítico, apresenta uma versão impressa e uma análise musical do Concerto Carioca nº 3, de Radamés Gnattali, composto no início da década de 1970, até então encontrado manuscrito pelo próprio autor. O processo de edição foi financiado pelo grupo Quatro a Zero e teve uma revisão realizada por Roberto Gnattali e outra realizada pelo autor desta dissertação. A fundamentação teórica da análise foi baseada nos livros Harmony e Orchestration de Walter Piston, Twentieth-Century Harmony de Vincent Persichetti, Materials and Techniques of Twentieth-Century Music de Stefan Kostka, A guide to Schenkerian Analysis de David Neumeyer e Susan Tepping, Analytic Approaches to Twentieth-Century Music, de Joel Lester e no artigo de Richard Cohn "Introduction to Neo-Riemannian theory: A survey and a historical perspective". Utilizando uma abordagem Neo-Riemanniana aliada ao uso da Teoria dos Conjuntos, foi possível demonstrar como o compositor estrutura esta grande obra, aliando sonoridades tonais diatônicas e octatônicas, com trechos pós tonais, apontando Radamés como um compositor criativo e ao mesmo tempo consciente da condução dos planos formais em uma obra de vulto. Demonstrar também como o compositor, grande conhecedor da música popular brasileira, utiliza os ritmos e os conceitos formais oriundos desta música para estruturar esta obra clássica / Abstract: This musicological and analytical research presents a printed version and a musical analysis of the Concerto Carioca No. 3 by Radames Gnattali, composed out in early 1970s, previously found in manuscript version by the author. The editing process was financed by the musical group Quatro a Zero and was reviewed by Roberto Gnattali and the author of this dissertation. The analysis theoretical foundation was based on the books Harmony and Orchestration by Walter Piston, Twentieth-Century Harmony by Vincent Persichetti, Materials and Techniques of Twentieth-Century Music by Stefan Kostka, A guide to Schenkerian Analysis by David Neumeyer and Susan Tepping, Analytic Approaches to Twentieth-Century Music by Joel Lester and Richard Cohn's article Introduction to Neo- Riemannian Theory: a survey and a historical perspective. Using a Neo-Riemannian approach allied to Pitch set Theory, it could be shown how the composer created the structure of this large work, combining tonal diatonic and octatonic sonorities with posttonal passages, showing Radames as a creative and at the same time conscious composer when conducting formal plans of a large work. It also shows how the composer, an expert in Brazilian popular music, uses the rhythms and the formal concepts from this music to compose this classical work / Mestrado / Fundamentos Teoricos / Mestre em Música
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Let Me Make it Simple for YouWaschka, R., 1958- 05 1900 (has links)
Discusses the creation and performance at a concert on Feb. 12, 1990, in the Merrill Ellis Intermedia Theater at the University of North Texas of three computer music-intermedia compositions: Shakespeare quartet for 4 acoustic guitars; A noite, porem, rangeu e quebrou, for instrument of low pitch range, tape and computer; and Help me remember, for performer, Synclavier, interactive MIDI computer music system and slides.
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The Influence of Chinese Folk and Instrumental Music on Tcherepnin's "Chinese mikrokosmos": A Lecture Recital, Together with Three Recitals of Selected Works of J.S. Bach, W.A. Mozart, C. Debussy, S. Rachmaninoff, D. Shostakovich, and OthersLuo, Yeou-Huey 08 1900 (has links)
One of the most important compositional theories of Alexander Tcherepnin (1899-1977), Russian-American composer and pianist, is the Eurasian ideology, which was a result of the influence of Eastern culture. Inspired by this theory, Tcherepnin not only extricated himself from his own compositional techniques, but also intensified his search for musical folklore. In April, 1934, he began a world tour which was to include China, Japan, Singapore, the Philippines, Egypt, and Palestine, to search for "musical folklore." He became so fascinated with the culture of ancient China that he cancelled the rest of his arrangements, and, except for visits to Japan, he remained in China for three years, until the outbreak of the Sino-Japanese War in July, 1937.
During his three-year stay in China, Tcherepnin was greatly attracted to Chinese culture, and as a result, Chinese culture influenced his music to a significant degree. This essay examines the manner in which Tcherepnin's music was influenced by his experiences in China.
In order to precisely analyze the close affiliation between Chinese musical elements and Tcherepnin's "Chinese Mikrokosmos," many original Chinese sources proved indispensable in this study. These sources include Chinese folk music, theater music, instrumental music, religious music, and Chinese periodicals and newspapers that reported Tcherepnin's activities in China (1934-7).
The organization of this dissertation as follows: Chapter I provides a brief biographical sketch of Tcherepnin, traces his activities in China, and introduces one of his greatest "Chinese" compositions, "Chinese Mikrokosmos," which represents the fruits of his labors to scrutinize and absorb Chinese musical language. Chapters II and III are devoted to exploring how Chinese folk and instrumental music inspired Tcherepnin's "Chinese Mikrokosmos." Chapter IV summarizes this study.
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Tele: Using Vernacular Performance Practices in an Eight-Channel EnvironmentWelch, Chapman 08 1900 (has links)
Examines the use of vernacular, country guitar styles in an electro-acoustic environment. Special attention is given to performance practices and explanation of techniques. Electro-acoustic techniques-including sound design and spatialization-are given with sonogram analyses and excerpts from the score. Compositional considerations are contrasted with those of Mario Davidovsky and Jean-Claude Risset with special emphasis on electro-acoustic approaches. Contextualization of the piece in reference to other contemporary, electric guitar music is shown with reference to George Crumb and Chiel Meijering.
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Towards a psychoanalytical music analysis of Hector Berlioz's song cycle Les nuits d'étéBotha, Henry Russell 01 1900 (has links)
This dissertation explores what it is that makes Les nuits d’été such an effective musical composition. This is done by analysing the song cycle according to Terry Eagleton’s four categories of psychoanalytical literary criticism. The death of Berlioz’s mother, with whom he had an unresolved conflict at the time of her death, is proposed as the emotional trigger that led to the composition of these songs. The content and form of the music to which he set them reveals a narrative that closely corresponds to Freud’s description of the Oedipal conflict and its successful resolution. Using the psychoanalytical theories of Lacan, Barthes, Kristeva and others, the subliminal catharsis of Berlioz’s song cycle, in the way that it is transposed to the listener through the mediation of the music, is proposed as the reason why Les nuits d’été is such an effective musical composition. / Art History, Visual Arts and Musicology / M.A. (Musicology)
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The Orchestral Mentality of Johannes Brahms' Piano Sonata No. 3Hsu, Yu-Ching 08 1900 (has links)
Although the current, exhaustive studies of Brahms' works have covered many aspects of the composer's art, it is still surprising that his large-scale, five-movement Piano Sonata No.3 has in many ways been insufficiently studied by scholars who have emphasized the genre of the piano sonata and the aspect of performance practice over the work's more diverse features. Another reason that this early work has been understudied could in fact be that his later compositions in other genres, such as his symphonies, chamber music or choral music, have been perceived by scholars to represent best his most mature, comprehensive style. This dissertation will therefore examine the orchestral underpinnings of this monumental work which owes most often its already mature artistic essence to Brahms' multi-instrumental approach.
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A Performer's Guide to Samuil Feinberg's Sonata No. 6: A Window into Russian School PianismGeorgievskaya, Liudmila 08 1900 (has links)
Samuil Feinberg was an important performing pianist, composer, and one of the protagonists of Russian Piano School. Among his numerous piano compositions, the Sixth Sonata is one of the most complex and illustrative of his deeply personal musical ideas. The following performer's guide offers some ideas on interpreting and performing the sonata from the perspective of Russian school pianism. Having trained in Russia for nearly a decade with two of Feinberg's most eminent disciples and assistants (Tatiana Galitskaya and Liudmila Roschina) makes this author part of living chain back to his pedagogical principles. I will draw upon my knowledge and expertise to illustrate how interpretation of Feinberg's Sonata No. 6 embodies many of the particular and subtle aspects of the Russian piano school technique.
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Rediscovering James Robert Gillette's VistasKitelinger, Jennifer 12 1900 (has links)
James Robert Gillette (1886-1963) was an early advocate for original wind band music at a time when marches and band transcriptions of orchestral music contributed heavily to the wind band repertoire. Primarily known as an influential, in-demand organist and composer, Gillette became the director of the Carleton College band program in Northfield, Minnesota in 1924. Taking an innovative approach to building, organizing, and programming, Gillette transformed that group into the Carleton Symphony Band and led a wider push for the symphonic band movement. In promoting his ideals of the symphonic band, he composed and arranged music specifically for the Carleton Symphony Band. One of his original works, Vistas, was widely performed and well-received in the decade just prior to and after its publication in 1934. Despite the popularity of the piece at that time, it has since gone out of print and is a rarely performed piece from Gillette's repertoire. This dissertation focuses on Vistas, Gillette's second published tone poem. This study starts with the examination of the history of Vistas from its origins as a movement in Gillette's transcription of Paul Robert Fauchet's Symphony in B-flat to its subsequent transformation and publication as an original work for band. Next, the performance history and reception of Vistas in the United States is traced and described from the year of publication to the present day. Finally, discrepancies present in the 1934 publication of Vistas are addressed through the creation of a performance edition. This performance edition also provides modifications to make the piece more widely accessible to wind bands today and the full score is presented at the end of the study.
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The Concerto for Bassoon by Andrzej Panufnik: Religion, Liberation, and PostmodernismOtt, Janelle (Bassoonist) 05 1900 (has links)
The Concerto for Bassoon by Andrzej Panufnik is a valuable addition to bassoon literature. It provides a rare opportunity for the bassoon soloist to perform a piece which is strongly programmatic. The purpose of this document is to examine the historical and theoretical context of the Concerto for Bassoon with special emphasis drawn to Panufnik's understanding of religion in connection with Polish national identity and the national struggle for democratic independence galvanized by the murder of Father Jerzy Popieluszko in 1984. Panufnik's relationship with the Polish communist regime, both prior to and after his 1954 defection to England, is explored at length. Each of these aspects informed Panufnik's compositional approach and the expressive qualities inherent in the Concerto for Bassoon.
The Concerto for Bassoon was commissioned by the Polanki Society of Milwaukee, Wisconsin and was premiered by the Milwaukee Chamber Players, with Robert Thompson as the soloist. While Panufnik intended the piece to serve as a protest against the repression of the Soviet government in Poland, the U. S. context of the commission and premiere is also examined. Additionally, the original manuscript and subsequent piano reduction are compared.
Although the Concerto for Bassoon has been subject to formal analysis by several scholars, discussion of the piece is generally contained within a larger discussion of several other compositions, and a comprehensive analysis of the piece has not yet been presented. This document contains a thorough formal analysis of all movements, as well as analysis of Panufnik's compositional style within the context of serialism, postmodernism, and the new Polish school of composition. The Concerto fro Bassoon features several devices common to Panufnik's larger opus, including the se of a common three-note cell, strong contrasts between section and movements, and symmetrical patterns of transposition, metric alteration, dynamic alteration, and registral expansion.
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Musical and Dramatic Functions of Loops and Loop Breakers in Philip Glass's Opera The VoyageWu, Chia-Ying (Charles) 05 1900 (has links)
Philip Glass's minimalist opera The Voyage commemorates the 500th Anniversary of Christopher Columbus's discovery of America. In the opera, Philip Glass, like other composers, expresses singers' and non-singers' words and activities by means of melodies, rhythms, chords, textures, timbres, and dynamics. In addition to these traditional musical expressions, successions of reiterating materials (RMs, two or more iterations of materials) and non reiterating materials (NRMs) become new musical expressions. However, dividing materials into theses two categories only distinguishes NRMs from RMs without exploring relations among them in successions. For instance, a listener cannot perceive the functional relations between a partial iteration of the RM and the NRM following the partial RM because both the partial RM and the NRM are NRMs. As a result, a listener hears a succession of NRM followed by another NRM. When an analyst relabels the partial RM as partial loop, and the NRM following the partial RM as loop breaker, a listener hears the NRM as a loop breaker causing a partial loop. The musical functions of loops and loop breakers concern a listener's expectations of the creation, sustaining, departure, and return to the norm in successions of loops and loop breakers. When a listener associates the satisfaction and dissatisfaction of these expectations with dramatic devices such as incidents, words in dialogues and soliloquies, and activities by singers and non-singers, loops and loop breakers in successions become dramatically functional. This dissertation explores the relations among musical and dramatic functions of loops and loop breakers in Glass's musical commemoration of Columbus.
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