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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.
11

The Ballad of Lady Isabel and the False Knight /

Kemppinen, Iivar, January 1954 (has links)
Texte remanié de: Väitöskirja--Åbo--Faculty of human sciences, 1954. / Bibliogr. p. 266-291.
12

Alienation and powerlessness : Adam Mickiewicz's Ballady and Chopin's Ballades

Zakrzewska, Dorota. January 1998 (has links)
Music scholars have long been trying to determine the major influences on the Ballades of Fryderyk Chopin. Some, like Karol Berger, have pointed to ideological influences of the Polish emigration in Paris, while others, like James Parakilas, have given credit to the generic characteristics of the European literary ballad. In my own view, however, the most salient extra-musical factor in the background to Chopin's Ballades are Ballady, a series of poems by the 19th century Polish poet Adam Mickiewicz. / After Chopin's death, Mickiewicz's Ballady were frequently associated with Chopin's Ballades, and in the first chapter I demonstrate this by examining the reception history of these works. In the next chapter I analyze the ideology of the Polish emigration in Paris, including prominent themes of alienation, powerlessness, morbid anxiety, pilgrimage, and nostalgia, which were used by that expatriate society to identify itself. Finally, in the third chapter, I trace analogies between these themes and their manifestations in Mickiewicz's Ballady. This analysis of Mickiewicz's poems forms the basis of my interpretation of Chopin's Second Ballade, where I discuss how certain textual and thematic features of the poems taken as a group can be mapped onto the form and musical discourse of the piano piece. / In sum, although the associations between specific poems and Chopin's Ballades have been made by many authors, no one has distilled a single narrative archetype from the group of Mickiewicz's Ballady to apply to Chopin's works.
13

Alienation and powerlessness : Adam Mickiewicz's Ballady and Chopin's Ballades

Zakrzewska, Dorota. January 1998 (has links)
No description available.
14

Forms in the Chopin Ballades

Driggers, Orin Samuel 08 1900 (has links)
The term ballade is the French and German spelling of the English word "ballad" and the Italian ballata. Although each of these terms is derived from the Latin ballare, meaning "to dance," each denotes an entirely different meaning. The synonomous usage of these terms is definitely misleading (1,p. 67), Frederic Chopin, 1810-1849, was first to use this term as a title for piano compositions. The purpose of this study is to reveal the formal characteristics of each of the four ballades that Chopin wrote for solo piano and to determine,through a comparison of the similarities and differences, some identifying characteristics of a ballade. These characteristics will be illustrated through a formal analysis of each ballade.
15

The Origin and Development of the Clavier Dance Suite to J.S. Bach

Smith, George Lyndal 06 1900 (has links)
A history of the evolution of dance music throughout time and the instruments used for each type of dance.
16

La ballade polyphonique à la fin du Moyen-Age : de l'union entre musique naturelle et musique artificielle /

Dulong, Gilles. January 2000 (has links)
Thèse--Musicologie--Tours--Univ. François-Rabelais, 2000. / Bibliogr. f. 349-358. Index.
17

Large-Scale Form in Chopin's Four Ballades from Sonata Theory and Phrase-Rhythmic Perspectives

Chung, Soo Kyung 22 August 2022 (has links)
No description available.
18

Two-Dimensional Sonata Form as Methodology: Understanding Sonata-Variation Hybrids through a Two-Dimensional Lens

Falterman, David 05 1900 (has links)
One of the difficulties of nineteenth-century form studies is ambiguity in ascertaining which formal types are at work and in what ways. This can be an especially difficult problem when multiple formal types seem to influence the construction of a single composition. Drawing on some recent innovations in form studies proposed by Steven Vande Moortele, Janet Schmalfeldt, and Caitlin Martinkus, I first develop a set of analytical tools specifically made for the analysis of sonata/variation formal hybrids. I then refine these tools by applying them to the analysis of two pieces. Chopin's Fourth Piano Ballade can be understood from this perspective as primarily following the broad outlines of a sonata form, but with important influences from the recursive structures of variation forms; Franck's Symphonic Variations, on the other hand, are better viewed as engaging most of all with multiple variation-form paradigms and overlaying them with some of the rhetorical and formal structures of sonata forms. I conclude with a brief speculation on some further, more general applications of my methodology.

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