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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

André Jolivet’s Chant de Linos (1944): A Sentential Analysis

Guarnuccio, Bryan Arthur 26 June 2006 (has links)
No description available.
2

Sentential Cycling: Structural Layering in the Baroque Era

Smith, Jennifer M. 29 July 2008 (has links)
No description available.
3

A Performance-and-Analysis Approach to a Cadential Ambiguity: Chopin's Piano Sonata No. 2 in B-flat minor, Op. 35, First Movement

Kim, Yereum 12 1900 (has links)
Pianists often have trouble in determining where a phrase ends, or in other words, cadence identification. This is especially true of certain cadences that can be considered either as half cadences or authentic cadences. This analytically ambiguous cadential point can result in different performance decisions, so pianists should make informed decisions about what kind of cadence it is. This study aims to investigate such cadential ambiguity shown at points of phrase boundaries by focusing on Chopin's Piano Sonata No. 2 in B-flat minor, Op. 35, first movement. I offer both possibilities (a half cadence or an authentic cadence) at the phrase ending, suggesting a performance-related strategy based on each possibility. My objective is not to support only one cadential status, but to bring up the cadential problem from the analytical perspective and to demonstrate how cadence identification affects performance results. The dissertation is divided into two parts: analysis and performance, so it relies on a combined method of analytical terminologies and performance-related musical elements. In the analysis, the terminology of William Caplin is employed. The performance part refers to several method books written by prestigious piano pedagogues. After an introduction in Chapter 1, Chapter 2 reviews some literature on cadences. Chapter 3 specifically analyzes the first movement of Chopin's second sonata by means of Caplin's terminologies. Chapter 4 provides a performance-related method and Chapter 5 deals with a practical performance strategy.
4

Symphonie no 3 en mi bémol majeur, op. 55, dite « Eroica », de Ludwig van Beethoven : a nalyse musicale de l’Allegro con brio et exégèse maçonnique

Cadrin, Béatrice 12 1900 (has links)
Au début du XIXe siècle, le paysage socio-politique européen est dominé par les bouleversements en provenance de France. Réagissant à ceux-ci, l’empereur Franz I restreint les libertés individuelles des sujets du Saint Empire Romain, tandis qu’au sein de l’aristocratie se trouvent au contraire des adeptes de l’Aufklärung, défenseurs de liberté et de tolérance. C’est dans ce contexte que Beethoven compose sa troisième symphonie en 1803-1804. Solomon (2004) a démontré que le compositeur a fréquenté sa vie durant des adhérents aux principes de l’Aufklärung, dont plusieurs francs-maçons. Des symboles maçonniques de sa main ornent d’ailleurs une page d’esquisses pour l’Eroica (Lockwood, 2013). Il semble donc naturel d’explorer cette œuvre sous cet angle. Une analyse formelle de l’Allegro con brio, la première selon la méthode de Caplin (1998), permet de faire ressortir une récurrence marquée du chiffre 3 à travers plusieurs paramètres (tonalité, métrique, rythme, forme, instrumentation). De plus, les trois étapes du rite initiatique (mort, enterrement et résurrection) sont représentées dans les trois premiers mouvements, tandis qu’on retrouve dans les trois derniers mouvements des évocations de la devise française Liberté, Égalité, Fraternité Cette relecture sous l’angle d’une interprétation maçonnique d’une œuvre fondamentale du canon symphonique apporte une contribution inédite à l’historiographie sur Beethoven ainsi qu’à l’histoire de la pensée et des sociétés. / At the beginning of the 19th century, the changes coming from France dominate the European sociopolitical landscape. In reaction to these, Franz I restricts individual freedom of the subjects of the Holy Roman Empire, while within the aristocracy, the numbers of adepts of the Aufklärung movement and believers in freedom and tolerance are growing. It is in this context that Beethoven composes his Third Symphony in 1803-104. Solomon (2004) has demonstrated that his whole life, the composer was surrounded with members of the Aufklärung, many of them also freemasons. Masonic symbols in Beethoven’s hand are even to be found on a page of his sketchbook for the Eroica (Lockwood, 2013). Therefore, it only seems logical to analyse the symphony from the angle of a masonic interpretation. A formal analysis of the first movement according to Caplin’s method (1998), the first of its kind to be applied to a whole movement from a Beethoven symphony, brings to the fore a marked recurrence of the number three throughout numerous parameters (tonality, measure, rhythm, form, instrumentation). Furthermore, all three steps of the masonic initiation rite (death, burial and resurrection) are represented in the first three movements, whereas one also finds references to the French motto of Liberté, Égalité, Fraternité in the last three. This new reading of a fundamental work of the symphonic canon represents a novel contribution to the historiography of Beethoven.
5

An Analysis of Phrase Structures in the First Movement of Leo Brouwer’s Elogio De La Danza (1964)

Focsaneanu, Bogdan Vasile 13 September 2012 (has links)
This study examines phrase and larger formal structures in the first movement of Leo Brouwer’s Elegio de la Danza (1964), a work that draws on tonal and post-tonal traditions. By adapting key features of the tonal motive, as described by Douglass Green, and the tonal period, as proposed by Green and William Caplin, the model seeks to provide a tool for the discussion of phrases and larger forms in Brouwer’s work. An analysis of primary parameters, such as melody, harmony, and rhythm, provides the means to discuss how the composer articulates beginnings and endings of statements and responses, which are then grouped into antecedent and consequent phrases. These periods articulate large-scale sections, which outline a ternary formal design. Secondary parameters (dynamics, tempo markings, instrumental markings) further contribute to the identification of formal structures in Brouwer’s work.
6

An Analysis of Phrase Structures in the First Movement of Leo Brouwer’s Elogio De La Danza (1964)

Focsaneanu, Bogdan Vasile 13 September 2012 (has links)
This study examines phrase and larger formal structures in the first movement of Leo Brouwer’s Elegio de la Danza (1964), a work that draws on tonal and post-tonal traditions. By adapting key features of the tonal motive, as described by Douglass Green, and the tonal period, as proposed by Green and William Caplin, the model seeks to provide a tool for the discussion of phrases and larger forms in Brouwer’s work. An analysis of primary parameters, such as melody, harmony, and rhythm, provides the means to discuss how the composer articulates beginnings and endings of statements and responses, which are then grouped into antecedent and consequent phrases. These periods articulate large-scale sections, which outline a ternary formal design. Secondary parameters (dynamics, tempo markings, instrumental markings) further contribute to the identification of formal structures in Brouwer’s work.
7

An Analysis of Phrase Structures in the First Movement of Leo Brouwer’s Elogio De La Danza (1964)

Focsaneanu, Bogdan Vasile January 2012 (has links)
This study examines phrase and larger formal structures in the first movement of Leo Brouwer’s Elegio de la Danza (1964), a work that draws on tonal and post-tonal traditions. By adapting key features of the tonal motive, as described by Douglass Green, and the tonal period, as proposed by Green and William Caplin, the model seeks to provide a tool for the discussion of phrases and larger forms in Brouwer’s work. An analysis of primary parameters, such as melody, harmony, and rhythm, provides the means to discuss how the composer articulates beginnings and endings of statements and responses, which are then grouped into antecedent and consequent phrases. These periods articulate large-scale sections, which outline a ternary formal design. Secondary parameters (dynamics, tempo markings, instrumental markings) further contribute to the identification of formal structures in Brouwer’s work.
8

A Fistful of Drama: Musical Form in the <i>Dollars</i> Trilogy

Kausalik, Emily Anne 29 July 2008 (has links)
No description available.
9

Formal and Harmonic Considerations in Clara Schumann's <i>Drei Romanzen</i>, op. 21, no. 1

Lakner, Katie 29 July 2015 (has links)
No description available.
10

Comparing Formal Analyses of Dmitri Shostakovich’s <i>Symphony No. 5, Op. 47</i> Through the Theories of James Hepokoski, Warren Darcy, and William Caplin

Walden, Joseph P. January 2014 (has links)
No description available.

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