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Fr Anselm Ferrer (1882 - 1969) : The Cecilian Movement in MontserratDíaz Callao, Marc January 2019 (has links)
No description available.
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The Messe de Requiem op. 54 of Camille Saint-Saëns: An Amalgamation of Contrasting Stylistic Trends in Requiem Composition in Nineteenth-Century ParisRogers, Brent January 2015 (has links)
Camille Saint-Saëns's (1835–1921) Messe de Requiem op. 54 (1878) is among the many works by that composer that are all but forgotten by contemporary musicians. As is the case with most of Saint-Saëns's forgotten works, it is of remarkably high quality, possessing numerous features that make it desirable and accessible to a variety of ensembles. This study seeks to bring greater awareness of the piece to a wider audience, to provide a framework for understanding the most prominent style features of the work, and to ascertain its relationship to other well-known French Requiems of the nineteenth century. To this end, this study identifies and summarizes two trends in French Requiem composition in the nineteenth century: the dramatic trend, exemplified by the Grande Messe des morts op. 5 (1837) of Hector Berlioz, and the conservative trend, exemplified by the second and third of Charles Gounod's four Requiem settings: the Messe breve pour les morts (1873), and the Messe funèbre (1883). Salient style features of these three works are discussed in order to determine how their respective composers bring about the dramatic and conservative affects of their respective works. An analysis of the form, text setting, expressive elements (including dynamics, articulation, and orchestration), harmonic practice, and choral voice leading of Saint-Saëns's Requiem is also given, including a discussion of the relationship of the style features of this work to those of the Berlioz and Gounod Requiems.
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Self-Celebratory Musical Acts: Cecilian Odes and Other Sung Texts as a Means of Acknowledging the Place of Music within the ArtsDegott, Pierre 18 December 2020 (has links)
No description available.
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“Cette jolie muse chrétienne” : la figure de sainte Cécile dans la littérature et les arts en Europe au XIXe siècle / “This pretty Christian muse” : the figure of saint Cecilia in literature and arts in Europe in the 19th centuryLebarbier, Amandine 09 December 2017 (has links)
Cette thèse s’attache à montrer le rôle important qu’a joué la figure de sainte Cécile au XIXe siècle dans l’imaginaire musical européen. La première partie de ce travail est consacrée à l’historiographie de sainte Cécile, du Ve siècle au XIXe siècle, et à l’inscription de la figure dans l’espace culturel européen. Différents media ont contribué à faire de la patricienne romaine légendaire une sainte patronne reconnue et célèbre dont, au premier chef, le tableau de Raphaël, L’Extase de sainte Cécile. Cette œuvre du patrimoine artistique européen fait l’objet d’une véritable fascination auprès des écrivains, des musiciens et des peintres de la première moitié du XIXe siècle et ce travail tente d’en comprendre les raisons. Dans un deuxième temps, cette thèse montre que la figure de sainte Cécile est une figure trope, une allégorie vive, utilisée par de nombreux écrivains pour construire un discours sur la musique, sur l’art et sur le rapport entre les arts. Il y a véritablement des moments sainte Cécile au XIXe siècle qui conduisent à recharger la figure d’un souffle vivant ; elle s’impose alors, non plus comme une figure de rémanence, mais bien comme la possibilité de penser une transcendance et de construire un discours esthétique. Le troisième axe de cette recherche s’inscrit dans une perspective d’études de genres. Héritière de plusieurs types de traditions de représentations féminines, sainte Cécile apparaît comme un outil analogique riche de présupposés idéologiques sur la représentation de la femme et en particulier de la femme musicienne. Représentantes d’un Éternel féminin fantasmé, les femmes musiciennes comparées à sainte Cécile sont les garantes d’une mémoire idéologique qui enferme la femme musicienne dans un champ très restreint de la pratique musicale. / This thesis aims to show the important role played by the figure of Saint Cecilia in the European musical psyche in the 19th century. The first part of this work is devoted to the historiography of Saint Cecilia, from the fifth century to the 19th century, and to the inclusion of the figure in the European cultural space. Various media have contributed to make this legendary Roman patrician a celebrated and famous patron saint but, first and foremost, is the picture of Raphael, The Ecstasy of St. Cecilia. During the first half of the 19th century this artistic European heritage artwork is the subject of a true fascination for the writers, musicians and painters. This thesis tries to understand the reasons why. In the second phase, this thesis shows that the figure of Saint Cecilia is a trope figure, a vivid allegory, used by many writers to construct a discourse on music, art and the relationship between the arts. During the 19th century there were several strong phases of focus on Saint Cecilia, each leading to recharge the figure with a vivid breath. She then imposes herself, no longer as a figure of persistence only, but rather as the possibility of thinking about transcendence and of constructing an aesthetic discourse. The third axis of this research focuses on gender studies. Heiress to several types of feminine representations, Saint Cecilia appears as an analogical tool, rich in ideological presuppositions on the representation of women and women musicians. Representation of an eternal feminine fantasy, the female musicians associated to Saint Cecilia are the guarantors of an ideological memory which encloses the female musician in a very restricted area of the musical practice.
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