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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.
31

Iron John for solo bass & orchestra /

Snyder, Mark. January 2003 (has links)
Thesis (M.M.)--Ohio University, August, 2003. / Title from PDF t.p.
32

Doctoral thesis recital (double bass)

Kwak, Se Hyun 25 March 2014 (has links)
Suite for violin and double bass / Reinhold Gliere ; transscribed by Frank Proto -- Duet for cello and double bass in D major / Gioacchino Rossini -- Piano trio no. 39 in G major : "Gypsy" / Joseph Haydn / text
33

An Historical Survey of Double Bass Pedagogy and Performance

Boyd, Joseph Thomas, Boyd, Joseph Thomas January 1978 (has links)
No description available.
34

Doctoral thesis recital (Double bass)

Gilliam-Valls, Jessica 07 June 2012 (has links)
Sonata no. 1 : Gamba / Johann Sebastian Bach -- Four pieces. Andante, op. 1 ; Valse miniature : op. 1, no. 2 ; Chanson triste : op. 2 ; Humoresque : op. 4 / Serge Koussevitzky -- Monk's mood / Thelonious Monk ; arr. Buell Neidlinger -- Sonata for double bass and piano (1996) / David Anderson. / text
35

Doctoral thesis recital (double bass)

Ballam, David 18 July 2012 (has links)
Sonata in A major, op. 2, no. 5 / B. Marcello -- Sonata in D major / J. M. Sperger -- Sonata #1 in A major, op. 5 / Adolf Misek -- Sonata "1963" / Frank Proto. / text
36

Simplification and Octavation in Double Bass Performance: An Overview of Historical and Contemporary Practices

Shih, Wen-Ling 05 1900 (has links)
Two important performance practices in the modern orchestral performance are discussed in this document: simplification and octavation. Due to the differing opinions and common practices which bass players have around these two performance practices, simplification and octavation have become two of the most complex issues faced by orchestral sections. The first part of the document will provide a brief history of simplification and octavation. The second part of the document will offer recommendation for double bass orchestral practice in the 21st century and examine key works of the bass repertoire in which simplification and octavation occur. The research and practice of leading pedagogues and major orchestral players and the solutions they have developed to reduce the discrepancy inherent within section playing will be discussed. This document will propose several empirical solutions to major excerpts in the bass repertoire, demonstrating how it is to achieve the most uniformed playing, and offer applicable and suggestive guidelines for contemporary orchestral double bass performers.
37

Interpretation and Execution of Chords on the Double Bass from Select Movements of the Bach Cello Suites

Chen, Der-Shiuan 08 1900 (has links)
The Bach Cello Suites have become widely transcribed and studied on the double bass. They have also become essential teaching material as most US orchestra auditions demand solo Bach for bass auditions. Transcribing the chords in Bach Cello Suites presents many difficulties on the bass because of the different tuning of our instrument (cello in 5ths; double bass in 4ths). There is no unified solution to all the problems presented in chord playing at this time. The purpose of this project, therefore is to give bass players solutions to the problems by looking at historical interpretation of chords, technical execution of the chords on cello and bass, tonal and resonance considerations and fingering solutions. The chords chosen represent the most common and most difficult to transcribe to the double bass from the Cello Suites.
38

New Performance Editions of Three Works for Double Bass by Theodor Albin Findeisen (1881-1936)

Matheson, Robert Newell January 2012 (has links)
The purpose of this project is to bring to light three concert works by Theodor Albin Findeisen (1881-1936), namely Nixenreigen, Elegie, and Romantische Suite, and prepare them for use by modern double bassists. Save for Findeisen's compositions, which are largely out of print and unknown, the Late Romantic Austro-German school of composition is not represented in the double bass concert repertory. To establish the historical significance of Findeisen's concert works for double bass, this document includes background information on the composer and his work. This research culminates in the creation of newly arranged, transposed, transcribed, and edited performance editions that are informed by Findeisen's methodology and by modern performance techniques. This document addresses editorial decisions in creating these new editions.
39

Beethoven's Double Bass Parts: The Viennese Violone and the Problem of Lower Compass

Buckley, Stephen 16 September 2013 (has links)
This study addresses the discrepancy between the range of Beethoven's double bass parts and the instrument or instruments in use in Vienna in his day. Scholars and musicians have complained about Beethoven's apparent disregard for the instrument's capabilities since the middle of the nineteenth century. A systematic examination of Beethoven's orchestral writing for the double bass shows that this reputation is undeserved. In fact Beethoven paid close attention to the lower compass of the double bass throughout his orchestral writing: a clear boundary of F is observed up to op. 55, and thereafter E, though F still obtains in some late works. Beethoven's observance of the F boundary suggests that he was writing for the Viennese five-stringed violone, and not the modern form of the instrument, as has previously been assumed in scholarship. Other evidence pointing to the use of this instrument is presented. Some of Beethoven's bass parts between op. 55 and op. 125 do in fact descend to C (sounding C1); yet there is no evidence supporting the existence of a double bass instrument capable of C1 in Beethoven's day. Possible explanations for these violations of the compass of the double bass are discussed. These focus on the possibility of simple proofreading error, and on evidence for the unwritten practice of reinforcing the double bass with one or more contrabassoons. The contrabassoon in Beethoven's day had a lower compass of C1, and Vienna was an early center for its production and use. Analysis of the bulk of Beethoven's double bass parts for their range is given. Emphasis in this analysis is given to instances where Beethoven demonstrates a clear awareness of the compass of the instrument. Out-of-range pitches are compiled in table form.
40

Doctoral thesis recital (double bass)

Hassan, Tarik 20 January 2015 (has links)
Beatrice / Sam Rivers -- Pent-up house / Sonny Rollins -- Everything I love / Cole porter -- Darn that dream / Jimmy van Heusen -- Django / John Lewis -- Laverne walk / Oscar Pettiford. / text

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