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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.
201

Psytrance: o ritornelo da alegria : comunicação, design sonoro, música eletrônica

Lemos, Sabrina Maia [UNESP] 15 September 2006 (has links) (PDF)
Made available in DSpace on 2014-06-11T19:24:04Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 0 Previous issue date: 2006-09-15Bitstream added on 2014-06-13T19:07:15Z : No. of bitstreams: 1 lemos_sm_me_bauru.pdf: 766787 bytes, checksum: ccf5175c2fc664ef285a68a7ee9afed7 (MD5) / Coordenação de Aperfeiçoamento de Pessoal de Nível Superior (CAPES) / Uma escuta contemplativa dos acontecimentos sonoros do Psychedelic Trance. Agenciadas por Deleuze e Guattari, desde a gênese da música eletrônica, as afecções bergonianas nietzscheanas e espinosanas se desdobram em Psytrance, uma composição afectivo-sonora da mídia eletrônica. / A contemplative audition of the sonorous events of the Psychedelic Trance. By the texture of Deleuze and Guatarri meaning, since the eletronic music genesis, the Bergson, Nietzsche and Espinosa affections unfold in Psytrance, an affective-sonorous composition of the eletronic media.
202

A informatividade da música eletrônica / The informativeness of electronic music

Jade Augusto de Macedo Gola Fernandes 08 October 2015 (has links)
Essa pesquisa faz um recorte da música eletrônica através de suas linguagens, práticas documentárias e processos informativos, estudados a partir de contextos socioculturais, para observar sua constituição como um gênero musical popular. A informatividade da música eletrônica foi compreendida em seus complexos de relações terminológicas e conjecturas diversas, ilustrando e identificando interrelações, propriedades estéticoformais, categorizações e características discursivas e linguísticas. Conceitos da Ciência da Informação e das humanidades foram utilizados para analisar como esse gênero irresoluto e fragmentado por muitas definições, processos anticategóricos e conflitos de distinção cultural, acaba por definir-se como um campo de intensa materialidade informativa e histórica, que segue tendo na ideia de \"música eletrônica\" seu universo simultaneamente amplo e circunscrito. Objetos, fenômenos, o devir musical, categorias e as linguagens dessa música foram estudados sob os vértices da informatividade, como proposta por Bernd Frohmann, conceito processual que surge a partir da ideia dos documentos como definidores e reveladores de contextos, problemáticas e discursos. Essa pesquisa conclui como a informatividade da música eletrônica logra documentá-la como tal: um gênero musical histórico, institucionalizado e documentado, coeso e problematizado por preponderantes aspectos informativos, referenciais e de categorização - um fenômeno da Cultura e da Informação. / This research outlines electronic music through its languages, documentary practices, informative processes and their sociocultural contexts, to observe its constituion as a popular music genre. The informativenesse of electronic music is seen from its complexes of terminology relations and several conjectures, that illustrate and identify interrelations, aesthetic and formal properties, categorizations, discursive and linguistic characteristics. Concepts from Information Science and other humanities have been used to analyze how this irresolute musical genre, fragmented by anti-categorical and cultural distinction conflits, ends up being defined as a field of intense informative and historical materiality. This music still relies this wide and also circumscribed universe on the idea of \"electronic music\". Objectos, phenomena, the music becoming, categories and languages of this music have been studied under the informativeness theorical vertices, as proposed by Bernd Frohmann, a procedural concept that arises from the ideia of documents as defining elements of contexts, discourses and problems. This research concludes how informativeness manages to document electronic music as such: a historical, institutionalized and documented musical genre, cohesive and also very problematized by its preponderant informative, referential and categorical aspects - a Cultural and Informative phenomenon.
203

Musica eletronica e xamanismo : tecnicas contemporaneas do extase / Electronic music and shamanism: contemporary techniques of ecstasy

Ferreira, Pedro Peixoto, 1975- 10 February 2006 (has links)
Orientador: Laymert Garcia dos Santos / Tese (doutorado) - Universidade Estadual de Campinas, Instituto de Filosofia e Ciencias Humanas / Made available in DSpace on 2018-08-07T10:34:57Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 1 Ferreira_PedroPeixoto_D.pdf: 8937333 bytes, checksum: 17df3e5c647ad1becc52c5bfc711471a (MD5) Previous issue date: 2006 / Resumo: Começamos com uma análise das relações entre música eletrônica de pista e xamanismo a partir de um assim chamado discurso nativo e descobrimos que elas se concentram principalmente na produção de uma experiência de transe pela imersão em um ambiente sonoro intenso, repetitivo e técnico. Depois, realizamos uma pesquisa bibliográfica sobre xamanismo indígena e sobre suas relações com a tecnologia moderna, que revelou não apenas a íntima relação entre xamanismo e tecnologia, mas também uma tendência do xamarusmo tradicional a se distribuir tecnologicamente em situações de contato entre índios e brancos. Enfim, propomos uma interpretação da música eletrônica de pista como o som de uma máquina e de seu xamanismo como o uso dessa máquina pelo DI e pelo seu público na produção de estados de transe maquínico. Esboçamos também as linhas gerais de uma metodologia para a verificação dessa proposta em pesquisas futuras. Esta pesquisa se insere num esforço mais amplo de investigar os maquinismos inconscientes que fazem funcionar a máquina capitalista contemporânea / Abstract: We began with an analysis of the relations between electronic dance music and shamanism as found in a so called native discourse, and discovered that they concern mainly the experience of trance produced by the immersion in an intense, repetitive and technical sonic environment. Then, we did a bibliographical research about indigenous shamanism and about its relations with modern technology which revealed not only the intimate relations between shamanism and technology but also a tendency of traditional shamanism to beco me technologically distributed in contexts of contact among Indians and Whites. At last, we proposed an interpretation of electronic dance music as the sound of a machine and of its shamanism as the use of this machine by the DI and his audience in the production of machinic trance states. We also sketched the main lines of a methodology for the verification of this proposal in future researches. This research is part of a bigger effort to investigate the unconscious machinisms which make work the contemporary capitalist machine / Doutorado / Doutor em Ciências Sociais
204

The development of resources for electronic music in the UK, with particular reference to the bids to establish a National Studio

Candlish, Nicola Anne January 2012 (has links)
This thesis traces the history and development of the facilities for electronic music in the UK. It covers the early attempts to experiment with electronic music and create studios in less than ideal circumstances and the subsequent bids to create a national centre. It also covers some elements of worldwide development of electronic music and sound recording, in particular those which occurred before 1965. The thesis calls upon non-traditional sources and the author was able to access many documents in the personal archives of electronic music pioneers. There is substantial reference to committees and societies for electronic music and their effects on the development of facilities for electronic music in the UK. Some of the early pioneers are studied in detail; these include Daphne Oram, Tristram Cary and Hugh Davies. Unprecedented access to information on Hugh Davies and Daphne Oram was provided by the family estates of these recently deceased composers. This allowed the author to gain valuable insight into the working patterns and methodology of these composers. Many references to later pioneers such as Trevor Wishart are also made but the focus remains on the facilities available to composers rather than the composers and their works.
205

Non-invasive gesture sensing, physical modeling, machine learning and acoustic actuation for pitched percussion

Trail, Shawn 07 May 2018 (has links)
This thesis explores the design and development of digitally extended, electro- acoustic (EA) pitched percussion instruments, and their use in novel, multi-media performance contexts. The proposed techniques address the lack of expressivity in existing EA pitched percussion systems. The research is interdisciplinary in na- ture, combining Computer Science and Music to form a type of musical human- computer interaction (HCI) in which novel playing techniques are integrated in perfor- mances. Supporting areas include Electrical Engineering- design of custom hardware circuits/DSP; and Mechanical Engineering- design/fabrication of new instruments. The contributions can be grouped into three major themes: 1) non-invasive gesture recognition using sensors and machine learning, 2) acoustically-excited physical mod- els, 3) timbre-recognition software used to trigger idiomatic acoustic actuation. In addition to pitched percussion, which is the main focus of the thesis, application of these ideas to other music contexts is also discussed. / Graduate
206

Electronic music instrument practice and the mechanisms of influence between technical design, performance practice and composition

Williams, Sean Barry Kelly January 2012 (has links)
This thesis examines the practices and techniques involved with particular electronic instruments and proposes an archaeological approach to reconsider the ways in which noise can communicate various details of instrument design and practice to the listener. I present two case studies concerning electronic music practice using repurposed devices - stepped filters - and by combining a detailed material analysis of the instruments with interviews, video and other evidence, I document the practices involved with their use. By rebuilding these instruments, and designing and building other devices, I test my hypotheses through my own practice, and by doing so I refine my results and extend my composition, performance practice and technical design skills to include valuable lessons learned through this research. The portfolio engages with the three archaeological levels (Listening Situation, Reproduction Stage, Production Environment) and the three areas of the production continuum (Composition, Performance Practice, Technical Design) and through sound installations, crafted media, recorded performances, and the documentation of devices designed for these pieces, it supports the thesis through experimentation and incorporation of results through reflective practice.
207

Electroacoustic Etudes for Clarinet and Pure Data: A Set of Etudes for Clarinet and Electronics for the Advancing Musician

January 2020 (has links)
abstract: Electronic music, including the subgenre of interactive electronic music, has a century-old history and has established itself as a vital and important element of modern music cultures throughout the world. Acoustic musicians in the twenty-first century will be expected to perform and interact with electronic music. Currently, however, few resources are available to either the student or teacher to help advancing young musicians develop their skills working with electronic musical components. A considerable amount of electronic music is prohibitive due to cost, access to equipment, and degree of difficulty. Therefore, a set of works designed to specifically reduce these prohibitive costs seems necessary. As a performer/composer that plays clarinet and as an electronic musician that regularly utilizes the open-source programming software Pure Data (Pd), I feel my composing, performing, and technical experience uniquely positions me to create educational materials. For this project, I will compose/program a collection of electronic etudes for clarinet and electronics that: (1) utilizes Pd to provide electronic accompaniment, (2) is composed for clarinetists of varying experience levels, (3) and will be commercially available as electronic PDF and Pd files. / Dissertation/Thesis / Doctoral Dissertation Music 2020
208

Ghosts before breakfast for chamber ensemble and electronics and a history of the electronic music studios of the University of Iowa (1964-2017)

Wilson, Jonathan James 15 December 2017 (has links)
This dissertation is divided into two parts. Part 1 consists of the composition Ghosts Before Breakfast for chamber ensemble and fixed electronics. In this work I was interested in the creation of unity in the horizontal, vertical, and structural dimensions of a composition between the ensemble and the electronics and using electronic music techniques to gradually unify the ensemble and tape parts. Part 2 consists of an investigation into the development of the Electronic Music Studios of the University of Iowa when James Cessna from the Department of Physics and Astronomy came up with a Master’s Thesis project to design an Arbitrary Waveform Generator. An initial discussion with James Van Allen, James Cessna, Himie Voxman, and Philip Bezanson in 1964 led to the initiation of the program with the loan of equipment from the Department of Physics and Astronomy, the Collins Radio Company, and homemade devices. The outcome of this interdisciplinary project between the Department of Physics and Astronomy and the School of Music led to a transformation of the Composition Program, and the studios evolved into a nationally recognized center for the study of electronic music. Its legacy lives on through its students who have reaped the benefits of the program and made successful careers throughout the country from the development of studios at other colleges and universities to work for film industries in Hollywood and New York. A history of the Electronic Music Studios shall be discussed, through the professors who have directed this program, its facilities, its assistants who maintained the facilities, its students, its guests, and its performances.
209

UNRAVEL: Acoustic and Electronic Resynthesis

McCulloch, Peter 08 1900 (has links)
UNRAVEL, a work for alto saxophone and interactive electronics. Examines works for saxophone and electro-acoustic music. Analyzes modes of interactivity using Robert Rowe's guidelines, with sonogram, score, and programming examples. Investigates hybrid serial-parallel signal-processing networks, and their potential for timbral transformations. Explores compositional working methods, particularly as related to electro-acoustic music.
210

Facilitators and barriers to motivation in music production : Discovering opportunities for product companies to support motivation in music production

Holmberg, Henrik January 2020 (has links)
In music production, along with other creative endeavors, there is a recurring phenomenon of loss of motivation during the process of creating. Within the community of music producers, there is no unified picture of what leads to lack of motivation, and little academic research has been done on motivation in music production specifically. However, when it comes to motivation in creativity, there is some research which suggest that intrinsic motivators are the primary regulators of motivation in creativity. Whether extrinsic motivators are detrimental to intrinsic motivation or can be used to facilitate intrinsic motivation, as well as what kind of extrinsic motivators that may facilitate intrinsic motivation, is still debated. This thesis sets out to discover what facilitators and barriers to motivation can be found in the music production process of electronic music producers, and whether this knowledge can be applied to products for music production. To examine facilitators and barriers in music production, a phenomenology-inspired, bottom-up methodology of semi-structured interviews and thematic analysis is employed on professional and enthusiast music producers. The results show that while baseline intrinsic motivators such as the will to create are vital for motivation, there are a lot of extrinsic factors at play in sustaining motivation through music production as well. This thesis is presented with product companies that make products for electronic music production in mind, and through the results of this thesis, numerous suggestions on what to think about when designing for motivation in music production are presented.

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