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Dubuisson: A Study of His Music for Solo Bass ViolCheney, Stuart 12 1900 (has links)
Dubuisson (fl.1666-c.1685) is the sole French viol player-composer between Nicolas Hotman (1613-1663) and Le Sieur de Sainte-Colombe (d.c.1700) whose works are extant. His four suites from a Library of Congress manuscript (1666) are the oldest dated French music for the bass viol; his approximately 125 pieces are contained in five manuscript sources. This thesis brings together, for the first time, all the music from the five sources for study and analysis. Together with the few biographical details, this material is used to assess his position within the French viol school. Brief histories of the viol and the suite in France precede a discussion of Dubuisson's contributions to the evolution of the genre.
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Le Sieur de Machy and the French solo viol traditionNg, Shaun Kam Fook January 2009 (has links)
During the late seventeenth century in France, the viol was beginning to emerge as one of the most important musical instruments of the day. French luthiers had created the quintessential French viol, which allowed violists in France to make their mark on viol playing, both as performers and teachers. So fervent was this enterprise that players soon formed cliques, creating two opposing schools of viol playing. One of the main protagonists who is the focus of this thesis, De Machy, led one of these schools. Although we are fully aware of this historical dichotomy, it is widely assumed that De Machy's rivals were the eventual victors of this conflict, and thus have become the model for modern violists to emulate. This has, however, encouraged modern violists to completely disregard the efforts of De Machy, which, as this thesis shall demonstrate, are as important as those of his contemporaries. Chapter 1 discusses De Machy's place in modern scholarship, giving readers an overall view of the kinds of biases and prejudices that currently exist. It also serves to act as a brief collation and analysis of modern writings that discuss De Machy. Chapter 2 provides us with a historical account of the viol in France, giving special emphasis to solo viol playing. It also traces the evolution of musical style and playing technique as well as the development of the instrument within its social role. Chapter 3 discusses French ornamentation on plucked instruments, keyboard instruments and the viol, giving special emphasis to De Machy's own ideas on ornamentation. Possible explanations for the proper execution of these ornaments are also provided. Chapter 4 revaluates Rousseau and the Traité de la Viole (1687), and seeks to determine its reliability as a credible source of information. Chapter 5 describes and analyses the quarrel between De Machy and Rousseau as described by Rousseau in the Réponce de Monsieur Rousseau (1688). In addition to providing a more complete picture of the social interactions of the viol community of the late seventeenth century, this chapter seeks to better explain the issues that De Machy and Rousseau argued about. Chapter 6 examines historical and modern writings and attempts to explain one of the main issues of aforementioned quarrel, the left hand position otherwise known as the ports de main as advocated by De Machy. Appendix A reproduces the avertissement from De Machy's Pièces de Violle. The facsimile of the original publication is presented alongside the English translation. This document is central to many of the issues discussed in this thesis. Appendix B is an English translation of the Réponce de Monsieur Rousseau. One of the aims of this thesis is to re-examine the history of the viol in France, and more specifically, its use as a solo instrument. It is through De Machy's Pièces de Violle and Rousseau's Réponce that most of this information is centred.
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Circulação do vírus rábico em gambás (Didelphis albiventris e Didelphis aurita) nos municípios de Torre de Pedra, Bofete e Anhembi-São PauloBacchiega, Thais Silva [UNESP] 05 May 2014 (has links) (PDF)
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000790335.pdf: 823197 bytes, checksum: 0a61fc4013025a91cf7b4b1a5eb4a447 (MD5) / A raiva é uma zoonose, que se caracteriza como uma encefalite aguda e letal. Atualmente, sabe-se que o vírus da raiva possui vários ciclos epidemiológicos e diversos animais podem servir como seus reservatórios, perpetuando-o no ciclo silvestre e urbano. Esse estudo teve como objetivo avaliar a prevalência de anticorpos neutralizantes (AN) contra a raiva no soro de gambás das espécies Didelphis albiventris e Didelphis aurita por meio da técnica de soroneutralização (Rapid Fluorescent Focus Inhibition Test - RFFIT). A pesquisa foi conduzida nas cidades de Anhembi, Torre de Pedra e Bofete, localizadas no centro oeste de São Paulo. Soro de 67 animais, a maioria do sexo masculino e na idade adulta, foram avaliados. A positividade para anticorpos neutralizantes antirábicos foi de 17,9%. Esse resultado evidencia a circulação do vírus da raiva em gambás e serve de alerta tanto à comunidade científica quanto às autoridades governamentais envolvidas nas pesquisas e controle da raiva / Rabies is a zoonotic disease, which is characterized as an acute and lethal encephalitis. Currently, it is known that rabies virus has several cycles and several epidemiological animals may serve as reservoirs of the virus perpetuating it in wild and urban cycle. This study aimed to evaluate the presence of antirabies neutralizing antibodies (NA) in the serum of the opossum Didelphis albiventris e Didelphis aurita by means of a virus neutralizing (Rapid Fluorescent Focus Inhibition Test - RFFIT). The survey was conducted in the cities of Anhembi, Torre de Pedra and Bofete, located in the center west of São Paulo. Sera from 67 animals were examined, most males in adulthood. The percentage of animals that presented neutralizing antibodies was 17.9%. This result shows the circulation of the rabies virus in skunks and serves to alert both the scientific community and government authorities involved in the research and rabies control
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The sixteenth-century basse de violon: fact or fiction? Identification of the bass violin (1535-1635).Erodi, Gyongy Iren 08 1900 (has links)
Research on the origins of the violoncello reveals considerable dispute concerning the existence and identity of its ancestor, the bass violin. This study focuses on the classification of the sixteenth- and early seventeenth-century bass violin by means of the following criteria: construction, early history and development, role due the social status of builders and players, use within the violin band, performing positions, and defining terminology. Accounts of inventories, organological treatises, music theoretical writings, lists of households and royal courts, descriptions of feasts, reports of choreographies and iconographical examples confirm the bass violin's presence in the late sixteenth century and beyond. Three of the earliest unchanged extant organological examples embody, complement and corroborate the bass violin's identification, and conclude the essay.
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A Comparison of Cello and Viola da Gamba Bow Technique and Style from 1600–1750Yu, Wei-Shuan 04 October 2021 (has links)
No description available.
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EXPERIMENTAL KNOWLEDGE: TOWARD A PERFORMANCE-ORIENTED SYNTHESIS OF SOURCES ON MUSICAL IMPROVISATION, 1600–1800Katz, Benjamin Charles January 2021 (has links)
This dissertation investigates how historical musicians’ relationships to harmonic or contrapuntal rules intersected with their individual and collective experiences of fully improvised or improvisatory music. Within the realm of interpersonal relationships, musicians experience and develop powerful mental and artistic bonds through improvisation. Deep levels of sympathy and communication were documented in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, within the cultural contexts of Bernardo Pasquini (1637–1710), Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach (1714–1788), and Christopher Simpson (1602–1669), the three musicians I focus on in this study. In the arena of harmonic rules and parameters, I contend that what appears to be “rule-breaking,” when it shows up on paper can instead be viewed as a frozen-in-time representation of the type of liberties that may have been commonplace in seventeenth- and eighteenth-century improvisation. Improvisers in this era seem to have been more concerned imparting a large-scale sense of harmony and producing engaging melodic variety than with compliance to the most formal rules of counterpoint. Through studying surviving documentation of historical improvisation, I show how its spirit can suffuse formal composition. By shifting focus from fine points of historical musical style to a discussion of generalized artistic and conceptual concerns around improvisation, I suggest that modern day musicians can discover how they themselves relate to baroque works that demand performers’ agency and creativity. My approach aims to suggest ways in which performers today can apply lessons from the past in modern interpretations of improvisation-based baroque music. / Music Performance
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"Untune the Sky": Ten Original Pieces for Microtonal Viola da Gamba with Voice and ElectronicsSnead, Jonathan Dunnam 08 1900 (has links)
Untune the Sky is a collection of ten original preludes, dances, and songs for microtonal viola da gamba in 7-limit just intonation with voice and live electronics that incorporates elements of Baroque music, traditional Irish dance music, extended just intonation tuning theory, and live electronic audio processing techniques. This thesis thoroughly describes the work and contextualizes its relationship to its historical and contemporary influences. The first sections explain why extended just intonation and viola da gamba were chosen as the central elements of the work. This is followed by a description of the structure, instrumentation, notational conventions, and intended performance practice of the work. The final section contains a musical analysis of the form, harmony, and structure of each piece in the collection. For researchers and interested performers, Appendix A contains a brief catalog of existing microtonal viol repertoire listed with a description of the microtonal techniques used.
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“Time is a wall”: a spectrum representation of traditions and modernitiesElvidge, Charlotte E. S. 06 March 2013 (has links) (PDF)
This paper looks at traditions and modernities in terms of a spectrum representation and thus challenges the previously accepted notion of tradition and modernity as an either/or matter where tradition is seen to hold obstacles assumed to block progression towards modernity. With this in mind, it considers Ebrahim Hussein´s title for his play Wakati Ukuta (Time is a Wall) and Euphrase Kezilahabi´s novel Gamba la Nyoka (The snake´s skin) to illustrate the idea of multiple modernities where the relationship between tradition and modernity is seen in terms of tension between cultural homogenisation and cultural heterogenisation where various ´scapes´ containing traditions are inflected by historical, linguistic and political situatedness of different actors. Key themes are discussed in this paper displaying the indigenised ethnoscape of East Africa with various modernities and the different tensions this can produce in view of long-standing traditions. Individualism is the prevailing theme in the emergence of modernity. With this in mind, extramarital relationships, foreign behaviours, education and age/generational differences are discussed with reference to the two literary texts. These themes exemplify the thematic trajectory of the spectrum representation of traditions and modernities in Swahili literature, showing belonging to the present but also awareness of the past. This paper concludes that modernities should no longer be seen as a foreign invasion aiming to eradicate tradition but as metropolises that can be indigenised and incorporated into existing traditions. The observations in this paper demonstrate that the link between traditions and modernities is not a direct transition from one to the other but one of more complex affiliation. This paper lays foundations for broader research into this relationship and gives new insight into the illustration and critique of various texts.
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Deviation as communicative strategy in Gamba la nyokaMbatiah, Mwenda 06 March 2013 (has links) (PDF)
This article deals with deviation in Euphrase Kezilahabi´s novel Gamba la Nyoka (1979). We analyse four different types of deviation, namely grammatical, lexical, phonological, and semantic deviation. The objective of this study is to combine linguistic analysis with literary riticism, in order to show how these different types of deviation correspond with the overall message the author conveys in this novel, which is a political novel dealing with the era of establishing Ujamaa policies in rural Tanzania.
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Deviation as communicative strategy in Gamba la nyokaMbatiah, Mwenda 06 March 2013 (has links)
This article deals with deviation in Euphrase Kezilahabi´s novel Gamba la Nyoka (1979). We analyse four different types of deviation, namely grammatical, lexical, phonological, and semantic deviation. The objective of this study is to combine linguistic analysis with literary riticism, in order to show how these different types of deviation correspond with the overall message the author conveys in this novel, which is a political novel dealing with the era of establishing Ujamaa policies in rural Tanzania.
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