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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.
11

Contemporary indie and the construction of identity : discursive representations of indie, gendered subjectivities and the interconnections between indie music and popular fashion in the UK

Lifter, Rachel January 2012 (has links)
This thesis presents a historicized account of the construction of identity within contemporary indie. Indie emerged as a music scene in the early 1980s, and existing scholarly accounts of it focus on practices of music production and consumption. Indie has expanded and diversified over the last 30 years, however. Crucially, in the UK it has become increasingly interconnected into popular fashion – a development that has transformed indie from being a space solely for the construction of masculine identities, as it was in the 1980s, into a space for the construction of both masculine and feminine identities. These transformations within indie have not been addressed, and one of the contributions of this research is to fill this gap. This thesis contributes to the field of youth cultural studies by providing new knowledge on the relationship between youth culture and popular fashion. Drawing on the Bourdieuian concept ‘field’, the thesis explores the relationship between the sub-field of indie music and the field of popular fashion in the UK, arguing that contemporary indie forms at the points of overlap between these two fields: where their value systems are mutually informative and where their value systems diverge. Drawing on Foucault’s concepts ‘discourse’ and ‘practices of the self’, this thesis explores the way in which this complex popular cultural formation creates a space for the construction of identities. Through an analysis of media representations, it considers the discursive constitution of indie, and through an analysis of participant observation and interviews, it explores the ways in which those people participating in this formation construct the self. The thesis contributes to the field of fashion studies in that it draws together these two methodologies into an examination of the construction of identity and, more specifically, gendered identities.
12

Fazer-se compositor: Camargo Guarnieri 1923-1945 / Making a composer: Camargo Guarnieri 1923-1945

Egg, André Acastro 10 December 2010 (has links)
Este trabalho é um estudo a partir da correspondência de Camargo Guarnieri, das partituras de sua Obra de difusão interdita e de outras obras compostas entre 1928 e 1945. Nas cartas trocadas e nas partituras estão a relação com os professores de composição e os intelectuais e críticos com os quais o compositor trabalhou em colaboração no processo de fazer-se compositor sinfônico. Lamberto Baldi, Mário de Andrade, Curt Lange, Luiz Heitor, Charles Koechlin, Charles Seeger, Carleton Sprague Smith, Aaron Copland foram os interlocutores privilegiados desse processo no qual Guarnieri lutou para superar as limitações do meio musical brasileiro. Estabelecendo relação entre as obras e as demandas e comentários suscitados por elas, considerou-se que a composição da Sinfonia n° 1 entre 1942-44 e sua estréia em 1945 foi a culminância desse processo em que se construiu um compositor como reflexo e símbolo de seu meio musical, no âmbito das relações do modernismo, do Estado varguista, do americanismo musical, e da política de boa vizinhança e dos interesses do mercado de música sinfônica nos Estados Unidos. / This is a study from the letters of Camargo Guarnieri, the scores of his \"Work of disseminating forbidden\" and other works composed between 1928 and 1945. In the letters and in the scores are the testimony of a relation with teachers of composition and the intellectuals and critics with whom Guarnieri has worked in the making of a composer himself. Lamberto Baldi, Mario de Andrade, Curt Lange, Luiz Heitor, Charles Koechlin, Charles Seeger, Carleton Sprague Smith, Aaron Copland - were the privileged interlocutors of the process in which Guarnieri struggled to overcome the limitations of the Brazilian music scene. Establishing relations between musical work and the demands and comments raised by them, it was considered that the composition of the Symphony No. 1 in 1942-44 and his debut in 1945 was the culmination to the making of a composer, whose career was built as a reflection and symbol of his musical scene, in relations of brasilian modernism, Vargas regime, \"americanismo musical\", and the Good Neighbor Policy and the interests of the classical music as business in USA.
13

The Royal Philharmonic Society of Sydney: the rise and fall of a musical organisation

Thornley, Clare A January 2004 (has links)
Master of Music (Musicology) / The Royal Philharmonic Society of Sydney, formed as the Sydney Philharmonic Society in 1885, represented the rich tradition of amateur choral organisations present in Sydney in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. Under the strong leadership of two of their conductors, Roberto Hazon and Joseph Bradley, the Philharmonic Society presented the Sydney and Australian premieres of many choral works, engaged the services of many international vocal soloists, performed for full houses, and was invited to perform at many important civic and state events. Yet this organisation has been forgotten by history and the Sydney music community. Although many issues contributed to the decline of this amateur organisation, the strongest factors included the Philharmonic’s inability to maintain consistency in their leadership in later years, a change in general musical trends from amateur vocal performances to professional orchestral concerts, an increase in competition from other entertainments, the establishment of the ABC, and an ongoing lack of support from the city and state governments. These were further exacerbated by the lack of support from members of the Sydney press, particularly the Sydney Morning Herald. Therefore, an in-depth study into the story of the Royal Philharmonic Society of Sydney not only uncovers the history of a forgotten music organisation, it also contributes to a deeper understanding of the musical performance culture of the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries in Sydney.
14

The Community Arts Service: History and Social Context.

Ulenberg, Phillippa January 2009 (has links)
The Community Arts Service (CAS, 1946-1966), founded after World War Two, took tours of music, drama, opera, dance and art exhibitions to smaller centres and isolated rural areas throughout New Zealand, fostering the cultural activities undertaken by local groups. From the Auckland University College, where it originated as a branch of Adult Education, it spread to the other University College provinces and, beyond New Zealand, to Australia. As Adult Education, CAS programmes emphasised educational value and aimed to develop the tastes and level of culture in the participating communities. The Service operated through local CAS committees, encouraging rural centres to take increasing responsibility for the cultural life of their own communities. Following World War Two, themes of nationalism, decentralisation of culture and correcting the imbalances that existed between rural and urban life so as to create a more egalitarian society, were key issues in New Zealand. The CAS played a significant role in redressing these concerns but to date, have received little critical attention. This thesis, which examines the important role of the Service in the musical and artistic life of twentieth century New Zealand, is an original contribution to the cultural history of this country. Main documentary research sources consulted were regional histories, publications on New Zealand music, theatre, ballet, opera and journals on the arts from the period. Diaries, correspondence, local cultural societies' documentation and programmes of past concerts held in private collections have been valuable. The archival material for Arthur Owen Jensen and Ronald Graeme Dellow (Alexander Turnbull Library) and, the records of Auckland Adult Education (University of Auckland, Special Collections) have been a significant help. People who were involved with the CAS have generously contributed through interviews and correspondence. Newspaper cuttings in private collections and past issues of the Waikato Times held in the Hamilton Public Library have also been important sources.
15

The Royal Philharmonic Society of Sydney: the rise and fall of a musical organisation

Thornley, Clare A January 2004 (has links)
Master of Music (Musicology) / The Royal Philharmonic Society of Sydney, formed as the Sydney Philharmonic Society in 1885, represented the rich tradition of amateur choral organisations present in Sydney in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. Under the strong leadership of two of their conductors, Roberto Hazon and Joseph Bradley, the Philharmonic Society presented the Sydney and Australian premieres of many choral works, engaged the services of many international vocal soloists, performed for full houses, and was invited to perform at many important civic and state events. Yet this organisation has been forgotten by history and the Sydney music community. Although many issues contributed to the decline of this amateur organisation, the strongest factors included the Philharmonic’s inability to maintain consistency in their leadership in later years, a change in general musical trends from amateur vocal performances to professional orchestral concerts, an increase in competition from other entertainments, the establishment of the ABC, and an ongoing lack of support from the city and state governments. These were further exacerbated by the lack of support from members of the Sydney press, particularly the Sydney Morning Herald. Therefore, an in-depth study into the story of the Royal Philharmonic Society of Sydney not only uncovers the history of a forgotten music organisation, it also contributes to a deeper understanding of the musical performance culture of the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries in Sydney.
16

Notre Dame manuscripts and their history case-studies on reception and reuse

Maschke, Eva January 2015 (has links)
This dissertation focuses on fragments of Notre Dame manuscripts that made their way to German speaking Europe during the medieval period. The first chapter focuses on their contexts of reuse. Dominican, Cistercian as well as Franciscan bookbinders played a role in these processes of medieval and early modern recycling. The potential for fragments to elucidate bookbinders’ techniques will be explored, and existing hypotheses as to the circulation of Notre Dame manuscripts will be critically reviewed. Furthermore, an emphasis is placed on the importance of the reconstruction of medieval book collections. The second chapter is dedicated to the discovery of a set of conductus fragments reused by a bookbinder of the Dominican convent of Soest. Taking one known fragment as a point of departure, I was able to assign five further leaves(now in Münster, Cambridge and New Haven) to this set of fragments. The third chapter sheds new light on the history of two host volumes, in which, during the twentieth century, organum fragments were discovered. It addresses questions of the changing ownership of manuscripts, focusing on the role of post Reformation and nineteenth century book collectors. The final chapter, a case study of the conductus Porta salutis ave, discusses editorial problems in conjunction with a close analysis of the piece’s main stylistic features. As the text was originally designed as a seal inscription, questions of material culture and music are also addressed. Furthermore, my systematic search for text sources for the distich Porta salutis ave revealed more than twenty previously unconsidered manuscripts transmitting the poetic text only, whose fuller, contents point to complementary contexts and functions to those suggested in the musical sources and the seals.
17

Fazer-se compositor: Camargo Guarnieri 1923-1945 / Making a composer: Camargo Guarnieri 1923-1945

André Acastro Egg 10 December 2010 (has links)
Este trabalho é um estudo a partir da correspondência de Camargo Guarnieri, das partituras de sua Obra de difusão interdita e de outras obras compostas entre 1928 e 1945. Nas cartas trocadas e nas partituras estão a relação com os professores de composição e os intelectuais e críticos com os quais o compositor trabalhou em colaboração no processo de fazer-se compositor sinfônico. Lamberto Baldi, Mário de Andrade, Curt Lange, Luiz Heitor, Charles Koechlin, Charles Seeger, Carleton Sprague Smith, Aaron Copland foram os interlocutores privilegiados desse processo no qual Guarnieri lutou para superar as limitações do meio musical brasileiro. Estabelecendo relação entre as obras e as demandas e comentários suscitados por elas, considerou-se que a composição da Sinfonia n° 1 entre 1942-44 e sua estréia em 1945 foi a culminância desse processo em que se construiu um compositor como reflexo e símbolo de seu meio musical, no âmbito das relações do modernismo, do Estado varguista, do americanismo musical, e da política de boa vizinhança e dos interesses do mercado de música sinfônica nos Estados Unidos. / This is a study from the letters of Camargo Guarnieri, the scores of his \"Work of disseminating forbidden\" and other works composed between 1928 and 1945. In the letters and in the scores are the testimony of a relation with teachers of composition and the intellectuals and critics with whom Guarnieri has worked in the making of a composer himself. Lamberto Baldi, Mario de Andrade, Curt Lange, Luiz Heitor, Charles Koechlin, Charles Seeger, Carleton Sprague Smith, Aaron Copland - were the privileged interlocutors of the process in which Guarnieri struggled to overcome the limitations of the Brazilian music scene. Establishing relations between musical work and the demands and comments raised by them, it was considered that the composition of the Symphony No. 1 in 1942-44 and his debut in 1945 was the culmination to the making of a composer, whose career was built as a reflection and symbol of his musical scene, in relations of brasilian modernism, Vargas regime, \"americanismo musical\", and the Good Neighbor Policy and the interests of the classical music as business in USA.
18

A Seventeenth-century Musiklehrbuch in Context: Heinrich Baryphonus and Heinrich Grimm’s Pleiades Musicae

Dobbs, Benjamin M. 08 1900 (has links)
Heinrich Baryphonus (1581-1655) and Heinrich Grimm’s (1592/3-1637) didactic treatise, Pleiades musicae (1615/1630), provides a vivid testimony to the state of music education and music theory pedagogy in Protestant Germany in the early seventeenth century. Published initially by Baryphonus for use at the Gymnasium in Quedlinburg and reissued in an expanded format by Grimm for use at the Gymnasium in Magdeburg, the text examines the fundamentals of pitch, intervals, counterpoint, and, in the second edition, triadic theory and composition. Throughout the remainder of the seventeenth century and into the eighteenth century, music theorists including Johann Andreas Herbst (1588-1666), Otto Gibel (1612-1682), and Andreas Werckmeister (1645-1706), used the document as a source for their own musical writings, solidifying its status as a significant contribution to the field of music theory. Recently, scholars such as Carl Dahlhaus, Benito Rivera, and Joel Lester have found value in Pleiades musicae for its role in the early stages of the development of triadic theory and the emergence of harmonic tonality. However, with the exception of the passages on triadic theory, the treatise continues to be relatively unknown. In order to understand the full extent of Baryphonus and Grimm’s contributions to the history of music theory, and to provide a multifaceted context for situating Pleiades musicae in the culture of its time and place of origin, the present study examines both editions of the text from biographical, cultural, educational, philosophical, music-theoretical, and historical perspectives, and includes modern Latin editions and English translations of the two editions of the treatise.
19

Václav Philomathes’ Musicorum Libri Quattuor (1512): Translation, Commentary, and Contextualization

Iler, Devin 12 1900 (has links)
The Czech-born music theorist, Václav Philomathes, wrote the Musicorum libri quattuor in 1512 while attending the University of Vienna. This didactic treatise became one of the most widely published theory treatise of its time with 26 copies of five editions remaining today and covers the topics of Gregorian chant practice, Solmization, Mensural Notation, Choir Practice and Conducting, and Four-voice Counterpoint. Of particular note, is the section on choir practice and conducting, of which there is no equivalent prior example extant today. This dissertation provides a Latin-English translation of Philomathes’s work, as well as produces a critical commentary and comparison of the five editions while positioning the editions within the context of the musico-theoretical background of early-to-mid-16th century scholarship in Central Europe.
20

Curating music curation

Sepko, Delaina January 2015 (has links)
National cultural heritage institutions are charged with representative preservation of their countries’ cultural materials and the ways their staff undertake preservation activities impact to whom and how these materials are representative. Music is hailed as an integral part of a nation’s cultural heritage, but while aspects of its preservation are individually understood, their combined treatment in cultural institutions — music curation — and its ability to alter concepts of national identity are not. Consequently, we must ask how does music curation influence notions of national identity? By answering this question, this thesis seeks to contribute to our understanding of the ways that national cultural heritage institutions shape and promote a sense of national community. Since its beginning in 1800, the Library of Congress in Washington, D.C. has adopted several roles: a congressional resource; a copyright repository; a research centre; a hub for and leader in the library community; and cultural heritage institution. These combine to make the Library of Congress the de facto national library of the United States. However, these roles are not inherently congruent and in some instances undermine each other. Additionally, music has not always been easily integrated into its mission and its collections. Functioning as a national library, the Library of Congress potentially performs significant roles in the preservation and presentation of music, activities that make it an appropriate case study for investigating how music curation affects notions of national identity. Therefore, this work is structured in the following way: first, it offers an historical overview of the Library of Congress’ three music related departments — the Music Division, the American Folklife Center and the Recorded Sound component of the Motion Picture, Broadcast and Recorded Sound Division — to illuminate political, cultural and aesthetic forces that shaped their developments and their approaches to music curation. Second, it presents Howard Becker’s art world as the analytical framework by which this thesis critically engages narrative and identity theories. Third, employing the Library of Congress as a case study, it then investigates eight music curation narratives and juxtaposes them against its image as a cultural heritage institution. Narratives, gathered during semi-structured interviews and presented as interpretive stories, provide a focused insight into the tensions between staff and institution as well as institution and projected notions of national identity. In the context of music curation, this thesis’ conclusions illustrate a gap between the Library of Congress’ iconic image and its actual image, one that is perpetuated by its focus on research.

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