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Three suites: a celebration of klezmerUnknown Date (has links)
Three original suites, composed during 2008-2009, are presented and discussed with respect to form, style, and compositional techniques. The subjects are Suite No. 1 (clarinet and piano), Suite No. 2: For Paul, A Master of Music (clarinet, piano, double bass and drums), and Suite No. 3: L'Chaim (two clarinets, flugelhorn, French horn, bandoneon, piano, violin, and cello). Common to all three pieces is the inspiration of klezmer, a Jewish music genre that, during its reemergence over the past thirty-five years, has welcomed the influence of other musical styles. In keeping with the eclectic nature of klezmer, each suite builds upon the previous one with regard to instrumentation, style and technique, and embraces additional genres (jazz and tango). Brief reviews regarding the history and musical characteristics (including modes, ornamentation and improvisation, song types and instrumentation) for all the included genres are also presented for the benefit of compositional context. / by Alison Weiner. / Thesis (M.A.)--Florida Atlantic University, 2010. / Includes bibliography. / Electronic reproduction. Boca Raton, Fla., 2010. Mode of access: World Wide Web.
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Voices of survival: opera in TheresienstadtUnknown Date (has links)
by Jackelyn Marcus. / Thesis (M.A.)--Florida Atlantic University, 2012. / Includes bibliography. / Electronic reproduction. Boca Raton, Fla., 2012. Mode of access: World Wide Web.
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Hebrew Origins and Vocal Practice of Music in the Early Christian Church to 500 A.D.Palm, Richard C. 08 1900 (has links)
This study aims to show all known knowledge of singing in the earliest days of the biblical New Testament. The practices of the early Christian church in respect to singing are traced during the period directly following that covered by the New Testament and carried forward to around the year 500 A.D. The study aims to learn, insofar as available sources permit, all that we may know today of singing in the earliest days of the New Testament Church. Both Old and New Testaments will be searched for all references to song, and particular attention will be directed to the meaning of St. Paul's reference to "psalms, hymns, and spiritual songs" in an effort to determine the meaning of these three items.
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Jewish Elements in Representative Published Piano Works of Charles Valentine Morhange (Alkan)Radford, Wanda J. 12 1900 (has links)
The purpose of this study is to show interrelationships between the thematic contents of those piano works by Alkan that are considered to be representative of his general style and the more commonly used melodic phrases taken from the Jewish Synagogue, mainly prayer chants and accents. An attempt will be made to point out the reason behind consequent unacceptable of Alkan's piano works, despite the efforts of Busoni, d'Albert, and Lewenthal to bring them to public attention. The results of this investigation are presented in a systematic analysis and discussion of Jewish prayer-chants and their structure traceable within Alkan's music and in a presentation in table form of the Jewish accents found among Alkan's melodies. After consideration of the outcome of analysis, elements which are known to be European are also presented. These are mainly keyboard virtuousity and harmony and secondarily, form and rhythm. In this section, Robert Schumann's opinions of Alkan's music are quoted and discussed. Because Schumann's ideas carried into the twentieth century, this gave opportunity for a re-evaluation of the lack of musical beauty inherent in Alkan's music.
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Jewish folksongs in the Palestinian period : building a nationRutstein, Esther 01 1900 (has links)
The psyche of an entire people underwent a paradigm shift during the Palestinian
Period (1920-1948). Jews took a spiritual quantum leap; they left the despair of the
'wastelands' of the Diaspora and journeyed towards the Promised Land. The quest
of these pioneers was to rebuild their ancestral homeland. When the pioneering
Halutzim encountered the ancestral soil of their Motherland, deep impulses were
revealed. Their folksongs - an important component of folklore and mythology -
reflected this inner dimension of their being and of their experiences in Eretz Israel
by means of archetypal transformations. Initially, an idealistic devotion to
reconstruction and intimate reverence for the Land was reflected. However, in the
1930s and 1940s, opposition to Jewish settlement transformed folksongs so they
became increasingly militant, reflecting a movement towards extroversion in the
Jewish psyche which was consolidated in 1948. / Music / Thesis (M.A.)--University of South Africa, 1997.
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Jewish folksongs in the Palestinian period : building a nationRutstein, Esther 01 1900 (has links)
The psyche of an entire people underwent a paradigm shift during the Palestinian
Period (1920-1948). Jews took a spiritual quantum leap; they left the despair of the
'wastelands' of the Diaspora and journeyed towards the Promised Land. The quest
of these pioneers was to rebuild their ancestral homeland. When the pioneering
Halutzim encountered the ancestral soil of their Motherland, deep impulses were
revealed. Their folksongs - an important component of folklore and mythology -
reflected this inner dimension of their being and of their experiences in Eretz Israel
by means of archetypal transformations. Initially, an idealistic devotion to
reconstruction and intimate reverence for the Land was reflected. However, in the
1930s and 1940s, opposition to Jewish settlement transformed folksongs so they
became increasingly militant, reflecting a movement towards extroversion in the
Jewish psyche which was consolidated in 1948. / Music / Thesis (M.A.)--University of South Africa, 1997.
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