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Language on music : Beethoven, Mann and the absoluteVerster, François January 1997 (has links)
Bibliography: 190-197. / This dissertation investigates the general use of language on instrumental music. Three types of linguistic usage are identified: the metamusical, the systemic, and the metasystemic. In the first section, various forms of the metamusical - description, attempts at "recreation" and formal analyses of music - are considered, and are all shown to fail in different ways. The limitations of existing systems for negotiation between language and music are also brought to the fore. Failure is redefined, and shown to be intrinsically related to the tradition of musical ineffability, which finds its most extreme development in the notion of "absolute music". The second section attempts to provide a systemic discourse which takes the failure of language into account. Drawing on Lacan's imaginary/symbolic distinction and on Derrida's notion of the frame, it sets forth a construct called "the word of music", which is itself an impossible point of aspiration, but which manages to account for some of the dialectical complexities involved in systemic negotiation with a non-denotative form such as music. The third section entails metasystemic analysis proper; in other words, metamusical and systemic sources are analyzed and assessed. This part consists of a passage-by-passage translation of eight pages from Thomas Mann's Doctor Faustus, in which the fictional character Wendell Kretschmar delivers a lecture on and performance of Beethoven's Opus 111. Various metamusical and systemic issues are discussed: it is shown that Mann draws on a large number of established musicoliterary traditions, with his sources ranging from early Beethoven biographies to the writings of Theodor Adorno. Particular attention is given to the Romantic "Beethoven myth" and to Adorno's analysis of the composer's late music. Mann's negotiation between two partly opposing trends in the presentation of Opus 111 as an "ultimate" or "absolute" composition - the one based in a Romantic discourse of musical transcendence and the other originating in Adorno's identification of a tendency towards alienation in Beethoven's late style - is extensively discussed.
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Some Statistical Properties of Tonality, 1650-1900White, Christopher Wm. 26 February 2014 (has links)
<p> This dissertation investigates the statistical properties present within corpora of common practice music, involving a data set of more than 8,000 works spanning from 1650 to 1900, and focusing specifically on the properties of the chord progressions contained therein.</p><p> In the first chapter, methodologies concerning corpus analysis are presented and contrasted with text-based methodologies. It is argued that corpus analyses not only can show large-scale trends within data, but can empirically test and formalize traditional or inherited music theories, while also modeling corpora as a collection of discursive and communicative materials. Concerning the idea of corpus analysis as an analysis of discourse, literature concerning musical communication and learning is reviewed, and connections between corpus analysis and statistical learning are explored. After making this connection, we explore several problems with models of musical communication (e.g., music's composers and listeners likely use different cognitive models for their respective production and interpretation) and several implications of connecting corpora to cognitive models (e.g., a model's dependency on a particular historical situation).</p><p> Chapter 2 provides an overview of literature concerning computational musical analysis. The divide between top-down systems and bottom-up systems is discussed, and examples of each are reviewed. The chapter ends with an examination of more recent applications of information theory in music analysis. </p><p> Chapter 3 considers various ways corpora can be grouped as well as the implications those grouping techniques have on notions of musical style. It is hypothesized that the evolution of musical style can be modeled through the interaction of corpus statistics, chronological eras, and geographic contexts. This idea is tested by quantifying the probabilities of various composers' chord progressions, and cluster analyses are performed on these data. Various ways to divide and group corpora are considered, modeled, and tested. </p><p> In the fourth chapter, this dissertation investigates notions of harmonic vocabulary and syntax, hypothesizing that music involves syntactic regularity in much the same way as occurs in spoken languages. This investigation first probes this hypothesis through a corpus analysis of the Bach chorales, identifying potential syntactic/functional categories using a Hidden Markov Model. The analysis produces a three-function model as well as models with higher numbers of functions. In the end, the data suggest that music does indeed involve regularities, while also arguing for a definition of chord function that adds subtlety to models used by traditional music theory. A number of implications are considered, including the interaction of chord frequency and chord function, and the preeminence of triads in the resulting syntactic models.</p><p> Chapter 5 considers a particularly difficult problem of corpus analysis as it relates to musical vocabulary and syntax: the variegated and complex musical surface. One potential algorithm for vocabulary reduction is presented. This algorithm attempts to change each chord within an <i>n-</i>grams to its subset or superset that maximizes the probability of that trigram occurring. When a corpus of common-practice music is processed using this algorithm, a standard tertian chord vocabulary results, along with a bigram chord syntax that adheres to our intuitions concerning standard chord function.</p><p> In the sixth chapter, this study probes the notion of musical key as it concerns communication, suggesting that if musical practice is constrained by its point in history and progressions of chords exhibit syntactic regularities, then one should be able to build a key-finding model that learns to identify key by observing some historically situated corpus. Such a model is presented, and is trained on the music of a variety of different historical periods. The model then analyzes two famous moments of musical ambiguity: the openings of Beethoven's <i>Eroica</i> and Wagner's prelude to <i>Tristan und Isolde.</i> The results confirm that different corpus-trained models produce subtly different behavior.</p><p> The dissertation ends by considering several general and summarizing issues, for instance the notion that there are many historically-situated tonal models within Western music history, and that the difference between listening and compositional models likely accounts for the gap between the complex statistics of the tonal tradition and traditional concepts in music theory.</p>
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A correlational study of musical experience and language achievement in Hong Kong primary five studentsYu, Tsui-ying, Cindy. January 2008 (has links)
Thesis (M.A.)--University of Hong Kong, 2008. / Includes bibliographical references (p. 58-62)
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Musik und Sprachprosodie kindgerechtes Singen im frühen Spracherwerb /Falk, Simone. January 2009 (has links)
Thesis (doctoral)-Universität, München. / Includes bibliographical references.
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The effect of active and passive participation with music on the foreign language acquisition and emotional state of university studentsIwata, Kiyomi. Standley, Jayne M. January 2005 (has links)
Thesis (M.M.) Florida State University, 2005. / Advisor: Jayne M. Standley, Florida State University, College of Music. Title and description from dissertation home page (viewed 6-29-07). Document formatted into pages; contains 33 pages. Includes biographical sketch. Includes bibliographical references.
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Geschichte der altfranzösischen und altprovenzalischen RomanzenstropheStorost, Wolfgang, January 1930 (has links)
Inaug.-diss.--Halle-Wittenberg. / Lebenslauf. Published in full (xii, 116 p.) as Romanistische Arbeiten, 16. "Literatur": p. [vii]-xi.
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Geschichte der altfranzösischen und altprovenzalischen RomanzenstropheStorost, Wolfgang, January 1930 (has links)
Inaug.-diss.--Halle-Wittenberg. / Lebenslauf. Published in full (xii, 116 p.) as Romanistische Arbeiten, 16. "Literatur": p. [vii]-xi.
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Singing up close voice, language, and race in American popular music, 1925-1935 /Greenberg, Jonathan Ross, January 2007 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--UCLA, 2007. / Vita. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 251-268).
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Popular song as text in the lives of young adults /Stanovick, Lucy. January 2002 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Missouri-Columbia, 2002. / Typescript. Vita. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 313-322). Also available on the Internet.
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Popular song as text in the lives of young adultsStanovick, Lucy. January 2002 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Missouri-Columbia, 2002. / Typescript. Vita. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 313-322). Also available on the Internet.
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