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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.
1

Penser l’interprétation des sonates françaises pour piano et violon au XIXe siècle (1800-1870) : des sources au concert / From Sources to Concerts : the Interpretation of French Sonatas for Violin and Piano from the 19th-Century (1800-1870)

Kubik, Cécile 15 November 2016 (has links)
La thèse considère la double inconnue d’un répertoire et d’un jeu violonistique encore inexplorés. Elle dévoile les sonates françaises pour piano et violon de la période 1800-1870, mais questionne aussi leur interprétation. Une étude historique est menée sur le jeu des violonistes français : la base de données Mélos, deux inventaires inédits, l’analyse de maintes sources et témoignages, notamment un imposant corpus de traités pédagogiques de violon publiés en France au XIXe siècle et les partitions annotées du fonds Baillot de la Bibliothèque nationale de France (BnF), apportent des éclairages originaux sur ce sujet. L’ambition est de construire aujourd’hui, violon en main, une interprétation de ces sonates méconnues et, avec la création d’outils destinés aux interprètes et aux scientifiques, d’œuvrer à leur diffusion. / This dissertation addresses the twofold issue of a violin repertoire and a performance practice, both of which had yet to be explored. French sonatas for piano and violin ranging from the 1800s to the 1870s are unveiled. Their interpretation is also discussed. The performance practices of French violinists are studied from a historical perspective. The Melos database, two previously unpublished inventories, the analysis of numerous sources and testimonies, including an extensive corpus of 19th-century French violin methods and the annotated scores from the French National Library’s Baillot collection are used to tackle this question in the light of multiple criteria. The final purpose of this thesis is to combine theory and practice to bring about an interpretation of these little-known sonatas and to foster new tools for interpreters and scientists with a view to promulgate these works.
2

A harmônica na antiguidade grega / Harmonics in greek antiquity

Gusmão, Cynthia Sampaio de 22 April 2010 (has links)
principais teorias acerca do som musical na Antiguidade grega, entre o final do século VI a.C. e o início do século III a.C. O estudo analisa, em primeiro lugar, as circunstâncias históricas e materiais que propiciaram o desenvolvimento da teoria musical grega, chamada harmônica, e a sua relação com a prática musical do período em questão. A primeira teoria analisada está inserida no contexto da escola pitagórica, em que a cosmologia é o referencial de uma visão de mundo que se expande conectando todas as áreas do pensamento, e um dos pontos de origem é a harmônica matemática. São apresentadas a seguir as demonstrações feitas a partir do cálculo das médias proporcionais e sua relação com o princípio da coesão harmônica da oitava. No segundo capítulo são estudadas as teorias acústicas da Antiguidade, que se originaram das razões pitagóricas e se desenvolveram no âmbito das ciências naturais, aprofundando-se com a filosofia aristotélica. No terceiro capítulo, são analisados os principais pontos de confronto promovidos pela corrente aristoxeniana, que se insere no quadro epistemológico aristotélico, e que foram levantados contra os pitagóricos. Nessa nova forma de pensamento, a harmônica é estudada como uma tékne, que tem uma linguagem especializada particular e um objeto específico, o mélos. Ganha importância especial o conceito de aisthésis e, para colocá-lo em prática, a idéia de dynamis torna-se central. Por fim, é apresentada a persistência da concepção pitagórica nos cálculos dos intervalos musicais a partir da divisão do cânone. / This work presents the central ideas related to two main theories about musical sound in greek Antiquity between the end of VI century and the beginning of III B.C. First, the historical and material contexts that lead to the development of greek musical theory, called Harmonics, are investigated, and its relationship with the musical practice of the period. The first theory analyzed comes from the pythagorean school, in which cosmology is the framework of a world view that expands connecting all areas of thought and one of its departure point is mathematical Harmonics. Afterwards, I discuss the demonstrations that are done from the calculations of proportional medias and their relations with the octave harmonic cohesion principle. In the second chapter, its exposed the acoustic theories of Antiquity which originated from the musical ratios and had developed in the branch of natural sciences, deepening by the Aristotelian Philosophy. In the third chapter, I presented the most important issues concerning the differences between the aristoxenian current, which belongs to the aristotelian epistemological framework, against the pythagoreans. In this new way of thought, Harmonics is studied as a tékne that has a particular range of specialized terms and a specific object, the mélos. The concept of aisthésis assumes relevance and to put it into practice, the idea of dynamis becomes central. At last, the persistency of the pythagorean conception it is presented in the calculations of the musical intervals in the division of the canon.
3

A harmônica na antiguidade grega / Harmonics in greek antiquity

Cynthia Sampaio de Gusmão 22 April 2010 (has links)
principais teorias acerca do som musical na Antiguidade grega, entre o final do século VI a.C. e o início do século III a.C. O estudo analisa, em primeiro lugar, as circunstâncias históricas e materiais que propiciaram o desenvolvimento da teoria musical grega, chamada harmônica, e a sua relação com a prática musical do período em questão. A primeira teoria analisada está inserida no contexto da escola pitagórica, em que a cosmologia é o referencial de uma visão de mundo que se expande conectando todas as áreas do pensamento, e um dos pontos de origem é a harmônica matemática. São apresentadas a seguir as demonstrações feitas a partir do cálculo das médias proporcionais e sua relação com o princípio da coesão harmônica da oitava. No segundo capítulo são estudadas as teorias acústicas da Antiguidade, que se originaram das razões pitagóricas e se desenvolveram no âmbito das ciências naturais, aprofundando-se com a filosofia aristotélica. No terceiro capítulo, são analisados os principais pontos de confronto promovidos pela corrente aristoxeniana, que se insere no quadro epistemológico aristotélico, e que foram levantados contra os pitagóricos. Nessa nova forma de pensamento, a harmônica é estudada como uma tékne, que tem uma linguagem especializada particular e um objeto específico, o mélos. Ganha importância especial o conceito de aisthésis e, para colocá-lo em prática, a idéia de dynamis torna-se central. Por fim, é apresentada a persistência da concepção pitagórica nos cálculos dos intervalos musicais a partir da divisão do cânone. / This work presents the central ideas related to two main theories about musical sound in greek Antiquity between the end of VI century and the beginning of III B.C. First, the historical and material contexts that lead to the development of greek musical theory, called Harmonics, are investigated, and its relationship with the musical practice of the period. The first theory analyzed comes from the pythagorean school, in which cosmology is the framework of a world view that expands connecting all areas of thought and one of its departure point is mathematical Harmonics. Afterwards, I discuss the demonstrations that are done from the calculations of proportional medias and their relations with the octave harmonic cohesion principle. In the second chapter, its exposed the acoustic theories of Antiquity which originated from the musical ratios and had developed in the branch of natural sciences, deepening by the Aristotelian Philosophy. In the third chapter, I presented the most important issues concerning the differences between the aristoxenian current, which belongs to the aristotelian epistemological framework, against the pythagoreans. In this new way of thought, Harmonics is studied as a tékne that has a particular range of specialized terms and a specific object, the mélos. The concept of aisthésis assumes relevance and to put it into practice, the idea of dynamis becomes central. At last, the persistency of the pythagorean conception it is presented in the calculations of the musical intervals in the division of the canon.

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