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A Performance Guide and Analysis of Compositional Techniques in Selected Percussion Music of Dave MaricMitchell, David J. 06 February 2018 (has links)
<p> The aim of this study is to provide insight into the percussion music of Dave Maric through an analysis of a trilogy of pieces with backing track, <i> Trilogy</i> (2000), <i>Sense & Innocence</i> (2002/2014), and <i>Thrice Into Flames</i> (2017). The present study examines Maric’s influences, analyzes his compositional style, and provides a performance guide. Brief biographical information is provided to introduce Maric. His compositional style is examined by analyzing tonal language and formal structures. The tonal language of these pieces combines octatonic scales and diatonic scales. In terms of form, Maric uses mathematical sequences to determine proportions between sections, including the Fibonacci sequence. The performance guide includes sticking suggestions, transcriptions of backing track cues, and additional comments.</p><p>
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Mendelssohn's Public Statement of Faith| Lobgesang as Christian WitnessBrandon, Gregg Lewis 06 March 2018 (has links)
<p> In a letter from July 21, 1840, Felix Mendelssohn Bartholdy (1809–1847) shared with his friend Karl Klingemann that in his Symphony No. 2 in B-flat Major, the <i>Lobgesang</i>, “all the movements, vocal and instrumental, are composed to the words ‘Everything that breathes, praise the Lord’; you understand that the instruments first praise in their own way, and then the chorus and the individual voices.” This tantalizing passage is not a direct profession of faith, but the language of praising God through music does raise questions about Mendelssohn’s personal religious philosophy. The topic of Mendelssohn’s faith has been the subject of much speculation; some have assumed as the grandson of eighteenth-century Jewish philosopher Moses Mendelssohn, he ought to be considered Jewish, while others, such as R. Larry Todd, have posited that “despite a willingness to compose sacred music for different faiths, in his personal convictions Mendelssohn adhered to the Protestant creed.” </p><p> Mendelssohn’s <i>Lobgesang</i> contains evidence of his deeply-held Protestant identity. Its “motto” theme appears at the beginning, middle, and end of <i>Lobgesang</i>. The first time with instruments alone; the second time sung with the text, “Alles, was odem hat, lobe den Herrn” (“Everything that breathes, praise the Lord,” Psalm 150:6), and lastly, at the end of the work, by the instruments alone, suggesting the associated text even though it is not uttered aloud. Combining this cyclical quality with the appearance of self-quotations and the Christo-centric thrust of the rest of <i>Lobgesang</i>’s text, we are invited to view <i>Lobgesang</i> as a lens through which to view other works as having been composed for the glory of God—specifically, the God Mendelssohn knew from a Protestant perspective. </p><p> This paper contributes to the ongoing discussion about the relationship between music and identity, with a focus also placed on the continuing conversation about musical quotation and reference.</p><p>
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ThanatosViator, Landon 21 December 2017 (has links)
<p>Viator, Landon Bachelor of Music, University of Louisiana at Lafayette, Fall 2015; Master of Music, University of Louisiana at Lafayette, Spring 2017
Major: Music
Title of Thesis: Thanatos
Thesis Director: Dr. Quincy Hilliard
Pages in Thesis: 68; Words in Abstract: 94
Abstract
The purpose of this thesis is to provide a theoretical analysis of my composition as well as demonstrate the techniques used to compose and compile electroacoustic music in the digital realm using a DAW software. I have demonstrated how to use MIDI instruments to compose music, how equalization was used to digitally change the timbre of the guitar and drums, how compression was used to control the dynamic range of the drums and add fullness to their sound, and I have demonstrated how to create MIDI notes to be played by the software instruments.
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Pacific Suite: A Work in Four Movements for Solo PianoJanuary 2020 (has links)
abstract: Pacific Suite (2016) is a four-movement work for solo piano composed by the author of this paper, Holly Kordahl, that incorporates elements of several musical idioms, including Impressionism, tintinnabuli (as in the music of Arvo Pärt), post-modernism, minimalism and improvisation. This Doctorate of Musical Arts project consists of a descriptive paper, analysis, score and recording. The piece features varying levels of performer independence and improvisation along with notated music. Each movement is named after a different environment of the Pacific Ocean: Great Barrier Reef, Mariana Trench, Sunlit Zone, and Bikini Atoll.
Pacific Suite is engaging to mature pianists and accessible to students. The score of Pacific Suite is a blank canvas in some ways; almost all dynamics, tempi, pedaling, and fingerings are to be determined by the performer. The first movement, Great Barrier Reef, presents different musical vignettes. The second movement, Mariana Trench, requires the performer to improvise extensively while following provided instructions. The third movement, Sunlit Zone, asks the performer to improvise on a theme of Debussy. The final movement, Bikini Atoll, illustrates events of nuclear testing at Bikini Atoll in the 1940s. / Dissertation/Thesis / I. Great Barrier Reef / II. Mariana Trench / III. Sunlit Zone / IV. Bikini Atoll / Doctoral Dissertation Music 2020
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Winnie-the-Poohsical: a musicalDaranciang, Joshua 20 May 2022 (has links)
Musical numbers for a hypothetical musical based on the Winnie-the-Pooh series by author A.A. Milne. The plot is based on “In Which Piglet Is Entirely Surrounded by Water,” the 9th chapter of the series’ first book, Winnie-the-Pooh, first published in 1926.
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Arranging for School Full Orchestras with Incomplete InstrumentationMeckler, Jennifer 01 January 2020 (has links)
The purpose of this study is to investigate how to choose, adapt, and arrange music for school full orchestras with incomplete instrumentation that are not yet ready to perform unarranged standard literature. The literature suggests that while school full orchestra directors may be able to find some published arrangements that include generous cues for missing instruments and parts for substitute instruments, the most effective approach is to alter and arrange music as-needed. When arranging, it is important for teachers to make choices that allow for their students to be successful, but also preserve the original octaves, timbres, form, and tempo of the piece, as intended by the composer. Arranging options that accommodate incomplete instrumentation are demonstrated in an arrangement by the author for school full orchestra of Franz Joseph Haydn’s Symphony No. 82, Movement I. Further examinations of arranging techniques and abridgement considerations are provided in an additional arrangement by the author of Ludwig van Beethoven’s Symphony No. 6, Movement I, for school string orchestra. Two different published arrangements of “Dance Bacchanale,” from the opera Samson and Dalila by Camille Saint-Saëns, are compared to each other and to the original, to observe how existing arrangements anticipate and accommodate incomplete instrumentation in school full orchestras. A brief history of the full orchestra ensemble in American schools is also included.
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ACTUALIZING TEMPORAL COUNTERPOINT IN ARRIVALLitts, Andrew January 2022 (has links)
This dissertation consists of two parts. Part 1 is a composition for orchestra entitled Now at the Middle of the Night. Part 2 is the current document, which concerns temporality in the score of the movie Arrival. The essay discusses types of experiential time and how the main character begins to see time as a whole, not simply as a linear path. The paper looks at three scenes to examine how the musical techniques mirror the change in perspective the main character undergoes. / Music Composition / Accompanied by 1 .maxpat file: now-at-the-middle-of-the-night.maxpat; and 1 PDF file: Litts_temple_0225E_171/Now at the Middle of the Night.pdf
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Squatting the Tower of Babel : six electroacoustic worksCastagna, Sebastian January 1999 (has links)
No description available.
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Elegant Pain| Composing Identity in the Work of Itamar AssumpcaoZollinger, Marc 28 February 2019 (has links)
<p> Influenced by the 1960's vanguard movement of <i>Tropicália, </i> Itamar Assumpção became a leader of the so-called <i> Vanguarda Paulista</i>. He offered a new critique of the establishment while taking part in an independent DIY scene. This critique took the form of a detached and ironic narrative voice, and the exploration and reimagining of Samba and Pan-Africanism through polyphony and dissonance. Assumpção stands out as someone who was able to generate a new synthesis of Pan-African traditions and the Brazilian Popular Song tradition. Though today there's a current generation of musicians from São Paulo who are influenced by Assumpção, he still remains largely unknown in Brazil and the rest of the world. I analyze selected pieces from his discography by looking at his lyrics and compositional procedures in order to demonstrate a vast scope of artistic thought that utilized influences from contemporary theater to Reggae.</p><p>
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Time is the precipice of a thing becoming itselfPenwell, Benjamin John 30 June 2018 (has links)
This is a piece for mixed chamber ensemble (flute doubling piccolo and alto flute, bass clarinet, piano, percussion [crotales and vibraphone] violins 1&2, viola, and cello). The total performance length of the piece is approximately fifteen minutes. The structure of the work is based on the exploration of formlessness as form, a piece of music where the drifting, seemingly aimless instrumental lines create a complex texture that becomes more than the sum of its parts. Instead of relying on a clearly delineated form based on goal-oriented structures, this work gradually transforms its elements without ever feeling the need to go anywhere other than where it already is. In this sense, the music is in a constant state of becoming itself, a goal that it can never really achieve.
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