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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.
111

EARL KIM 12 CAPRICES FOR SOLO VIOLIN: SURVEY OF HIS INNOVATIVE SOLO VIOLIN WRITING VIA HIS TWELVE LOVE LETTERS

Song, Chi Young 01 January 2017 (has links)
The purpose of this project is to bring Kim’s caprices into the mainstream violin literature through a three-prong approach by examining each caprice via musical analysis, technical analysis, and by investigating its pedagogical merit. After inspecting each caprice through three different lenses mentioned above, the paper will organize the twelve caprices around a tripartite structure; serial, atonal, and free tonal. The work opens with a six-measure Motto. While the relationship between the Motto and the rest of the work is not immediately clear, thorough musical and formal analysis will provide insight into the work’s cohesion. This project will also examine pedagogically what specific technical challenges lay in selected caprices and how to solve thorny problems. The caprices are truly innovative in a sense that they present opportunities to understand non-tonal polyphonic writing on what is supposed to be a monophonic instrument while expanding the tradition of the Violin Caprice.
112

Agency, physicality, space : analytical approaches to contemporary Nordic concertos

Munk, James N. January 2011 (has links)
The concerto enjoys a position of centrality within the oeuvres of many contemporary Nordic composers: the genre often functions as a vehicle for the exploration of advanced compositional techniques and aesthetic preoccupations, and the resulting works are well-represented on recordings and in the concert hall. Yet this repertory has largely been neglected in scholarship. Through detailed analysis of works by Per Nørgård, Kaija Saariaho, Magnus Lindberg, and Pelle Gudmundsen-Holmgreen, this thesis develops analytical technologies for a genre which has received less musicological attention than it deserves. Placing a particular emphasis on the theatrical aspects of concerto performance, the project explores the application of three lines of enquiry, each of which has been theorised in some detail: agency (Cone, Maus, Cumming), physicality (Clarke, Cox, Larson), and space (Brower, Williams). Each of these lines of enquiry has been directed at the concerto sporadically, if at all – even though concertos make particularly compelling and potentially enriching case studies for the theoretical models in question. This thesis represents the first sustained attempt to explore the concerto with reference to these bodies of literature. The analytical models developed have wider applicability, to concertos both within and without the Nordic arena. I draw attention at numerous points to ways in which they can illuminate works by Ligeti, Birtwistle, Musgrave, Berio, and Lutosƚawski, among others. The project also has wider implications for our understandings of Nordic identity, virtuosity, and musical modernism at the turn of the twenty-first century.
113

An examination of performance aspects of two major works for percussion ensemble: Toccata by Carlos Chávez and Cantata para América mágica by Alberto Ginastera, a lecture recital, together with four recitals of selected works of I. Stravinsky, R. Vaughan Williams, W.A. Mozart, V. Persichetti, and P. Hindemith

George, Matthew 08 1900 (has links)
This study addresses the ways and means a conductor may approach two major twentieth century works written specifically for percussion ensemble. Performance techniques and decisions on aesthetics made by the conductor in dealing with such items as timbre, balance, pitch levels, and pitch relationships are also considered.
114

The viola in the 21st century : sound, instrument technologies, playing techniques and performance

Santos Boia, Pedro Jose January 2014 (has links)
This thesis develops an ecological perspective devoted to the question of what, if anything, it means to speak of music ‘itself’. As such it seeks to enrich and further develop music-centred perspectives in the sociology of music. To this end, the thesis uses and develops a sociology of mediations designed to specify empirically the constituents of localized, emergent and performed configurations of “music” within the ‘classical’ music world. An ethnographically informed and practice-driven case study of viola and viola playing is used as a means to gain insight into the avant-garde of viola playing today and to follow the ways in which different protagonists constitute viola aesthetics. Considering the viola’s identity historically, in terms of both reproduction and change (specifically, the instrument’s shift from a marginal status to a position nearer the centre within ‘classical’ music), the study addresses instrument materiality and technologies, sound playing techniques, as well as, more globally, viola identities in relation to the instrument’s sonic features, repertoire, psycho-cultural and affective associations and meaning making in interpretation and performance. It is also shown how musicians deal with and ‘erase’ ‘limitations’ formerly attributed to the viola and make the instrument ‘work’ (through technological calibration in collaboration with instrument-makers as well as playing techniques) and thus correspond the requirements of contemporary music performance. Aiming to be a useful resource for violists, this thesis traces change but also identifies potential constraints produced by the past history of the viola upon the ways the instrument is seen, used and explored. The data for this study was collected through audio/video-recorded interviews with eight widely recognized highly-skilled violists, video-recorded performance and observations of viola lessons, and documentary analysis. This thesis highlights the importance of intermediate mediations that, situated in-between score and performance, affect how music comes to sound when played. It also outlines a grounded theory of the affordances of couplings made between players and instruments, so as to develop a performative idiom that considers representations, discourses and social construction, but also materiality, bodies and minds, internalization processes, practices. The thesis concludes by suggesting that a ‘strong’ cultural and musical sociology requires a relational and transdiciplinary approach and that this approach in turn helps to articulate an eclectic and hybrid sociology of imbrications, one that challenges intra-disciplinary divides.
115

Rhythmic, phrase-structural and formal ambiguities in Brahms's violin sonata no. 3, 1st movement: a case study in analysis and performance. / CUHK electronic theses & dissertations collection

January 2013 (has links)
Long, I Ian. / Thesis (M.Phil.)--Chinese University of Hong Kong, 2013. / Includes bibliographical references. / Electronic reproduction. Hong Kong : Chinese University of Hong Kong, [2012] System requirements: Adobe Acrobat Reader. Available via World Wide Web. / Abstracts also in Chinese.
116

Pedagogy in performance : a soprano recital

Brunner, Lisa Temple January 2010 (has links)
Typescript (photocopy). / Digitized by Kansas Correctional Industries
117

Computational modelling and analysis of vibrato and portamento in expressive music performance

Yang, Luwei January 2017 (has links)
Vibrato and portamento constitute two expressive devices involving continuous pitch modulation and is widely employed in string, voice, wind music instrument performance. Automatic extraction and analysis of such expressive features form some of the most important aspects of music performance research and represents an under-explored area in music information retrieval. This thesis aims to provide computational and scalable solutions for the automatic extraction and analysis of performed vibratos and portamenti. Applications of the technologies include music learning, musicological analysis, music information retrieval (summarisation, similarity assessment), and music expression synthesis. To automatically detect vibratos and estimate their parameters, we propose a novel method based on the Filter Diagonalisation Method (FDM). The FDM remains robust over short time frames, allowing frame sizes to be set at values small enough to accurately identify local vibrato characteristics and pinpoint vibrato boundaries. For the determining of vibrato presence, we test two alternate decision mechanisms-the Decision Tree and Bayes' Rule. The FDM systems are compared to state-of-the-art techniques and obtains the best results. The FDM's vibrato rate accuracies are above 92.5%, and the vibrato extent accuracies are about 85%. We use the Hidden Markov Model (HMM) with Gaussian Mixture Model (GMM) to detect portamento existence. Upon extracting the portamenti, we propose a Logistic Model for describing portamento parameters. The Logistic Model has the lowest root mean squared error and the highest adjusted Rsquared value comparing to regression models employing Polynomial and Gaussian functions, and the Fourier Series. The vibrato and portamento detection and analysis methods are implemented in AVA, an interactive tool for automated detection, analysis, and visualisation of vibrato and portamento. Using the system, we perform crosscultural analyses of vibrato and portamento differences between erhu and violin performance styles, and between typical male or female roles in Beijing opera singing.
118

Bluegrass in Colorado

Bidgood, Lee 28 October 2017 (has links)
Bluegrass stylings in Colorado have ranged from Hot Rize's mix of traditional and modern ideas with humor to the earnest traditionalism of Jeff Scroggins and Colorado; from the jamband approach of Yonder Mountain String Band and String Cheese Incident to the indie-pop sensibilities of the band Front Range. The Colorado bluegrass scene's participatory aspects (Gardner 2004) are entwined with lucrative enterprises like Planet Bluegrass and its instant-sellout Telluride and Rockygrass festivals. While the Colorado Bluegrass Music Society (est. 1973) and a variety of camps have long supported learning about the music, Colorado College and the University of Northern Colorado have begun to engage bluegrass as a part of curriculum. Bluegrass music making in Colorado parallels recent trends in bluegrass and related acoustic musics elsewhere, but also reveals local particularities. Presenters (key local musicians and music organizers as well as scholars) will highlight salient aspects of Colorado bluegrass, with particular emphasis on festivals, production aesthetics, jambands, continuity with larger bluegrass scenes, comparison with other "extra-contextual" scenes (Hambly 1980), higher education's engagement with the music, as well as ways that ethnomusicology can contribute to bluegrass activities, and vice versa. All attendees to this session are asked to participate in the discussion, bringing their perspectives on this and other "named systems" revival musics in Colorado and elsewhere. This roundtable will serve as a rare chance for scholars and nonacademic stakeholders to engage in relaxed dialogue about this form of music in a formal setting.
119

Bluegrass Music and Appalachia in Place, Land, and Imagination

Bidgood, Lee 06 October 2015 (has links)
No description available.
120

Imagining Place in Bluegrass Music

Bidgood, Lee 14 March 2015 (has links)
No description available.

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