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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

Evolving music education in the digital age : sound-based music in public schools of Cyprus

Therapontos, Nasia January 2013 (has links)
Years now, sound-based music has been struggling to reach a wider public. Research supports that in order to promote sound-based music, it should be introduced at an early age in someone’s life to have the opportunity to familiarise himself/herself with it and accept it (Kopiez and Lehmann, 2008). This thesis investigates the implementation of sound-based music in public schools in Cyprus. Building on previous research aiming to introduce sound-based music ideas and concepts into the music classrooms (Savage, 2005; Higgins and Jennings, 2006; Wolf, 2008; Holland, 2011), this research aims at creating a sound-based music curriculum that will be appropriate for the implementation in such a teaching-learning environment in Cyprus. The research focuses on the Educational Reform Programme of Cyprus (2008-2015), which aims at modernising the Cypriot education system. This project offers the opportunity to investigate a set of sound-based music lesson plans, implemented in music classrooms. The research examines the reactions of teachers and students towards these lessons, and the evaluation of the lesson plans in order to be suitable for primary and secondary schools of Cyprus. It is an interdisciplinary project, allowing for educational as well as musical concepts to inform its content and structure. The research follows a grounded theory methodology, utilising a mixed-methods approach involving multi-site case studies and action research. In total of six schools, with six teachers and 117 students, eight different sound-based music lesson plans were created, implemented and evaluated, in a total of 18 lesson periods. During these lessons, a combination of questionnaires, interviews, observations, visual data and tests have facilitated the collection of both qualitative and quantitative information relating to the teachers, the students and the lesson plans. Findings of this research identify that the specific set of lesson plans implemented in the schools is considered as appropriate to be used in the music classrooms of Cyprus. The sound-based music lessons introduced new ways of using ICT in the music classroom, supporting the national initiatives of the Ministry of Education and Culture of Cyprus. It was also identified that these lessons offer an inclusive education, with creative activities, engaging students with the learning experience. However, the outcomes of the research recognised the need to understand the multidimensional change necessary to take place before such an implementation, such as the need to resolve any teachers’ concerns relating to the implementation of innovative material as well as any issues related to the equipment.
2

Geste et instrument dans la musique électronique : organologie des pratiques de création contemporaines / Gesture and instrument in electronic music : organology of contemporary creative practices

Bacot, Baptiste 18 December 2017 (has links)
Les moyens technologiques de la musique électronique reconfigurent les pratiques musicales. Du fait des procédures de computation et d’automation inhérentes aux machines qui médiatisent le phénomène sonore, ces moyens ont notamment la particularité d’introduire une rupture dans le rapport causal entre le geste instrumental et le son produit. Que signifie alors jouer de la musique électronique ? Comment comprendre ici les concepts de geste et d’instrument de musique qui sont traditionnellement mobilisés pour analyser les pratiques musicales ?Pour répondre à ces questions, nous avons mené entre 2010 et 2016 un travail de terrain auprès de musiciens professionnels dans des contextes musicaux variés : musique savante avec électronique en temps réel, performance audiovisuelle et musique électronique populaire. Cette approche, focalisée sur l’instrument, permet de questionner la matérialité des pratiques électroniques en la plaçant au premier plan, par-delà les esthétiques musicales. Ce travail consiste donc en une « enquête organologique » sur les pratiques des musiciens ou des groupes suivants : Robert Henke, Alex Augier, Brain Damage, High Tone, Pierre Jodlowski, Jesper Nordin, John MacCallum et Teoma Naccarato, Nicolas Mondon, Greg Beller et le collectif Unmapped. La méthode ethnographique permet de circonscrire l’usage particulier des technologies musicales à différents moments du processus de création : conceptualisation de l’œuvre, collaboration technique, réalisation artistique et performance scénique. À partir de l’analyse de l’activité musicale au prisme des configurations instrumentales, nous proposons une typologie des instruments électroniques dont le critère de classification est le geste, unique résidu du modèle acoustique de l’interaction instrumentale. L’activité corporelle permet donc d’ordonner la diversité matérielle des technologies musicales en même temps qu’elle constitue un vecteur stratégique d’expression de l’interaction instrumentale. / Technological means of electronic music reconfigure musical practices. Because of the machines’ computation and automation capacities that mediate the sonic phenomenon, the causal relationship between instrumental gesture and sound is altered. Therefore, what does it mean to play electronic music? The concepts of gesture and musical instrument are traditionally employed for the analysis of musical practices, but how should they be understood in this context? To address these issues, we conducted an extensive fieldwork between 2010 and 2016 with professional musicians in various contexts: art music with real-time electronics, audiovisual performance, and popular electronic music. Our instrument-focused approach allows us to consider the materiality of electronic music itself, beyond aesthetics. Thus, this work is an “organological inquiry” on the following musicians or bands: Robert Henke, Alex Augier, Brain Damage, High Tone, Pierre Jodlowski, Jesper Nordin, John MacCallum and Teoma Naccarato, Nicolas Mondon, Greg Beller, and the Unmapped collective. The ethnographic method sheds a light on the use of music technologies at different stages of the creative process: conceptualization of the work, technical collaboration, the making of the music and its performance. From this analysis of musical activity captured through instrumental configurations, we offer a typology of electronic music instruments, based on a gestural criterion, which is the only residual aspect of the acoustic instrumental interaction model. The corporeal activity leads to organise the material diversity of music technologies, as well as it constitutes a strategic way to express instrumental interaction.

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