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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

Les musiques soul et funk : la France qui groove des années 1960 à nos jours /

Sermet, Vincent, January 1900 (has links)
Texte remanié de: Thèse de doctorat--Histoire--Marne-la-Vallée, 2006. / Bibliogr. p. 430-431 et 433-441. Filmogr. p. 431 et 442. Webliogr. p. 441-442. Index.
2

Groove and flow : six analytical essays on the music of Stevie Wonder /

Hughes, Timothy Stephen. January 2003 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Washington, 2003. / Vita. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 268-279).
3

"Music is my vessel" an exploration of african american musical culture through the life story of Lavell Kamma /

Swan, Scott. Grindal, Bruce T., January 2003 (has links)
Thesis (M.S.)--Florida State University, 2003. / Advisor: Dr. Bruce T. Grindal, Florida State University, College of Arts and Sciences, Dept. of Anthropology. Title and description from dissertation home page (viewed Apr. 7, 2004). Includes bibliographical references.
4

Soul City: Indianapolis' African-American Community and Soul Music, 1968-1974

Kollath, Jeffrey J. January 2003 (has links)
Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis (IUPUI)
5

Black Paul : a soul music no Brasil nos anos 1970 /

Paiva, Carlos Eduardo Amaral de. January 2015 (has links)
Orientador: Eliana Maria de Melo Souza / Banca: Ana Lúcia Castro / Banca: Dagoberto José Fonseca / Banca: José Adriano Fenerick / Banca: Márcia Regina Tosta Dias / Resumo: Esta tese investiga a aclimatação do gênero musical soul music no Brasil dos anos 1970. Por meio da análise da canção de importantes músicos negros da época: Tim Maia, Jorge Ben e Tony Tornado, bem como do chamado movimento "Black Rio", sugerimos uma inflexão na formação de uma identidade negra no país, o que representou a emergência de uma estrutura de sentimentos negra e transnacional. Esta estrutura de sentimentos se caracterizou pela sua afirmação étnica e pelo seu internacionalismo vinculado à contracultura negra ocidental. No contexto político repressivo da ditadura, este movimento musical ajudou a aglutinar jovens negros em torno de uma política de identidades, além de fazer uma oposição manifesta ao mito da democracia racial, ideologia oficial do regime civil-militar / Abstract: This thesis investigates the acclimatisation of soul music genres in Brazil in the 70's by the analysing the songs of important black musicians of the era: Tim Maia, Jorge Ben and Tony Tornado as well as the movement called "Black Rio". We suggest an inflection on the formation of the black identity in the country that represented the emergence of a black structure of feelings in transnational levels. This structure of feelings is chacacterised by its ethinic affirmation and its internationalism tied to black western counterculture. In a repressive political context of dictatorship, this musical movement helped bring together young black men around political identity and made a clear objection to the myth of racial democracy, the official ideology of the civil-military regime / Doutor
6

Black Paul: a soul music no Brasil nos anos 1970

Paiva, Carlos Eduardo Amaral de [UNESP] 29 July 2015 (has links) (PDF)
Made available in DSpace on 2015-09-17T15:26:54Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 0 Previous issue date: 2015-07-29. Added 1 bitstream(s) on 2015-09-17T15:45:02Z : No. of bitstreams: 1 000846628.pdf: 1640434 bytes, checksum: cc92db0f7ba75dd007ed5a5df867a651 (MD5) / Coordenação de Aperfeiçoamento de Pessoal de Nível Superior (CAPES) / Esta tese investiga a aclimatação do gênero musical soul music no Brasil dos anos 1970. Por meio da análise da canção de importantes músicos negros da época: Tim Maia, Jorge Ben e Tony Tornado, bem como do chamado movimento Black Rio, sugerimos uma inflexão na formação de uma identidade negra no país, o que representou a emergência de uma estrutura de sentimentos negra e transnacional. Esta estrutura de sentimentos se caracterizou pela sua afirmação étnica e pelo seu internacionalismo vinculado à contracultura negra ocidental. No contexto político repressivo da ditadura, este movimento musical ajudou a aglutinar jovens negros em torno de uma política de identidades, além de fazer uma oposição manifesta ao mito da democracia racial, ideologia oficial do regime civil-militar / This thesis investigates the acclimatisation of soul music genres in Brazil in the 70's by the analysing the songs of important black musicians of the era: Tim Maia, Jorge Ben and Tony Tornado as well as the movement called Black Rio. We suggest an inflection on the formation of the black identity in the country that represented the emergence of a black structure of feelings in transnational levels. This structure of feelings is chacacterised by its ethinic affirmation and its internationalism tied to black western counterculture. In a repressive political context of dictatorship, this musical movement helped bring together young black men around political identity and made a clear objection to the myth of racial democracy, the official ideology of the civil-military regime
7

Love and Loss: A Contemporary Song Cycle

Williams, Jeffrey C. 15 May 2020 (has links)
No description available.
8

Banda Black Rio = o soul no Brasil da década de 1970 / Black Rio Band : the soul music in Brazil 1970's

Gonçalves, Eloá Gabriele 19 August 2018 (has links)
Orientador: José Roberto Zan / Dissertação (mestrado) - Universidade Estadual de Campinas, Instituto de Artes / Made available in DSpace on 2018-08-19T08:52:06Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 1 Goncalves_EloaGabriele_M.pdf: 60495318 bytes, checksum: 3a3ebc85450535991b7e825c6bfdb5ef (MD5) Previous issue date: 2011 / Resumo: Este trabalho estuda a trajetória da Banda Black Rio, formada em meados dos anos de 1970, cuja produção caracteriza--?se por fusões de múltiplas musicalidades. Através da análise musical de uma amostragem do repertório gravado pela banda, verificou?se nessa produção a presença de elementos característicos de gêneros brasileiros como o samba, o choro e o baião, mesclados aos do jazz, do soul e do funk. A pesquisa revelou que procedimentos adotados pelos músicos nas composições, releituras, arranjos e instrumentação produziram resultados sonoros peculiares. Trata--?se de uma sonoridade híbrida, que, de certa forma, expressa a emergência de uma nova sensibilidade num contexto histórico brasileiro marcado pela presença de um regime político autoritário, do desenvolvimento e da integração da indústria cultural e do advento de novas identidades geracionais e étnicas / Abstract: This work studies the history of the band Black Rio, formed in the mid 1970s, whose production is characterized by a fusion of multiple musicalities. Through musical analysis of a sample of the repertoire recorded by the band, it was verified the presence of characteristic elements of Brazilian genres such as samba, choro and baião, merged with components of jazz, soul and funk. The research found that the procedures adopted by the musicians in compositions, re--?readings, arrangements and instrumentations produced a peculiar sound result. It is a hybrid sonority that, in a certain way, expresses the emergence of a new sensibility in a Brazilian historical context marked by the presence of an authoritarian political regime, by the development and integration of the cultural industry and by the advent of new generational and ethnical identities / Mestrado / Fundamentos Teoricos / Mestre em Música
9

James Brown: apprehending a minor temporality.

Scannell, John, School of Media, Film & Theatre, UNSW January 2006 (has links)
This thesis is concerned with popular music's working of time. It takes the experience of time as crucial to the negotiation of social, political or, more simply, existential, conditions. The key example analysed is the funk style invented by legendary musician James Brown. I argue that James Brown's funk might be understood as an apprehension of a minor temporality or the musical expression of a particular form of negotiation of time by a minor culture. Precursors to this idea are found in the literature of the stream of consciousness style and, more significantly for this thesis, in the work of philosopher Gilles Deleuze on the cinema in his books Cinema 1: The Movement-Image and Cinema 2: The Time-Image. These examples are all concerned with the indeterminate unfolding of lived time and where the reality of temporal indeterminacy will take precedence over the more linear conventions of traditional narrative. Deleuze???s Cinema books account for such a shift in emphasis from the narrative depiction of movement through time the movement-image to a more direct experience of the temporal the time-image, and I will trace a similar shift in the history of popular music. For Deleuze, the change in the relation of images to time is catalysed by the intolerable events of World War II. In this thesis, the evolution of funk will be seen to reflect the existential change experienced by a generation of African-Americans in the wake of the civil-rights movement. The funk groove associated with the music of James Brown is discussed as an aesthetic strategy that responds to the existential conditions that grew out of the often perceived failure of the civil rights movement in the 1960s. Funk provided an aesthetic strategy that allowed for the constitution of a minor temporality, involving a series of temporal negotiations that eschew more hegemonic, common sense, compositions of time and space. This has implications for the understanding of much of the popular music that has followed funk. I argue that the understanding of the emergence of funk, and of the contemporary electronic dance music styles which followed, would be enhanced by taking this ontological consideration of the experiential time of minorities into account. I will argue that funk and the electronic dance musics that followed might be seen as articulations of minority expression, where the time-image style of their musical compositions reflect the post-soul eschewing of a narratively driven, common sense view of historical time.
10

James Brown: apprehending a minor temporality.

Scannell, John, School of Media, Film & Theatre, UNSW January 2006 (has links)
This thesis is concerned with popular music's working of time. It takes the experience of time as crucial to the negotiation of social, political or, more simply, existential, conditions. The key example analysed is the funk style invented by legendary musician James Brown. I argue that James Brown's funk might be understood as an apprehension of a minor temporality or the musical expression of a particular form of negotiation of time by a minor culture. Precursors to this idea are found in the literature of the stream of consciousness style and, more significantly for this thesis, in the work of philosopher Gilles Deleuze on the cinema in his books Cinema 1: The Movement-Image and Cinema 2: The Time-Image. These examples are all concerned with the indeterminate unfolding of lived time and where the reality of temporal indeterminacy will take precedence over the more linear conventions of traditional narrative. Deleuze???s Cinema books account for such a shift in emphasis from the narrative depiction of movement through time the movement-image to a more direct experience of the temporal the time-image, and I will trace a similar shift in the history of popular music. For Deleuze, the change in the relation of images to time is catalysed by the intolerable events of World War II. In this thesis, the evolution of funk will be seen to reflect the existential change experienced by a generation of African-Americans in the wake of the civil-rights movement. The funk groove associated with the music of James Brown is discussed as an aesthetic strategy that responds to the existential conditions that grew out of the often perceived failure of the civil rights movement in the 1960s. Funk provided an aesthetic strategy that allowed for the constitution of a minor temporality, involving a series of temporal negotiations that eschew more hegemonic, common sense, compositions of time and space. This has implications for the understanding of much of the popular music that has followed funk. I argue that the understanding of the emergence of funk, and of the contemporary electronic dance music styles which followed, would be enhanced by taking this ontological consideration of the experiential time of minorities into account. I will argue that funk and the electronic dance musics that followed might be seen as articulations of minority expression, where the time-image style of their musical compositions reflect the post-soul eschewing of a narratively driven, common sense view of historical time.

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