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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.
41

Selected etudes for the development of string quartet technique : an annotated compilation /

Blanche, Linda Susanne. January 1996 (has links)
Thesis (Ed.D.)--Teachers College, Columbia University, 1996. / Issued also on microfilm. Includes tables. Sponsor: Lenore M. Pogonowski. Dissertation Committee: Harold F. Abeles. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 123-125).
42

Schubert's apprenticeship in sonata form, the early string quartets

Black, Brian January 1997 (has links) (PDF)
No description available.
43

The second finale of Beethoven's string quartet Opus 130: a study of the composing score and autograph manuscript

Ross, Megan H. January 2013 (has links)
Scholars and performers have long wondered when and why Beethoven composed an alternative ending to his string quartet, Opus 130. The original, the Grosse Fuge, was an immense and heavy multi-sectioned fugal finale; the second was a much shorter and lighter hybrid sonata-rondo form finale. The second finale was the last substantial piece Beethoven composed and is reminiscent of earlier dance-like 2/4 Allegro finales composed by Beethoven, likely influenced by Haydn. This style is seemingly incongruous with our current understanding of Beethoven’s late style, centered around foreign harmonies and forms, with expansive thematic material. While research on this topic has been extensive, including studies in biography, source material, reception history, and harmonic and formal analysis, it has not led to a fully adequate understanding of this second finale. My study aims to provide a fresh understanding of this movement through the examination and evaluation of the later stages of its composition. The major sections of revision found in the composing score, Berlin, Deutsche Staatsbibliothek, MS Autograph 19c, and the autograph fair copy, Berlin, Deutsche Staatsbibliothek, MS Grasnick 10, are closely studied here for the first time. In order to highlight important steps in the creative process, I have selected four heavily revised areas from each of the sonata-form sections of this movement as shown in both manuscripts. My interpretation of these revisions is based on comparison to parallel sections in both manuscripts and the final version, as shown in transcriptions of these passages from the sketches along with accompanying images of the original pages. For each of these sections, I attempt to suggest the order in which Beethoven made his revisions, and I discuss their formal, thematic and harmonic implications. As a whole, these revisions reveal Beethoven’s concern for economical treatment of thematic material, especially motives from theme 1a, and a concern for playing upon the harmonic and formal expectations of his audience. The voicing of theme 2a in the exposition and recapitulation, and the voicing and texture of theme 1a in the development, the false and authentic recapitulations and the coda are analyzed in terms of momentum, sectional balance, texture, and dramatic tension. I suggest that further study of these sketches and related primary source material might help to revise our notion of Beethoven’s late style.
44

Thunderbird : 'n bespreking (Afrikaans)

Johnson, Alexander F. 10 January 2007 (has links)
No abstract available. Accompanies the compositions of Thunderbird : twee bedrywe, Arabia : konsert vir klavier en orkes; Vyf miniature vir klarinet (b-mol) en kitaar; Vyf toonsettings van Afrikaanse liefdesgedigte vir sopraan en strykkwartet, DMus thesis, kept in the music Library, as well as the Special Collection Section of the Merensky Library (level 5). / Thesis (D Mus (Komposisie))--University of Pretoria, 2007. / Music / unrestricted
45

Present Absence: A work for string quintet and live electronics

Bell, Jeffrey C. 05 1900 (has links)
Present Absence is a work that integrates electronic processing and live performance. It is approximately 20 minutes long and is divided into three movements. The movements are distinct from each other, but are related through various elements. Incorporating electronic processing and live performance can be cumbersome. The primary objective of this piece is to use electronic processing in a manner that liberates the performers from any restrictions imposed by the use of electronic processing. The electronic processing in the work is accomplished through the program MAX/Msp, a real-time digital signal processing environment. The patch that was created for this piece is called MOO-V. This paper discusses the both the technical details in the construction of this patch, and the aesthetic it serves.
46

Performance and analysis of Brahms quintet op. 115 for clarinet and string quartet : Searching for a deeper interpretation

Rubio Carrion, Maria January 2021 (has links)
In this thesis, I have studied the composer Johannes Brahms. I have talked about the background and history of his Quintet in B minor for clarinet and string quartet and I have then analyzed the piece. The purpose of this thesis is to find lesser known but significant information about Brahms to help other clarinetists when they have to perform this important piece of clarinet repertoire. Moreover, my artistic questions are if one piece can change your perception or your way to play it after doing a deep analysis and if the interpretation is in a way stronger than before. I decided to analyze this piece due to my interest in Brahms and to learn more about the expressive qualities in his music. I wanted to know more about the composer and so I chose this Quintet, because it is a challenging piece to play and is often performed.  From the quintet, I concentrated specifically on the possibilities of performing it and I tried to search for a way to have a deeper understanding of Brahms to produce the most convincing artistic performance of the piece.  After I learnt more about the background of this piece it resulted in a stronger interpretation of his quintet.
47

Elusive quartet, Imaginary Songs: understanding and experiencing the music of Morton Feldman and Helge Sten

Miskey, Nicholas W. 27 August 2020 (has links)
Many commentators experience difficulties describing and analyzing Morton Feldman's String Quartet no. 2 (1983), implying that the quartet eludes stable ascriptions of meaning. Feldman's own philosophy frames these difficulties as symptoms of an antagonism between direct experience and post-hoc understanding of music, a dichotomy tacitly supported in much related discourse. I critique this proposed rift between understanding and experience by analyzing how String Quartet no. 2 prompts listeners to repeatedly reconsider their own experiences. Obfuscated instrumentation, transformations of repeated phrases, and disorienting formal returns challenge one's perception, pattern recognition, and musical memory, leading audiences to return to linguistic interpretation in an effort to comprehend what they hear. Drawing on writing by Lawrence Kramer, I show that the compulsion to voice these uncertainties is not a result of a separation of understanding and experience, but of the blurring of these categories. Vacillation between close listening and interpretation also typifies experiences of the music of Helge Sten, produced under the pseudonym Deathprod. For the album Imaginary Songs from Tristan da Cunha (1996), Sten transfers recorded violin improvisations to wax phonograph cylinders, clouding attributions of the music's manner of production. Incorporating Brian Kane's theory of acousmatic sound, I demonstrate that the resultant spacing of sound and source provokes listeners to oscillate between attending to the music's material properties and struggling to identify its meaning and cause. Work by Jonathan Sterne indicates that historical techniques of hearing associated with the antiquated medium of the phonograph cylinder prolong and complicate this mode of listening. As with Feldman's quartet, auditors of Imaginary Songs endlessly fluctuate between attempting to understand and striving to listen closely to the music. / Graduate
48

Debussy stråkkvartett op.10 : Impressionism eller romantik?

Bengtsson, Hedvig January 2023 (has links)
I detta arbete analyseras Claude Debussys stråkkvartett op.10 i g-moll från 1893. Stråkkvartetten skrevs tidigt i Debussys karriär då han ännu inte förknippades som impressionistisk kompositör. Med frågeställningen Impressionism eller romantik analyseras verket utifrån motiv, form, tematik, satsstruktur, harmonik och instrumentering. Det romantiska formatet i kombination med ett nytt impressionistiskt tonspråk gör verket unikt i sitt slag. Debussy använder sonatform i första satsen men lyssnarens intryck är inte ett verk av romantisk karaktär. Musikens oavbrutna flöde kan förklaras med användning av heltonsskala, kyrkotonarter, staplade dimackord, septim-och nonackord utan förberedelser eller upplösning. Arbetets resultat visar att verket är både romantiskt och impressionistiskt. / In this study, Claude Debussy's string quartet op.10 in G minor from 1893 was analyzed. The string quartet was written early in Debussy's career when he was not yet considered as an impressionist composer. With the question Impressionism or romanticism, the work is analyzed based on motif, form, theme, movement structure, harmony, and instrumentation. The romantic format combined with a new impressionistic sound makes the work unique. Debussy uses sonata form in the first movement, but the listener's impression is not a work of romantic nature. The music's uninterrupted flow can be explained using whole-tone scales, church modes, stacked diminished chords, seventh and ninth chords without preparation or resolution. The results of the study show that the work is both romantic and impressionistic.
49

The string quartets of Bela Bartok : an analysis

Corra, Arthur. 01 January 1959 (has links) (PDF)
What is generally referred to by the public-at-large as “modernism” is thought (by it) to be based upon the denial and contradiction of the fundamental principles of musical art. But it would be a grave error to assume from this that the present age differs in the attitude toward modernism very considerably from any other, except perhaps in degree. The general intellectual or artistic niveau of any period whatsoever is almost inevitably a low one, apart from a few outstanding figures -- rarely exceeding two or three in any single generation -- who impart most of the significance to it. One is too prone to forget that art is somewhat different from other human activities in that the achievement of one man of genius far outweighs that of any number of mediocrities put together, even though he may be outnumbered by them in the ratio of a thousand to one. Even though it is rare, if not impossible, to find a man of solitary genius who is not indebted to at least one or several lesser men for his achievements it still holds true that a thousand noughts added together only amount to nothing in the end. It is the inability to recognize this simple truth that is primarily responsible for the all-too-familiar charge of decadence which is increasingly brought by each successive generation against its contemporary artists, even in the most incomparably fertile periods of artistic activity. In Bartok’s music one can feel a rich humaneness. The mechanization of music as found in Stravinsky, and the constructivism of Schoenberg in later years, are equally alien to Bartok. No matter how new his music, no matter how far he ventures into unexplored tonal spheres, his music never loses its inherent warmth. His keen mind, thinking clearly and surely, does not chill the emotion and does not allow the soul to freeze, as do the intellect of Schoenberg and the calculated objectivity of Stravinsky. Regardless of how much Bela Bartok condenses music and reduces it to the very essential of tone and rhythm, and even when he seeks heights where the atmosphere becomes thin and cold, music remains an art of the soul, of its grief and sorrow. The songs of the people, from whom Bela Bartok is descended, still resound into the lonely spheres in which the spirit of a great composer sought a new truth
50

As if “moving a mountain”: The Auditive, Visual and Semantic Potential of Performing Chaya Czernowin’s String Quartet and 'The last leaf

Knickmann, Tobias 16 August 2022 (has links)
No description available.

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