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An Analysis of Elements of Jazz Style in Contemporary French Trumpet LiteratureSchmid, William A. (William Albert) 08 1900 (has links)
French trumpet works comprise a large portion of the contemporary standard repertoire for the instrument, and they frequently present unique stylistic and interpretive challenges to performers. The study establishes the influence of jazz upon Henri Tomasi, André Jolivet, Eugène Bozza and Jacques Ibert in their works for solo trumpet. Idiomatic elements of jazz style are identified and discussed in terms of performance practice considerations for modern-day trumpeters.
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Chaozhou Xian shi yue in Hong Kong: a case study of the music division of the Hong Kong Chiu Chow Merchants Mutual Assistance Society, Ltd.January 2002 (has links)
by Law Bing Kuen Anthony. / Thesis (M.Phil.)--Chinese University of Hong Kong, 2002. / Includes bibliographical references (leaves 100-105). / Discography: p. 107. / Abstracts in English and Chinese. / List of Tables --- p.iii / Abbreviations --- p.iv / Introduction --- p.1 / Concepts --- p.5 / Previous Studies on Xianshiyue --- p.6 / Fieldwork --- p.10 / PART ONE: CULTURAL AND SOCIAL BACKGROUND --- p.19 / Chapter Chapter One: --- Hong Kong --- p.20 / The Rise of Modern Hong Kong: Hong Kong in the Nineteenth Century --- p.21 / Formation of Norms and Values --- p.27 / Chapter Chapter Two: --- The Chaozhou Community of Hong Kong --- p.30 / The Name --- p.30 / The Area --- p.31 / The People and Culture --- p.32 / Migration of Chaozhou People to Hong Kong --- p.35 / Social Organization of the Chaozhou Community --- p.41 / The Chiu Chow Merchants Mutual Assistance Society --- p.43 / PART TWO: XIANSHIYUE --- p.48 / Chapter Chapter Three: --- Xianshiyue in Hong Kong --- p.49 / "The Music Division of the Hong Kong Chiu Chow Merchants Mutual Assistance Society (the ""MD"")" --- p.51 / From Waijiang Traditions to Chaozhou Traditions --- p.56 / Performances in the Music Club Context --- p.61 / Performances in the Concert Hall Context --- p.72 / Performances in the Chaoju Context --- p.76 / Performances in the Gatherings of the Parent Organization --- p.80 / Summary of the Performance Contexts of Xianshiyue in Hong Kong --- p.82 / Chapter Chapter Four: --- The Music of Xianshiyue --- p.84 / Setting Up the Temperament --- p.86 / Tuning Process as Social Process --- p.90 / Conclusion --- p.93 / Glossary of Chinese Characters --- p.96 / Bibliography --- p.100 / Appendix A: An Inquiry on the Place of Origin of Hong Kong Chinese People --- p.109 / Appendix B: Newspaper cutting Showing Ethnic Stereotypes --- p.110
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泉州南音: 一個福建民間音樂傳統與文化認同的研究 = Nanyin in Quanzhou : a study of a folk musical tradition and cultural identity in Fujian. / Nanyin in Quanzhou: a study of a folk musical tradition and cultural identity in Fujian / Quanzhou Nan yin: yi ge Fujian min jian yin yue chuan tong yu wen hua ren tong de yan jiu = Nanyin in Quanzhou : a study of a folk musical tradition and cultural identity in Fujian.January 2002 (has links)
吳瑞珠. / "2002年7月". / 論文(哲學碩士)--香港中文大學, 2002. / 參考文獻 (leaves 152-156). / 附中英文摘要. / "2002 nian 7 yue". / Wu Ruizhu. / Lun wen (zhe xue shuo shi)--Xianggang Zhong wen da xue, 2002. / Can kao wen xian (leaves 152-156). / Fu Zhong Ying wen zhai yao. / 致謝 --- p.iv / 摘要(中文) --- p.v / 摘要(英文) --- p.vi / Chapter 第一章 --- 導論 --- p.1 / 人類學與民族音樂學 --- p.6 / 音樂傳統與文化認同 --- p.12 / 研究問題與理論架構 --- p.18 / 研究地點和研究方法 --- p.22 / 本文章節安排 --- p.25 / Chapter 第二章 --- 福建泉州南音 --- p.27 / 何謂南音? --- p.27 / 歷史沿革 --- p.30 / 曲譜類別、樂器及音樂特色 --- p.39 / 南音和閩南風俗及其音樂功能 / 從名稱上看南音的發展 --- p.46 / 南音裡的男女現象 --- p.48 / 南音面對的困難 --- p.49 / Chapter 第三章 --- 地方組織與表演 --- p.53 / 泉州市工人文化宮南樂社 --- p.54 / 泉州南音樂團 --- p.61 / 浮橋仙景南音學校 --- p.67 / 南音表演裡的男女角色 --- p.74 / 地方組織和南音的保存 --- p.75 / Chapter 第四章 --- 傳統與改革 --- p.81 / 南音的演變 --- p.82 / 傳統南音的局限和新南曲的特點 --- p.88 / 動態的傳統 --- p.91 / 新南音的弱點 --- p.95 / 傳統文化與文化認同 --- p.101 / Chapter 第五章 --- 境外華人與泉州南音的發展 --- p.106 / 閩南移民和跨國網絡的建立 --- p.106 / 境外華人和泉州的南音組織 --- p.110 / 境內外南音團體的聯繫 --- p.111 / 傳統的被利用 --- p.114 / 音樂傳統和懷舊情懷、文化認同 --- p.122 / Chapter 第六章 --- 南音和世界文化遣產的話語 --- p.127 / 國際組織和世界文化遺產的保護 --- p.128 / 泉州南音申報世遺的背景 --- p.129 / 各界的表現 --- p.132 / 世遺的價值 --- p.137 / 世遺和文化認同 --- p.139 / Chapter 第七章 --- 結語 --- p.144 / 附錄(新南曲唱詞) --- p.149 / 參考書目 --- p.152
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Images and lyrics: Representations of African American women in blues lyrics written by black womenPugh-Patton, Danette Marie 01 January 2007 (has links)
The purpose of this thesis is to examine to what extent representations of double jeopardy and the stereotypical images of African American females: Mammy, Matriarch, Sapphire, and Strong Black Woman emerge in the blues lyrics of Alberta Hunter, Gertrude "Ma" Rainy, Memphis Minnie, and Victoria Spivey, using the theoretical framework of Black feminist rhetorical critique. The findings in this research entail several meanings regarding the lives of African American women during the 1920s and 1930s. Representations of racism, sexism, and classism also appear in the theme of relationships with various subthemes. The focus of this study is to explore the evolution of Black music and examine the role women have played in both the development and advancement of the blues genre. Additionally, the study will explore various concepts of cultural identity development in order to establish the process of how identity is constructed and negotiated in African Americans specifically African American women.
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A cultural studies analysis of the Christian women vocalists movement from the 1980's to 2000: Influences, stars and lyrical meaning makingAkers, Mary Elizabeth 01 January 2007 (has links)
This study examines popular female Christian vocalists of the 1970s and 1980s, their images and their contemporary Christian music (CCM) lyrics. This literature illustrates how music becomes popular, and also how it becomes a powerful source of communication, which prompts popular culture and society to buy into its style and lyrics. The implications of this study illustrates the importance of image and lyrics and how certain female CCM vocalists had greater influences, impact and had the ability to make changes within their female audiences towards Christianity.
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South African popular music of the 1980's and the role of the Graceland Project: A case of International (USA- RSA ) collaboration and co-productionZulu, Thulani 21 September 2018 (has links)
PhD (African Studies) / Department of African Studies / In the 1980s South Africa was subjected to cultural embargo. However, at the height of the embargo, Paul Simon went against the political climate of the day and mounted a cross-cultural, multinational music project called Graceland. Although South African popular music can facilitate the prosperity of musicians, only few musicians have succeeded in fostering this aspect. Using popular music and pop culture Afrocentrism as frameworks, this study analyses the Graceland project in the context of the South African popular music of the 1980s. The empirical research approach leaning towards the qualitative method was used. Interviews and literature review were the main modes of data gathering. Owing to the sensitivity of the subject, ethical considerations were adhered to. The cultural embargo, as well as other political interventions aiming at pressurising the South African government to abandon its apartheid policies, were well-meaning, but at the same time, the cultural embargo had a negative impact in that the popular culture of the country went unrecognised by global players. It was envisaged that this study would help in understanding the motivations and intentions of the planners of the Graceland project, and how these were to benefit the South African music sector. / NRF
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Maila-go-fenywa, Rangwato Magoro and Mmino wa Kosa: some perspectives on theory and practiceMasoga, Mogomme Alpheus 25 August 2009 (has links)
Looking at current African music studies, one notices an interesting shift from the `norm' to a fresh engagement and analysis. Fresh perspectives are increasingly being presented to position African music dialogue in the arena of the so-called `established music fields'. While these developments are noticeable, the unmentioned, unsung and uncelebrated indigenous African music practitioners, composers, performers, poets, praise singers and so forth must not be forgotten. This work does not claim novelty in terms of the latter gap, but takes the debate further to highlight, though in a small way, such a need. Mme Rangwato Magoro, from Malatane village in the greater Ga-Seloane community, is included as the main research collaborator in this brief piece of work. The work may come as a shock to any established researcher in music and music science. The author could not help but attempt to allow the voice of Mme Magoro to determine the format and content of this piece of work. In addition, the Maila-go-fenywa performance group is linked with the compositional and performance work and the praise poems of Mme Magoro. In conclusion, discussions and debates on musical arts education are addressed in terms of implementation, with examples drawn from the work of Maila-go-fenywa. / Art History, Visual Arts & Musicology / M.A. (Musicology)
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Three unknown Carthusian liturgical manuscripts with music of the 14th to the 16th centuries in the Grey Collection, South African Library, Cape TownSteyn, Frances Caroline 11 1900 (has links)
Of the three manuscripts that form the basis of this thesis, MS Cape Town, South African
Library, Grey 4c7 is, in musicological terms the most important of the three manuscripts. It
is a complete Carthusian Antiphonary, of the late 14th century, written for the Charterhouse
of Champmol, near Dijon, the mausoleum of the Dukes of Burgundy. It also contains an
extensive Tonary, a Hymnary and a Kyriale. The two didactic verses which form part of the
Tonary are of particular importance, since MS 4c7is one of the few manuscripts in the world
intended for musical performance to contain the Ter terni by William of Hirsau; furthermore
it is apparently the only Carthusian manuscript of any kind to contain the Oyapente et
dyatessaron by Hucbald. The manuscript is placed in the context of the Carthusian liturgy
of the 12th to the 16th centuries and is compared with 33 manuscripts of this period. It is
shown that, although a marked textual similarity exists between the manuscripts, there are
variant melodies. The conclusion is therefore drawn that the Carthusians did not have a
single exemplar for the melodies in their liturgical books. It is shown that MS 4c7 and MS
Oijon, Bibliotheque municipale 118, also written for Champmol, were copied from the same
exemplar and that they are closely related to MSS Beaune, Bibliotheque municipale 27, 34
and 41, ot the neighbouring Charterhouse of Fontenay.
The second manuscript, MS Grey 3c23, an Antiphonary for nuns, for Lauds and Vespers,
written for the Charterhouse of Mont-Sainte-Marie, at Gosnay, near Arras, has been dated
1538 by the original scribe. This manuscript is almost identical to MS AGC C II 817. The
presence of a Sequence, foreign to the Carthusian tradition, is however unique toMS 3c23.
The third manuscript, MS Grey 6b3, is an Evangeliary, signed by the scribe, Amelontius de
Ercklems, in 1520. Its provenance is the Charterhouse of Our Lady of the Twelve Apostles
at Mont-Cornillon near Liege. Musicological features of the manuscript which are discussed
are the Hymn 'Te decet laus', and the accent neumes at the ends of pericopes. / Art History, Visual Arts & Musicology / D.Mus. (Musicology)
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Jewish folksongs in the Palestinian period : building a nationRutstein, Esther 01 1900 (has links)
The psyche of an entire people underwent a paradigm shift during the Palestinian
Period (1920-1948). Jews took a spiritual quantum leap; they left the despair of the
'wastelands' of the Diaspora and journeyed towards the Promised Land. The quest
of these pioneers was to rebuild their ancestral homeland. When the pioneering
Halutzim encountered the ancestral soil of their Motherland, deep impulses were
revealed. Their folksongs - an important component of folklore and mythology -
reflected this inner dimension of their being and of their experiences in Eretz Israel
by means of archetypal transformations. Initially, an idealistic devotion to
reconstruction and intimate reverence for the Land was reflected. However, in the
1930s and 1940s, opposition to Jewish settlement transformed folksongs so they
became increasingly militant, reflecting a movement towards extroversion in the
Jewish psyche which was consolidated in 1948. / Music / Thesis (M.A.)--University of South Africa, 1997.
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Down beats and rolling stones : an historical comparison of American jazz and rock journalismBrennan, Matthew January 2007 (has links)
Jazz and rock have been historically treated as separate musical traditions, despite having many similar musical and cultural characteristics, as well as sharing significant periods of interaction and overlap throughout popular music history. The rift between jazz and rock, and jazz and rock scholarship, is based on a set of received assumptions as to why jazz and rock are different. However, these assumptions are not naturally inherent to the two genres, but are instead the result of a discursive construction that defines them in contrast to one another. Furthermore, the roots of this discursive divide are to be found in the history of popular music journalism. In this thesis I challenge the traditional divide between jazz and rock by examining five historical case studies in American jazz and rock journalism. My underlying argument is that we cannot take for granted the fact that jazz and rock would ultimately become separate discourses: what are now represented as inevitable musical and cultural divergences between the two genres were actually constructed under very particular institutional and historical forces. There are other ways popular music history could have been written (and has been written) that call the oppositional representation of jazz and rock into question. The case studies focus on the two oldest surviving and most influential jazz and rock periodicals: Down Beat and Rolling Stone. I examine the role of critics in developing a distinction between the two genres that would eventually be reproduced in the academic scholarship of jazz and rock. I also demonstrate how the formation of jazz and rock as genres has been influenced by non-musicological factors, not least of all by music magazines as commercial institutions trying to survive and compete in the American press industry.
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