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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

The forgotten Don Quichotte: Trois chansons and the early vocal style of Marcel Delannoy

Jepson, Steven Baker 01 December 2015 (has links)
No description available.
112

The Mélodie in the Chansons de mer of Charles-Marie Widor, a Lecture Recital, Together with Three Recitals of Selected Works of A. Vivaldi, R. Strauss, R. Hahn, G. Binkerd, N. Rorem, G. Brevi, G. Faure, R. Trunk, S. Adler, D. Pinkham, D. Argento, T. Pasatieri, and Others

DeMent-Rutledge, Melanie 08 1900 (has links)
The lecture recital, given on April 18, 1983, began with biographical background that suggests the influences on the compositional development of both the composer, Charles Widor, and the poet, Paul Bourget, of the Chanons de mer. Songs were chosen to examine the characteristics that not only enhance Widor's poetic rendering, but impart to the Chansons de mer the more intellectual appeal often desired in today's concert repertoire.
113

Folk song and the construction of Greek national music : writings and compositions of Georgios Lambelet, Manolis Kalomiris and Yannis Constantinidis /

Little, Bliss Sheryl. January 2005 (has links)
Diss.--Philosophie--College Park (Md.)--Faculty of the graduate school of the Univ. of Maryland, 2001. / Textes des chansons populaires en grec suivis de la trad. anglaise. Bibliogr. p. 358-369.
114

Suomis sång : kollektiva identiteter i den finska studentsången 1819-1917 /

Kvist Dahlstedt, Barbro, January 2001 (has links)
Avhandling--Musikvetenskap--Göteborg Universitet, 2001. / Bibliogr. p. 515-534.
115

Chronology and style in the Laborde Chansonnier

Tees, Miriam H. January 1995 (has links)
The Laborde Chansonnier (Wash.L.C. 2.1 L25 Case) is one of the most important but least studied of the Franco-Burgundian chansonniers of the fifteenth century. It contains 106 chansons, 22 of which are unica. / Fallows, Brown, Montagna, Kenney, Perkins and others have discussed the transformation of the style of the chanson over the course of the 15th century. Little has been written specifically on the period of the Laborde chansonnier. With reference to musical features such as melodic style, imitation, cadences, metrical structure, role of the contratenor, and range of note values, I discuss the style of the chansons, first in general, and then layer by layer, charting the changes in a crucial period. Although these changes are gradual, it is possible to follow the development of the chanson during the period between 1450 and the beginning of the sixteenth century. / The Laborde Chansonnier contains twenty-five unica, of which four have appeared in modern editions, and one of which is incomplete. I have transcribed the other twenty and also four other chansons which I could not find in modern editions. (Abstract shortened by UMI.)
116

Metodi quantitativi e informatici per l'analisi del testo letterario : il "caso" delle canzoni popolari greche e la loro versione in italiano : C. Fauriel 1824, N. Tommaseo 1842 /

Gkikopoulos, Foivos-Vasileios K. January 1984 (has links)
Didaktorikē diatribē--Tmēma italikēs glōssas kai filologias tēs Filosofikēs sholēs--Thessalonikē--Aristoteleio panepistēmio, 1984. / Notice translittérée du grec à l'exception du titre propre. Notes bibliogr.
117

Nu wache ûf, sünder traege : geistliche Tagelieder des 13. bis 16. Jahrhunderts, Analysen und Begriffsbestimmung /

Probst, Martina. January 1999 (has links)
Th. doct.--Philosophische Fakultät IV, Sprach und Literaturwissenschaften--Universität Regensburg, 1998. / Bibliogr. p. 177-186.
118

A Performer's Analysis of Maurice Ravel's Chansons madécasses: A Lecture Recital, Together with Three Recitals of Selected Works of B. Britten, R. Schumann, S. Barber, T. Pasatieri, F. Poulenc, G. Verdi, T. Arne, and Others

Ellis, Diana Lea 05 1900 (has links)
In his song cycle, Chansons madécasses (1926), a chamber work for voice, piano, flute, and cello, Maurice Ravel combines twentieth-century musical experimentation and exoticism with the late nineteenth-century style characteristics present in the vocal elements and instrumentation. Because early twentieth-century music appears to be closely connected to modern concerns, performers may tend to dismiss the style and technique of the early twentieth century as simply "old-fashioned" rather than examine and consider those elements as resources and valuable tools for interpreting and presenting authentic performances. The focus of this research includes a discussion of the historical, social, and textual implications of the music and poetry; a formal musical analysis of the work, including comparisons of an early twentieth-century, mid-century, and late twentieth-century recordings with regard to the use of vibrato and portamento in the voice, cello, and flute; and an examination of Chansons madécasses for elements of authentic Malagasy music and poetry. The paper also suggests methodologies for performance practice which reflect the results of these analyses. The beginnings of the rejection of traditional form - harmonic, rhythmic, and melodic structures - found in the early part of the century began to free composers and performers to explore musical presentations that gain their power not only from startling and unexpected elements of exoticism and interpretation but also from their romantic roots, which spurred the desire for a raw, even melodramatic, emotionalism. Ravel, without sacrificing the integrity of his native language, is able to blend his text with his accompaniment in a way that uses both the poem and the music to advance the "plot" and emotion of the narration, producing what might be described as a near perfect union of form and theme, structure and idea.
119

Musique de Scène pour Les Chansons de Bilitis by Claude Debussy on Poems by Pierre Louÿs a Lecture Recital, Together with Three Recitals of Selected Works of J.S. Bach, S. Prokofiev, J. Francaix, W. Piston, L. v. Beethoven, and Others

Youngblood, Pamela Jackson 05 1900 (has links)
The incidental music for Chansons de Bilitis is little known and rarely performed. However, the relegation of this work to the realms of obscurity is highly unjustified. Chansons de Bilitis requires an unusual combination of instruments: two flutes, two harps, and celesta in addition to a reciter. The work is a theater piece in the tradition of melodrama, with spoken text and background music in alternation. Despite the rather unique nature of the work, many of the melodic, textural, and orchestrational devices for which Debussy is noted are evident. The music is throughcomposed; each movement mirrors and emphasizes the meaning and mood of the accompanying poem. Because of the fragmentary nature of the music and its rather subordinate role in the total theater work, the primary emphasis in gaining an appreciation of the value of the work lies in an investigation of its historical background.
120

Chronology and style in the Laborde Chansonnier

Tees, Miriam H. January 1995 (has links)
No description available.

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