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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

A performance guide to the music for flute and piano by Philippe Gaubert

Phillips, Tamara Kristen. Ohlsson, Eric Paul, Gaubert, Philippe, January 2006 (has links)
Treatise (D.M.A.) Florida State University, 2007. / Advisor: Eric Ohlsson, Florida State University, College of Music. Title and description from dissertation home page (viewed 7-11-07). Document formatted into pages; contains 85 pages. Includes biographical sketch. Includes bibliographical references.
2

Master's thesis recital (flute)

Slottow, Mackenzie 25 July 2012 (has links)
Sonata in E major BWV 1035 / Johann Sebastian Bach -- Suite for flute and piano, op. 34 / Charles-Marie Widor -- Sonatine for flute and piano / Walter Gieseking -- Fractus III: Aerophoneme for flute and supercollider / Eli Fieldsteel. / text
3

Doctoral thesis recital (flute)

Minaux, Francois 11 July 2012 (has links)
Foliage op. 8 for flute and piano / Daniel Carr -- Sonata in A minor "Arpeggione" for flute and piano / Franz Schubert -- Around, awry for flute doubling picc. and organ / Ethan F. Greene -- Fantasiestucke op. 73 for alto flute and piano / Robert Schumann -- Sonata in A minor for flute and piano / Cesar Franck. / text
4

Elasticity in three compositions with flute by Boris Blacher

Taher, Cecilia 01 July 2009 (has links)
This thesis proposes a new concept of form for Boris Blacher's Divertimento for Woodwinds, Duet for Flute and Piano, and Quintet for Flute, Oboe, Violin, Viola, and Violoncello. In 1950, Blacher began to use systematically varying metric units to provide logic to the apparently arbitrary rhythm of modern music. This practice led the few scholars who have studied his compositions to concentrate on the mathematical organization of metrical units, underestimating other musical elements. This dissertation is based on the idea that it is not the mere disposition of meters, but mostly the interaction between them and other musical elements that makes the peculiar durational scheme audible, thus perceptually relevant. Following this, the technique of expansion and contraction that becomes evident in the organization of the meters is also present in the disposition of durations at other hierarchical levels and in the pitch structure. Furthermore, the mathematical metrical scheme is the foundation for a deeper universe of systematic organization. Blacher's techniques provide a unique sense of movement to his compositions, the aural effect of an "elastically developing music." In Duet and Quintet, this idea is also applied in simultaneity to the registral disposition of pitches and textural development, suggesting vertical elasticity. As a result, Blacher's late compositions suggest a replacement of the traditional concepts of form and texture with a new idea of constantly moving, elastic shape. The methodological approach of this thesis is exclusively analytical and technical, with emphasis on durational and pitch organization, form, texture, and the interaction among these aspects. The individual and comparative analysis of the three compositions reveals a consistent conception of the musical space that emphasizes its bi-dimensional quality. In the Divertimento, the unitary conception of the vertical and horizontal construction is mainly reflected in the bi-dimensional treatment of interval classes that provides coherence to the motivic structure. In Duet and Quintet, this mere idea of consistent organization of the musical materials in the horizontal and vertical dimensions of the total space becomes a unique principle of formal definition, the elastic development of the musical content itself.
5

Inspired by the Hindu tradition compositions and reflections /

Chan, Sze-rok. Chan, Sze-rok. Chan, Sze-rok. Chan, Sze-rok. Chan, Sze-rok. January 2006 (has links)
Thesis (M. Phil.)--University of Hong Kong, 2007. / Title proper from title frame. Also available in printed format.
6

Temporal Plane Shifting and Suspended Time in Something Like Your Lagrangian Point and Nothing Never Always Sometimes Changes

Praetorius, Emily January 2023 (has links)
This paper explores the compositional method of “temporal plane shifting” used to evoke states of suspended time in two of my compositions, Something Like Your Lagrangian Point (2019), for two pianists and two percussionists, and Nothing Never Always Sometimes Changes (2021) for alto flute/piccolo, tenor saxophone, violin, cello, and piano. Temporal plane shifting involves overlaying musical material of unrelated tempi—what I call “temporal planes”—to create an experience of time that parallels being in two different locations or states at once. I argue that this creates the feeling of “suspended time.” This paper begins with an overarching theory that, because our conceptions of time are bound with our conceptions of motion, states of entrainment are thus felt as locations in space. This argument is then expanded to explain the reasoning behind suspended time as the sensation of being in two locations at once. The rest of the paper uses the aforementioned pieces to explore how temporal planes are composed by way of instrumental juxtaposition, rhythmic juxtaposition, material limitation, and gestural repetition, and ends with a discussion of future considerations for the expansion of temporal plane composition.
7

Gabriel Pierné's Sonata in D Minor, op. 36: A Study of the Work's Compositional Language and Context, Focusing on the Composer's Transcription for Flute

Le, Huong Thu 05 1900 (has links)
There are very few significant sonatas for flute and piano written between 1880 and 1918, a period of unusually rich stylistic diversity. Gabriel Pierné composed his Sonata in D Minor, Op. 36 for piano and violin in 1900, and later transcribed it for flute and piano. Unfortunately, the work has not been embraced to a significant extent by either violinists or flutists. The wealth of violin sonatas from this period might explain it not becoming part of the canon for violinists, but this is not the case for the flute repertoire, where it seems that it should hold a place of genuine importance. Since little has been written about Pierné as a composer or about this piece in either of its versions, this project is intended to promote an understanding of the work in its historical and theoretical context and to advocate for more frequent performances. This document also suggests an alternate version of several particular passages so it can better represent the characteristics of today's flute and its modern techniques. This research will help other flutists and flute professors to introduce and spread an awareness of its existence and ideally helping to establish its place in the flute repertoire. From a historical standpoint, this dissertation also offers a case study of Gabriel Pierné's place, both stylistically and institutionally, in the history of French music in fin-de-siècle. Both of these goals fill important gaps in the existing research literature.
8

Inspired by the Hindu tradition: compositionsand reflections

Chan, Sze-rok., 陳詩諾. January 2006 (has links)
published_or_final_version / abstract / Humanities / Master / Master of Philosophy
9

wELten ERleBEn für Flöte, Violoncello und Klavier (2009): aus Anlass des UNESCO-Welterbetags 2009

Drude, Matthias 18 March 2009 (has links)
In dem Titel "wELten ERleBEn" stecken - bei Berücksichtigung der Großbuchstaben - die Wörter ERBE und ELBE. Ein Beitrag zum Welterbetag 2009, in dem die Schönheit der Landschaft sowie ihre Bedrohungen (Hochwasserkatasgtrophe 2002, Bau der Waldschlösschenbrücke) zum Klingen gebracht wird, ohne den Hörer auf eine einseitige Deutung festzulegen. Uraufführung: 6. Juni 2009 in Dresden
10

The Mozart Flute: Old and New Transcriptions of KV. 10-15

Potts, Elizabeth (Elizabeth Ann) 05 1900 (has links)
My lecture serves as a critical examination of the Six Sonatas Op. 3, KV. 10-15 by W.A. Mozart. I will engage the variances between the first edition of Op. 3 and those by Joseph Bopp and Louis Moyse edited specifically for the flute in hopes of providing another perspective for students, performers, and pedagogues alike. This study will (1) provide background information regarding the creation of KV. 10-15, (2) include a brief analysis of each sonata, (3) compare adaptions between the first edition, according to NMA, and two modern flute transcriptions, and (4) produce two new transcriptions. My new transcriptions of Sonatas KV. 10 and 13 represent a closer interpretation to the first edition and alerts students and teachers to the differences between the editions by Joseph Bopp and Louis Moyse to that of the first and NMA editions. The goal is to stimulate performers to reappraise their approach to this particular repertoire and to encourage more authentic performances of these engaging sonatas.

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