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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.
11

The music culture of Cirebon

Wright, Michael Richard, January 1978 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of California, Los Angeles, 1978. / Typescript. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 345-356).
12

The Influence of Balinese Gamelan on the Music of Olivier Messiaen

Puspita, Amelia January 2008 (has links)
No description available.
13

Waton Kumpul ("as long as we get together") : cultural preservation of the community Uyon-Uyonand Latihan Karawitan tradition in Sleman, Yogyakarta, 2004-2006 /

Trout, John William. January 2007 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Cincinnati, 2007. / Includes abstract. Keywords: cultural preservation; Karawitan; Sleman; Yogyakarta; Javanese; Gamelan; Java; Sanggar. Includes bibliographical references (p. [583]-603). Also issued online.
14

Der Einfluss der javanischen Gamelan-Musik auf Kompositionen von Claude Debussy /

Arndt, Jürgen, January 1993 (has links)
Diss.--Paderborn, 1988. / Bibliogr. p. 159-171.
15

Transmission et techniques d'apprentissage d'un savoir traditionnel : étude ethnolinguistique et ethnomusicologique de la musique de gamelan (Java central) /

Jacquemart, Nathalie. January 1900 (has links)
Th Etat--Ethnomusicologie--Paris 5--René Descartes, 1997. / Extraits de textes en javanais et en indonésien. Glossaire p. 554-572. Bibliogr. p. 573-586. Index.
16

Gong ageng : Herstellung, Klang und Gestalt eines königlichen Instrumentes des Ostens /

Varsányi, András. January 2000 (has links)
Diss.--Tübingen, 1999. / Glossaire p. 577-585. Bibliogr. p. 586-598. Index.
17

Musik kontemporer experimental music by Balinese composers /

McGraw, Andrew Clay. January 2005 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Wesleyan University, 2005. / Includes bibliographical references (leaves 416-422) and index.
18

Bamboo power : performance in gamelan jégog and comparisons with UK gamelan performance

Jiménez, Manuel Anthony January 2015 (has links)
No description available.
19

Modeling Music with Grammars: Some Examples from Balinese Kotekan

Cowal, Janet Tom 31 May 1994 (has links)
What is the relationship of music and language? Analogies and comparisons of music and language are plentiful in various types of literature. For researchers in the cognitive sciences, the importance of organization, patterning, and structuring of sounds is a common theme in analyzing both language and music. With the success of generative grammars for languages, a number of researchers have used similar kinds of grammars to describe or model particular aspects of music. In addition, researchers are interested in possible universals in musical grammars. However, while grammars of non-Western musics have been written, most of the work has been based on Western tonal systems. The purpose of this research is to analyze, in an information processing, linguistic framework, a non-Western musical system for which there is currently no formal grammar in the literature, and to describe an aspect of it in the form of a grammar. Kotekan, the system of interlocking parts in Balinese game/an music, is examined in this study. This study is based on library research, scores, tapes, and communication with experts in Balinese music. A number of previously written grammars for musical systems are examined, as well as literature concerning various types of formal grammars. Balinese kotekan data is collected, in the form of literature, scores, and tapes. Portions of the data are described in the form of a grammar. The rules are then tested on new data, that is, portions of other Balinese pieces. The natures of and the relationship between music and language can be examined more closely through the use of an information processing, linguistic framework. Grammars are a precise and formal way of describing structure and regularities in linguistic and musical systems, and of describing aspects of competence. Linguistic and musical grammars share some features and differ in others. The grammar for Balinese kotekan presented in this study exhibits features that are similar to other musical grammars. The system can be described as a hierarchy of constraints from global tendencies to specific rules for various types of kotekan. In addition, there are deep and surface structures, variation related to structure, ranked or preference rules, spatio-motor considerations, and the need for context-sensitive rules. The structure of po/os and sangsih (the interlocking parts of kotekan) as individual lines is described by context-free phrase structure rules. The relationship between pol os and sangsih is described by transformations. The grammar presented is a starting point for a complete grammar of Balinese kotekan.
20

Timbre perception of cultural insiders : a case study with Javanese gamelan instruments

Serafini, Sandra 11 1900 (has links)
It has recently become more common to combine methodologies from the fields of ethnomusicology and psychoacoustics to address fundamental questions concerning music perception. Ethnomusicology emphasizes cultural context when examining the different ways musical sounds are organized. Psychoacoustics explores the relationships between perceptual processes and physical properties of sound. The methodologies of both disciplines are crucial in developing a cross-cultural cognitive theory of music. A perception experiment was performed on two groups of Western musicians: one with training in Javanese gamelan music (the Gamelan group), and one without training in Javanese gamelan (the Western group). This study examined whether changes in timbre perception occurred in adults who were trained in another culture's music compared to naive listeners. The two groups' perceptions were also compared between an isolated tone and a melodic context to determine where the effects of training were most salient. A mathematical technique known as Multidimensional Scaling (MDS) showed that all subjects based their ratings on two factors during both contexts. In the isolated tone context, the two subject groups did not differ in their timbre perception. In the melodic context, the subject groups diverged in a statistically significant manner. Multiple regression analysis showed that in the isolated tone context, attack centroid (a measure of the spectral energy distribution during the initial 50 milliseconds of the tone) was emphasized almost equally by both groups, along with an unknown psychological factor. In the melodic context, the Gamelan group focused their attention almost completely on the attack centroid while the Western group focused their attention roughly the same between the attack centroid and the middle portion of the amplitude envelope. These results indicate that timbre perception in the music of another culture is modified when a listener has received training in that music, even as an adult. A musical context is needed for these modifications to become apparent, however, otherwise training has no effect on processing timbre. It would appear that attention is directed to acoustical properties that provide meaning to a musical context by those listeners who are familiar with that context. Conversely, listeners who are naive of another culture's musical contexts do not focus their attention on those specific acoustical properties.

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