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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.
241

Von der Erfindung der Weihnachtsfreude: Melodram für Sprecher und Orgel nach einem Text von Dietrich Mendt (2005)

Drude, Matthias 18 March 2009 (has links)
Melodram für Sprecher und Orgel. Text: Dietrich Mendt, Musik: Matthias Drude
242

Influencia de los métodos de composición de música para cine en música para videojuegos peruanos del 2014 al 2019

Arias Merino, Gian Franco 30 June 2020 (has links)
La música para cine es un arte que convive con nosotros hace muchos años y que ha acompañado a toda clase de películas, desde las taquilleras hasta las experimentales. Así como existen películas legendarias que han trascendido generaciones, también existen soundtracks que han logrado hacer aún más especial la experiencia de presenciar una producción cinematográfica. Con el pasar de los años (desde la aparición de la música sincronizada en las películas en 1926 con Don juan) se han ido elaborando y perfeccionando los métodos para componer música para películas, y es por esta razón que existen diversos manuales y técnicas para tomar en cuenta al momento de componer música para cine. Así como el fenómeno de las películas, existe otra forma de entretenimiento que también lleva bastante tiempo activa y que cada vez toma más fuerza: los videojuegos. Los videojuegos comparten ciertas similitudes con el cine: ambos buscan entretener, comunicar un mensaje, contar una historia. A pesar de que cada uno lo hace a su manera, existe un elemento que ambos comparten y es la música. Esta en los videojuegos tiene casi las mismas funciones que en el cine y por consecuencia surge la interrogante: ¿Se puede componer música para videojuegos tomando como punto de partida los métodos para componer música para cine; y de ser así ¿se práctica dicha aproximación en Perú? El presente trabajo de investigación tiene como objetivo demostrar que sí es posible. / Film music is an art form present in movies for a long time, from blockbusters to experimental cinema. Just as there are classic movies that have transcended generations due to its major success, there are also legendary soundtracks that have made the experience of watching a movie even better. Along the years (since Don Juan in 1926, first movie with synchronized music), composing music for movies has developed grandly and also, it’s techniques. Just like cinema, there is another form of entertainment that already has several years active and grows stronger everyday: videogames. They share the same objectives with movies which are to entertain, communicate a message, tell a story. Each of them has its own ways, but there is an element in common and its music. Here, it has almost the same functions as in cinema, and therefore one may ask: Can I write music for videogames using the methods for composing music for cinema? Is this approach present in the peruvian context? This research aims to demonstrate that these statements are true. / Trabajo de investigación
243

The Composer's Guide to the Tuba: Creating a New Resource on the Capabilities of the Tuba Family

Hynds, Aaron Michael 05 August 2019 (has links)
No description available.
244

Breaking In Torrent ⸺

Molnar, Delanie 24 May 2021 (has links)
No description available.
245

"Femininity: Ownership and Power": A Multimedia Exhibition

Brown, Aleyna M. 12 1900 (has links)
This thesis is a critical analysis and creative commentary providing research and insight into my 150-minute multimedia exhibition, "Femininity: Ownership and Power," that premiered October 23, 2021. All of my research, composition, and collaboration efforts seek to recontextualize the semiotics of ‘femininity' through ownership and empowerment from varying intersections and identities. The titles of the eight works composed and premiered as part of the exhibition include: a beautiful reckoning; Dust; Moirai; Gaia; Portrait of the American Woman; Shared, In Balanced Contrast; At My Intersection; and I See You. Also included was #pinkcode, an exhibit that features a fuschia graphic user interface for an interactive modulation synthesis application built in Csound designed to bring femininity into computer music spaces. The musical compositions vary in instrumentation including flute, alto flute, voice, guitar, viola, harp, cajon, vibraphone, live electronics, and fixed media. They also vary in medium including live performance, virtual reality video, music video, audio-reactive TouchDesigner video, immersive text projections, light show, and live dance. Feminist texts by women poets and authors recited by women personally connected to me are also included in the fabric of the musical fixed media of multiple pieces in the thesis exhibition. Collaborators of artistic media including film, digital art, music, and dance include Eboni Johnson, Hannah Ottinger, Cami Holman, Miranda Zapata, and Elijah J. Thomas.
246

Raise the Curtain! : Composing beyond the acousmatic to explore performative agencies

Onorato, Giovanni January 2022 (has links)
In this text, I aim to provide a critical account of a practice-based process where I composed the pieces: No Future, Futuribile No.2, celycib~, and radiocib~. In this iterative process, practical explorations provided foundations for theoretical development, which in turn, guided the following iteration of the practical work. In addition to this, I will critique the concept of the post-acousmatic, using the theoretical insights that emerged from the iterative process. In presenting the artistic results, I will describe the compositional intentions, the process, the aesthetical decisions I made, and a critical reflection on the results. The outcomes of my compositional journey might be regarded as heterogeneous in terms of musical results, and I strongly regard this occurrence in a positive manner. Despite the heterogeneity of the artistic outcomes, a conceptual framework emerges from the critical reflection on the works, linking them together. The conceptual basis of my work is related to two main aspects: one linked to my interest in political issues, the other to artistic and aesthetic matters. I see the artistic space as an opportunity to stage a potential socio-political scenario, in which different possibilities can be prototyped and explored, showing that a broader horizon of possibility can exists, even if in the confined boundaries of the stage. The artistic and aesthetic matters are related to my interest in acousmatic music. In this text I will show how I frequently make use of acousmatic techniques in a post-acousmatic context, which will be described in the Critical Reflection. The description and the critique of the works will highlight how such techniques contribute to this idea.In this text I will frequently make use of the term acousmatic. I am aware of the ambiguity of using this term, which in my understanding, might refer either to a phenomenon or a music genre (see The Post-Acousmatic section). However, I find it a useful tool to address a set of intentions and compositional strategies, aesthetics, and communities. My political and artistic stands relate to each other through my belief that an experimental approach to arts can contribute, to some extent, to the socio-political context. I regard the compositional approaches developed in relation to the acousmatic condition as the most interesting development in new music of the last century. Nevertheless, in the last decades, a standardized way of composing has emerged from the acousmatic communities. My belief is that this led to a speculation over self-referential aesthetics, and consequently, excluded new audiences to get access to it. On the other side, the absence of acousmatic music is noticeable in the programmes of venues, or the online listeners communities, and therefore, the everyday life of people. My belief is that an experimental approach towards arts, including acousmatic music, might be beneficial for contributing to a less hierarchical society: an experimental attitude in arts is the way to explore a broader horizon of possibility.
247

Oh Ewe Mohobelo for Orchestra

Harris, Austin W. 19 September 2016 (has links)
No description available.
248

Portfolio of compositions and critical writing

Garrard, Christopher January 2013 (has links)
The portfolio of compositions comprises six pieces: a chamber opera, an orchestral piece and four shorter chamber works. These pieces are diverse and distinct from one another but collectively explore aesthetic tensions relating to tonality, aura and ontology. The largest piece is a chamber opera setting Margaret Atwood's novel, The Handmaid's Tale, which has been flexibly scored as a series of fragments in order to reflect the quality of her text. The remaining pieces draw influence from poetry, landscape and the environment. They all encompass a series of material contrasts but attempt to simply contain these tensions in some way, leaving them partially unresolved. The thesis is a re-assessment of the music of the Ukrainian composer, Valentin Silvestrov, in particular, his 'metamusic' approach to composition that treats pre-existing styles as a form of musical metaphor. Through a series of comparisons with landscape and photography, I offer new vantage points for approaching the aesthetic issues present in his work, relating to aura, imitation and historical reference. The metaphors of landscape and photography might appear far removed from his work, but mediated by the work of the artist Gerhard Richter, offer a basis for critically analysing Silvestrov's approach. Furthermore, by drawing upon the theories of Walter Benjamin, Roland Barthes and the geographer, Stephan Harrison, I demonstrate how concepts from other disciplines can be recast in order to be effective for approaching both Silvestrov and Richter. As a form of conclusion, I consider the role of photography in the production of CD covers and how this relates to the reception of Silvestrov's metamusic in a commercial setting.
249

The identity, application and legacy of Paul Hindemith's theory of music

Desbruslais, Simon Stephen January 2013 (has links)
This thesis investigates the relationship between Hindemith’s music theory and his evolving compositional practice. It focuses on the first volume of his Unterweisung im Tonsatz (1937); both evaluating the very identity of the treatise and analysing how it may be applied to free composition. Above all, this work highlights the increased use of quartal pitch collections found in Hindemith’s Unterweisung-based compositions. Archival documents from the universities of Yale, Berlin, Buffalo, and the Frankfurt Hindemith Institute augment this process, and are used to revise our understanding of how Hindemith’s music theory originated, and how it relates to his practice and teaching. The dissertation begins by exploring the theoretical and intellectual climate of the Rundfunkversuchsstelle at the Berlin Hochschule für Musik within a critical commentary of Hindemith’s music theory. It then develops a new theoretical perspective of quartal pitch space, and atonal prolongation, to provide an analytical toolkit. The list of compositions in the Unterweisung appendix, which Hindemith felt most successfully demonstrated his theory in practice, structures the next three chapters. The Sonata for Solo Viola op. 25/1, a pre-Unterweisung composition, is followed by the Ludus Tonalis, which was published soon afterwards, which is investigated for its explicit theoretical connections. The third analytical chapter focuses on the Das Marienleben cycle as a work written before the Unterweisung, and subsequently revised with theoretical concerns. The final two chapters investigate the prominent decline in popularity experienced by Hindemith, both regarding his theory and compositions, from the 1950s. This is epitomised by a number of strongly-worded polemics published in The Music Review, much of which, it may be argued, is inaccurate or unduly critical. The thesis ends by constructing a Hindemith legacy based on a selection of archival documents and scores, together with a selection of trends in composition and music theory.
250

Messiaen's Influence on Post-War Serialism

Muncy, Thomas R. 08 1900 (has links)
The objective of this paper is to show how Olivier Messiaen's Mode de valeurs et d'intensites influenced the development of postwar serialism. Written at Darmstadt in 1949, Mode de valeurs is considered the first European work to organize systematically all the major musical parameters: pitch, duration, dynamics, articulation, and register. This work was a natural step in Messiaen's growth toward complete or nearly complete systemization of musical parameters, which he had begun working towards in earlier works such as Vingt regards sur 1'Enfant-Jesus (1944), Turangalila-symphonie (1946-8), and Cantyodjaya (1949), and which he continued to experiment with in later works such as Ile de Feu II (1951) and Livre d'orgue (1951). The degree of systematic control that Messiaen successfully applied to each of the musical parameters influenced two of the most prominent post-war serial composers, Pierre Boulez and Karlheinz Stockhausen, to further develop systematic procedures in their own works. This paper demonstrates the degree to which both Boulez' Structures Ia (1951) and Stockhausen's Kreuzspiel (1951) used Mode de valeurs as a model for the systematic organization of musical parameters.

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