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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

Mongolian folklore expressed through music technology original multimedia soundtrack "On Horseback"

Chu, Xinlei 12 June 2014 (has links)
<p>I returned to my hometown and recorded Mongolian folk music&mdash;Mongolian Long Song and Mongolian Throat Singing. I wanted to combine technology and traditional folk music and write an electronic piece based on Mongolian vocal materials. I used what I&rsquo;ve sampled, manipulated the sounds, composed the music, gathered the videos together and created this multimedia piece&mdash;On Horseback. The names of the four movements&mdash;Sand, Cloud, Water, and Fire&mdash;are four elements that I chose to represent the lifestyle in Inner Mongolia. </p><p> This thesis covers the journey of how I created this piece. I&rsquo;ve explored many variations of technology such as sound sampling, mixing, and video editing. I&rsquo;ve also gained the chance to bring traditional Mongolian folk vocal music out of my hometown and present it in my own work. </p>
2

Musica speculativa| An exploration of the multimedia concert experience through theory and practice part I| Imaginary cognition| Interpreting the Topoi of intermedia electroacoustic concert works part II| Musica speculativa| A multimedia concert work in five movements and three intermezzi

Olivier, Ryan K. 13 June 2015 (has links)
<p> <i>Musica Speculativa</i> is a final project in two parts in which I explore, through both theory and practice, the role of metaphors in our understanding of reality with special attention given to the use of visual representation in multimedia concert works that employ electroacoustics. Part I, entitled, "Imaginary Cognition: Interpreting the Topoi of Intermedia Electroacoustic Concert Works," explores how metaphors play a core role in our musical experience and how aural metaphors can be enhanced by and ultimately interact with visual metaphors to create a contrapuntal intermedia experience. Part II, "<i>Musica Speculativa:</i> A Multimedia Concert in Five Movements and Three Intermezzi," for mezzo-soprano, flute, B-flat bass clarinet, violin, cello, piano, a percussionist performing an array of lightning bottles, a dancer with a gesture-sensing wand, and a technologist operating interactive audio and video processing, focuses on the medieval philosophy of <i>Musica Speculativa</i> and how it relates to our current understanding of the world. </p><p> In part I explore the heightened experience of metaphorical exchange through the utilization of multimedia. The starting point is the expansion of visual enhancement in electroacoustic compositions due to the widespread availability of projection in concert halls and the multimedia expectations created through 21st-century Western culture. With the use of visual representation comes the potential to map musical ideas onto visual signs, creating another level of cognition. The subsequent unfolding of visual signifiers offers a direct visual complement and subsequent interaction to the unfolding of aural themes in electroacoustic compositions. The paper surveys the current research surrounding metaphorical thematic recognition in electroacoustic works whose transformational processes might be unfamiliar, and which in turn create fertile ground for the negotiation of meaning. The interaction of media and the differences created among the various signs within the music and the visual art create a heightened concert experience that is familiar to and in many ways expected by contemporary listeners. </p><p> Composers such as Jaroslaw Kapuscinski have sought to use multimedia as a means to enhance the concert experience, giving movement to the acousmatic presence in their electroacoustic works. In turn, these works create a concert experience that is more familiar to the 21st-century audience. Through examining Kapuscinski's recent work, <i>Oli's Dream,</i> in light of cognitive research by Zbikowski (1998 &amp; 2002), topic theory by Agawu (1991 &amp; 2009), and multimedia research by Cook (1998), I propose a theory for analyzing contrapuntal meaning in multimedia concert works. </p><p> The themes explored in Part I, regarding the use of metaphor to interpret both visual and aural stimuli, ultimately creating a metaphor for a reality never fully grasped due to the limits of human understanding, are further explored artistically in the multimedia concert work, <i>Musica Speculativa. </i> The medieval philosophy of Musica Speculativa suggests that music as it is understood today (<i>musica instrumentalis</i>) is the only tangible form of the metaphysical music ruling human interactions (musica humana) and ordering the cosmos (<i>musica mundana</i>). I found the concept of <i>Musica Speculativa</i> to be a fitting metaphor for how music and art allude to our own perception of reality and our place within that world. The project as a whole re-examines the concept of <i> Musica Speculativa</i> in light of our current technological landscape to gain a deeper understanding of how we interact with the world around us. </p>
3

Singing turkish, performing Turkishness| Message and audience in the song competition of the international Turkish olympiad

Wulfsberg, Joanna Christine 17 June 2015 (has links)
<p> Turkey's most controversial religious figure is the Muslim cleric and author Fethullah G&uuml;len, whose followers have established around one thousand schools in 135 countries. Since 2003, the G&uuml;len-affiliated educational non-profit T&Uuml;RK&Ccedil;EDER has organized the International Turkish Olympiad, a competition for children enrolled in the G&uuml;len schools. The showpiece of this event is its song contest, in which students perform well-known Turkish songs before live audiences of thousands in cities all over Turkey and reach millions more via television broadcasts and the Internet. While the contest resembles American Idol in its focus on individual singers and Eurovision in its nationalistic overtones, the fact that the singers are performing songs associated with a nationality not their own raises intriguing questions about the intended message of the competition as well as about its publics. To answer these questions, I analyzed YouTube videos of the competition and examined YouTube comments, popular websites, and newspaper opinion columns. I conclude that the performers themselves are meant to feel an affinity with Turkish culture and values, while Turkish audiences receive a demonstration that G&uuml;len's brand of Islam is compatible with Turkish nationalism. Moreover, the competition reaches a multiplicity of publics both within and beyond Turkey. While some of these can be characterized as essentially oppositional counterpublics, I find that, in the case of the Turkish Olympiad, the dichotomy between rational public and emotional or irrational counterpublic established collectively by such theorists of publics as J&uuml;rgen Habermas and Michael Warner begins to break down.</p>

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