The Cowboy Song as Art Song Daniel M. Raessler 44
... numbers of readers found themselves drawn to adventures set in that vast region. In 1882, Buffalo Bill Cody presented the first of what became a 30-year run of variously named “Wild West Shows,” adding the excitement of a circus-like atmosphere to an already alluring image and culture. Western films ...
... numbers of readers found themselves drawn to adventures set in that vast region. In 1882, Buffalo Bill Cody presented the first of what became a 30-year run of variously named “Wild West Shows,” adding the excitement of a circus-like atmosphere to an already alluring image and culture. Western films ...
View/Open - Digital Collections Home
... fragments of at least a few of them but find that they have the power to take us back to a time during our childhood when we aspired to membership in the fraternity of cowboys. In spite of the cowboy’s popularity and the enduring appeal of his songs, few twentiethcentury composers in the classical t ...
... fragments of at least a few of them but find that they have the power to take us back to a time during our childhood when we aspired to membership in the fraternity of cowboys. In spite of the cowboy’s popularity and the enduring appeal of his songs, few twentiethcentury composers in the classical t ...
Crossing Over in the 21st Century - Trace: Tennessee Research and
... this sacralization process, endowing the conductor of symphonic music with sacred qualities exemplified the highbrow tendencies that started to form in American symphonic music at the turn of the 20th century. These tendencies relied on a few factors: the sacralization of the conductors and the art ...
... this sacralization process, endowing the conductor of symphonic music with sacred qualities exemplified the highbrow tendencies that started to form in American symphonic music at the turn of the 20th century. These tendencies relied on a few factors: the sacralization of the conductors and the art ...
Centering on African Practice in Musical Arts
... cultures to bring new, often ethnographic, information on cultural practices, musical instruments and playing, and archiving techniques. The importance of drawing upon musical heritage to strengthen and support contemporary education, is a theme and is stressed time and time again. So too, is the im ...
... cultures to bring new, often ethnographic, information on cultural practices, musical instruments and playing, and archiving techniques. The importance of drawing upon musical heritage to strengthen and support contemporary education, is a theme and is stressed time and time again. So too, is the im ...
Clara Schumann - The Kapralova Society
... their works.22 Several years later, in one of his letters to Clara, Robert wrote: "You complete me as a composer, as I do you. Every thought of yours comes from my soul, just as I have to thank you for all my music." 23 The most ambitious composition of Clara's youth is her Concerto in A minor, a th ...
... their works.22 Several years later, in one of his letters to Clara, Robert wrote: "You complete me as a composer, as I do you. Every thought of yours comes from my soul, just as I have to thank you for all my music." 23 The most ambitious composition of Clara's youth is her Concerto in A minor, a th ...
A SURVEY OF TRAGIC LOVE IN VOCAL REPERTOIRE
... nations. Thomas Purcell was aware of the state of English music, but when he noticed some early signs of young Henry's musical talent, he knew he had to help him enter the musical world. In 1668 he helped Purcell gain admittance into the prestigious Chapel Royal as one of the 12 boy choristers.2 Pu ...
... nations. Thomas Purcell was aware of the state of English music, but when he noticed some early signs of young Henry's musical talent, he knew he had to help him enter the musical world. In 1668 he helped Purcell gain admittance into the prestigious Chapel Royal as one of the 12 boy choristers.2 Pu ...
- University of Missouri School of Law Scholarship
... difficult), to test and to make connections, to find possible answers, to mine for common essences, to make sense of and to merge seemingly incongruous ideasthat is, to mediate. To be more accurate .... to mediate between disciplinesbetween paradigms. This is what a mediator does as a profession. A ...
... difficult), to test and to make connections, to find possible answers, to mine for common essences, to make sense of and to merge seemingly incongruous ideasthat is, to mediate. To be more accurate .... to mediate between disciplinesbetween paradigms. This is what a mediator does as a profession. A ...
gunther schuller: journey into jazz
... the opening movement), and an indication of the basic chord pattern for that bar. From this, and from what they hear around them, the jazz musicians mostly improvise their part. Meanwhile the orchestral players, whose parts are written out fully in traditional notation, find themselves confronted wi ...
... the opening movement), and an indication of the basic chord pattern for that bar. From this, and from what they hear around them, the jazz musicians mostly improvise their part. Meanwhile the orchestral players, whose parts are written out fully in traditional notation, find themselves confronted wi ...
hugues dufourt`s “manifesto of the music of our times”
... the sense of Cassirer’s symbolic forms.4 That is, it is less important that his music refer to some external reality, than it produce a world of its own (Cassirer 1946, 8). To understand this, we must look at how the elements of music and the new technologies of sound point to one another rather tha ...
... the sense of Cassirer’s symbolic forms.4 That is, it is less important that his music refer to some external reality, than it produce a world of its own (Cassirer 1946, 8). To understand this, we must look at how the elements of music and the new technologies of sound point to one another rather tha ...
American Language and Culture
... A list of the most important terms in jazz Arrangement. A new version of a previously written piece. Jazz arrangements often include new chords for the piece as well as new material to be played during and between solos, and so on. Avant-garde. Jazz (usually atonal) not based on preconceived chord c ...
... A list of the most important terms in jazz Arrangement. A new version of a previously written piece. Jazz arrangements often include new chords for the piece as well as new material to be played during and between solos, and so on. Avant-garde. Jazz (usually atonal) not based on preconceived chord c ...
Jason Theoharis thesis
... 130 million songs.5 Since this number only consists of songs recorded and uploaded to the website, it is evident that more have been written over the past several hundred years, meaning, supposedly, over 130 million melodies have been sung. A melody serves as a succession of pitches in musical time ...
... 130 million songs.5 Since this number only consists of songs recorded and uploaded to the website, it is evident that more have been written over the past several hundred years, meaning, supposedly, over 130 million melodies have been sung. A melody serves as a succession of pitches in musical time ...
The Orlando Consort
... bawdy French songs by Isaac, Compère and Mouton. The program’s point was that love songs cover an enormous range of intentions, let alone expression. The Machaut was an example of idealized, courtly love. But love had a religious side as well. In Dufay’s “Vergine bella” the imagery is loving but rev ...
... bawdy French songs by Isaac, Compère and Mouton. The program’s point was that love songs cover an enormous range of intentions, let alone expression. The Machaut was an example of idealized, courtly love. But love had a religious side as well. In Dufay’s “Vergine bella” the imagery is loving but rev ...
Chapter - 5 - Shodhganga
... help of the hows and the arrows. They were also using as means to produce high sound for signaling dangers like those of the Bhumi-Dudumbhi 9 and Dudumbhi. It has already been stated in book ‘Development of Indian Music’ by G.U.Thite, that when the primitive savage Men became familiar with the iron ...
... help of the hows and the arrows. They were also using as means to produce high sound for signaling dangers like those of the Bhumi-Dudumbhi 9 and Dudumbhi. It has already been stated in book ‘Development of Indian Music’ by G.U.Thite, that when the primitive savage Men became familiar with the iron ...
Klein ISD-Advanced Academics - Spring, TX
... is used for all kinds of music. While the names of the western scale tones are not used everywhere, a keyboard provides an excellent visual aid for understanding pitch. High-sounding pitches are to the right; low-sounding pitches are to the left. Moving from left to right is called moving “up” the k ...
... is used for all kinds of music. While the names of the western scale tones are not used everywhere, a keyboard provides an excellent visual aid for understanding pitch. High-sounding pitches are to the right; low-sounding pitches are to the left. Moving from left to right is called moving “up” the k ...
Chapter_Twenty Seven_Outline
... 3. The final movement moves from terror to reconciliation, Hell to Paradise, much like the Beethovenian trajectory of the Fifth Symphony. E. “Down with Programs!” 1. Mahler’s Second Symphony also began as a symphonic poem, this one on death. 2. It is known as the “Resurrection” and requires the larg ...
... 3. The final movement moves from terror to reconciliation, Hell to Paradise, much like the Beethovenian trajectory of the Fifth Symphony. E. “Down with Programs!” 1. Mahler’s Second Symphony also began as a symphonic poem, this one on death. 2. It is known as the “Resurrection” and requires the larg ...
The first special edition in 2011
... Ukrainian, Belorussian, Georgian and other languages and staged in, amongst others, Moscow, Istanbul, New York, Paris, London, Tehran, Cairo, Beijing, Berlin, Warsaw, Sofia, Budapest and Bucharest, totalling 120 theaters. Hajibeyov’s other famous operetta “O Olmasin, Bu Olsun” was screened for the f ...
... Ukrainian, Belorussian, Georgian and other languages and staged in, amongst others, Moscow, Istanbul, New York, Paris, London, Tehran, Cairo, Beijing, Berlin, Warsaw, Sofia, Budapest and Bucharest, totalling 120 theaters. Hajibeyov’s other famous operetta “O Olmasin, Bu Olsun” was screened for the f ...
A Companion to Recent Scottish Music: 1950 to the Present - n-ISM
... When Max came to live in Orkney during the early Seventies, he joined a community and connected to a culture and environment that contained deep resonances of an ancient Nordic culture. His new homeland encouraged a rejuvenation of his musical vocabulary. Much of his earlier work was chamber music o ...
... When Max came to live in Orkney during the early Seventies, he joined a community and connected to a culture and environment that contained deep resonances of an ancient Nordic culture. His new homeland encouraged a rejuvenation of his musical vocabulary. Much of his earlier work was chamber music o ...
Improvisation and entrepreneurial bricolage versus rationalisation: A
... combining resources for new purposes, by which they mean the ‘reuse of resources for different applications from which they were originally intended’ (Baker and Nelson, 2005: p. 335). The third element involves ‘resources at hand’ (Baker and Nelson, 2005: p. 336). This again is derived closely from ...
... combining resources for new purposes, by which they mean the ‘reuse of resources for different applications from which they were originally intended’ (Baker and Nelson, 2005: p. 335). The third element involves ‘resources at hand’ (Baker and Nelson, 2005: p. 336). This again is derived closely from ...
Tin Pan Alley
... In response to changes in society and in technology, as well as to the impact of jazz composers such as Duke Ellington, it was natural for the professional songwriters to extend the harmonic vocabulary of the popular song. Some argue, for example James Maher in his introduction to Alec Wilder’s Amer ...
... In response to changes in society and in technology, as well as to the impact of jazz composers such as Duke Ellington, it was natural for the professional songwriters to extend the harmonic vocabulary of the popular song. Some argue, for example James Maher in his introduction to Alec Wilder’s Amer ...
The Milwaukee Symposia for Church Composers
... The category of Christian ritual music offers new ways to understand and classify the various musical elements in worship. For example, rather than simply focusing on sung texts and listing these according to the liturgical importance of the text,14 a ritual music perspective allows for other catego ...
... The category of Christian ritual music offers new ways to understand and classify the various musical elements in worship. For example, rather than simply focusing on sung texts and listing these according to the liturgical importance of the text,14 a ritual music perspective allows for other catego ...
to the PDF file. - Svenska samfundet för musikforskning
... beauty of its popular traditions’. In the mountains and forests, isolated from both political regimes and the influence of European culture, ‘enemy of all individualism’, popular poetry, design, song, and dance thrived. From these, Norwegian writers, artists, and musicians were drawing inspiration, ...
... beauty of its popular traditions’. In the mountains and forests, isolated from both political regimes and the influence of European culture, ‘enemy of all individualism’, popular poetry, design, song, and dance thrived. From these, Norwegian writers, artists, and musicians were drawing inspiration, ...
Charles University in Prague Pedagogical Faculty DIPLOMA THESIS
... time i was writing the thesis, i had two things in mind. The first, that jazz was a completely different thing from classical music, and second that classical music was not seriously affected, or let's say influenced by jazz. I was amazed to find out that a lot of basic elements are the same and app ...
... time i was writing the thesis, i had two things in mind. The first, that jazz was a completely different thing from classical music, and second that classical music was not seriously affected, or let's say influenced by jazz. I was amazed to find out that a lot of basic elements are the same and app ...
Chord Progressions
... "The recipe for music is part melody, lyric, rhythm, and harmony (chord progressions). The term chord progression refers to a succession of tones or chords played in a particular order for a specified duration that harmonizes with the melody. Except for styles such as rap and free jazz, chord progre ...
... "The recipe for music is part melody, lyric, rhythm, and harmony (chord progressions). The term chord progression refers to a succession of tones or chords played in a particular order for a specified duration that harmonizes with the melody. Except for styles such as rap and free jazz, chord progre ...
AN 34307 TOPICS IN US HISTORY:
... Modal jazz. A repertoire of jazz pieces, as opposed to a particular style of improvising. Modal pieces stay on each mode (and thus each scale and chord as well) for a long time, usually at least four bars per mode, in contrast with standard repertory which changes chords at least once per measure. M ...
... Modal jazz. A repertoire of jazz pieces, as opposed to a particular style of improvising. Modal pieces stay on each mode (and thus each scale and chord as well) for a long time, usually at least four bars per mode, in contrast with standard repertory which changes chords at least once per measure. M ...
The Synthesizer - Scholarship @ Claremont
... significant impact on the musical world. It wasn’t until the development of the synthesizer that music could truly be transformed. The impact the synthesizer had on music is far greater than imaginable at the time of its creation. Obviously, the instrument added an entire realm of possible sounds to ...
... significant impact on the musical world. It wasn’t until the development of the synthesizer that music could truly be transformed. The impact the synthesizer had on music is far greater than imaginable at the time of its creation. Obviously, the instrument added an entire realm of possible sounds to ...
Musical composition
Musical composition can refer to an original piece of music, the structure of a musical piece, or the process of creating a new piece of music. People who practice composition are called composers.Although today composition is considered to consist of the manipulation of each aspect of music (harmony, melody, form, rhythm, and timbre), according to Jean-Benjamin de Laborde (1780, 2:12):Composition consists in two things only. The first is the ordering and disposing of several sounds...in such a manner that their succession pleases the ear. This is what the Ancients called melody. The second is the rendering audible of two or more simultaneous sounds in such a manner that their combination is pleasant. This is what we call harmony, and it alone merits the name of composition.