New Directions In Music
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New Directions in Music
Author | : David Cope |
Publsiher | : WCB/McGraw-Hill |
Total Pages | : 298 |
Release | : 1976 |
Genre | : Music |
ISBN | : UCAL:B3966611 |
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Directions in the musical avant-garde in the past fifty years seem as numerous and diverse as the composers and their works. Yet these directions have historical motives and aesthetic values, traceable and uniquely observable due to their singularly radical nature. This book explores the history, philosophy, composers, and works of the avant-garde since the late 1940s, emphasizing works departing radically from tradition. Outstanding features include extensive bibliographies of written works and recordings; interviews with important avant-garde composers, showing readers firsthand the thought behind their works; in-depth analyses of specific works relevant to each chapter; and addresses, with websites, of publishers of avant-garde music.
New Directions in Music
Author | : David Cope |
Publsiher | : Unknown |
Total Pages | : 286 |
Release | : 2001 |
Genre | : Music |
ISBN | : UOM:39015050516940 |
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Musicians and musical scholars of all levels will benefit from Cope's clear presentation, organizing a seemingly idiosyncratic field into a logical succession of ideas and developments."--BOOK JACKET.
New Directions in Music
Author | : David Cope |
Publsiher | : WCB/McGraw-Hill |
Total Pages | : 428 |
Release | : 1993 |
Genre | : Music |
ISBN | : UCSC:32106016712272 |
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New Directions in Music
Author | : David H. Cope |
Publsiher | : Unknown |
Total Pages | : 271 |
Release | : 1978 |
Genre | : Electronic Book |
ISBN | : OCLC:462398314 |
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Trends in World Music Analysis
Author | : Lawrence Beaumont Shuster,Somangshu Mukherji,Noé Dinnerstein |
Publsiher | : Routledge |
Total Pages | : 356 |
Release | : 2022-02-24 |
Genre | : Music |
ISBN | : 9781000535501 |
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This volume brings together a group of analytical chapters exploring traditional genres and styles of world music, capturing a vibrant and expanding field of research. These contributors, drawn from the forefront of researchers in world music analysis, seek to break down barriers and build bridges between scholarly disciplines, musical repertoires, and cultural traditions. Covering a wide range of genres, styles, and performers, the chapters bring to bear a variety of methodologies, including indigenous theoretical perspectives, Western music theory, and interdisciplinary techniques rooted in the cognitive and computational sciences. With contributors addressing music traditions from Africa, Asia, Europe, and the Americas, this volume captures the many current directions in the analysis of world music, offering a state of the fi eld and demonstrating the expansion of possibilities created by this area of research.
New Directions in Music and Human Computer Interaction
Author | : Simon Holland,Tom Mudd,Katie Wilkie-McKenna,Andrew McPherson,Marcelo M. Wanderley |
Publsiher | : Springer |
Total Pages | : 306 |
Release | : 2019-02-06 |
Genre | : Computers |
ISBN | : 9783319920696 |
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Computing is transforming how we interact with music. New theories and new technologies have emerged that present fresh challenges and novel perspectives for researchers and practitioners in music and human-computer interaction (HCI). In this collection, the interdisciplinary field of music interaction is considered from multiple viewpoints: designers, interaction researchers, performers, composers, audiences, teachers and learners, dancers and gamers. The book comprises both original research in music interaction and reflections from leading researchers and practitioners in the field. It explores a breadth of HCI perspectives and methodologies: from universal approaches to situated research within particular cultural and aesthetic contexts. Likewise, it is musically diverse, from experimental to popular, classical to folk, including tango, laptop orchestras, composition and free improvisation.
Eudaimonia
Author | : Gareth Dylan Smith,Marissa Silverman |
Publsiher | : Routledge |
Total Pages | : 185 |
Release | : 2020-04-13 |
Genre | : Music |
ISBN | : 9780429559969 |
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Eudaimonia: Perspectives for Music Learning asserts the fertile applications of eudaimonia—an Aristotelian concept of human flourishing intended to explain the nature of a life well lived—for work in music learning and teaching in the 21st century. Drawing insights from within and beyond the field of music education, contributors reflect on what the "good life" means in music, highlighting issues at the core of the human experience and the heart of schooling and other educational settings. This pursuit of personal fulfillment through active engagement is considered in relation to music education as well as broader social, political, spiritual, psychological, and environmental contexts. Especially pertinent in today’s complicated and contradictory world, Eudaimonia: Perspectives for Music Learning is a concise compendium on this oft-overlooked concept, providing musicians with an understanding of an ethically-guided and socially-meaningful music-learning paradigm.
New Directions in Mobile Media and Performance
Author | : Camille C. Baker |
Publsiher | : Routledge |
Total Pages | : 266 |
Release | : 2018-09-03 |
Genre | : History |
ISBN | : 9781317088530 |
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New Directions in Mobile Media and Performance explores various performative projects and forms of expression that have emerged since the onset of the smartphone. It focuses mainly on new concepts and developments that have emerged in mobile media performance. It showcases the intimate and phenomenological mobile aesthetic that has been unfolding within networked performance and media art projects for over a decade and a half. This aesthetic utilises the potential and affordances with each iteration and update of modern smartphones. Themes of embodiment, presence, liveness and connection through mobile, networked, and remote technology are revisited in the context of HD mobile cameras, selfies and live video streaming from the phone, as well as the impact of peer production, opensource and Maker culture on mobile media performance practices. It explores the surge in development of wearable devices in performance, as well as how the ‘quantified-self movement’ has affected performance works. It deals with concepts and developments in intermedial performance that incorporate mobile and wearable devices, especially from the artist’s, designer’s or dramaturge’s perspective as the creator and their creative process, working with technology as a collaborator, not just a tool or guide. The book demonstrates how artists have repurposed the device – transforming it from merely a communication device, using voice and text only – to become a new collaborative medium, a full visual, synaesthetic, interactive and performative tool of deeper expression and social change. It discusses seminal works and the evolution of the medium, within intermedial digital art and performance practices as medium for artistic expression, creative process and staged performances. It focuses on projects and artists who have pushed mobile media performance beyond the conventional blackbox. Emerging visual, digital, interactive, tactile, gestural and theatrical or performance projects that incorporate mobile or wearable devices, used as vehicles for more challenging, experimental, experiential and immersive performative artworks are highlighted. The book also contextualises Baker’s own media research and performance practice within the larger landscape with the field. It is bookended with interviews with the artists themselves on their creative process and intentions. It is the outcome of three years of research of artistic works around the world, interviews, in-person viewings of performances, as well as incorporating and reflecting on her own ongoing practice and projects in context.