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The William Paterson University Department of Music Presents New
The William Paterson University Department of Music presents New Music Series Peter Jarvis, director Featuring the Velez / Jarvis Duo, Judith Bettina & James Goldsworthy, Daniel Lippel and the William Paterson University Percussion Ensemble Monday, October 17, 2016, 7:00 PM Shea Center for the Performing Arts Program Mundus Canis (1997) George Crumb Five Humoresques for Guitar and Percussion 1. “Tammy” 2. “Fritzi” 3. “Heidel” 4. “Emma‐Jean” 5. “Yoda” Phonemena (1975) Milton Babbitt For Voice and Electronics Judith Bettina, voice Phonemena (1969) Milton Babbitt For Voice and Piano Judith Bettina, voice James Goldsworthy, Piano Penance Creek (2016) * Glen Velez For Frame Drums and Drum Set Glen Velez – Frame Drums Peter Jarvis – Drum Set Themes and Improvisations Peter Jarvis For open Ensemble Glen Velez & Peter Jarvis Controlled Improvisation Number 4, Opus 48 (2016) * Peter Jarvis For Frame Drums and Drum Set Glen Velez – Frame Drums Peter Jarvis – Drum Set Aria (1958) John Cage For a Voice of any Range Judith Bettina May Rain (1941) Lou Harrison For Soprano, Piano and Tam‐tam Elsa Gidlow Judith Bettina, James Goldsworthy, Peter Jarvis Ostinato Mezzo Forte, Opus 51 (2016) * Peter Jarvis For Percussion Band Evan Chertok, David Endean, Greg Fredric, Jesse Gerbasi Daniel Lucci, Elise Macloon Sean Dello Monaco – Drum Set * = World Premiere Program Notes Mundus Canis: George Crumb George Crumb’s Mundus Canis came about in 1997 when he wanted to write a solo guitar piece for his friend David Starobin that would be a musical homage to the lineage of Crumb family dogs. He explains, “It occurred to me that the feline species has been disproportionately memorialized in music and I wanted to help redress the balance.” Crumb calls the work “a suite of five canis humoresques” with a character study of each dog implied through the music. -
Insan Sesi, Vurmali Sazlar, Piyano Ve Arp
Dicle Üniversitesi Sosyal Bilimler Enstitüsü Dergisi Kasım 2014 YIL-6 S.12 (DÜSBED) ISSN : 1308-6219 İNSAN SESİ, VURMALI ÇALGILAR, PİYANO VE ARP ÇALGILARINDAKİ YENİ İCRA TEKNİKLERİNİN 20. YÜZYILDAN GÜNÜMÜZE TARİHSEL GELİŞİMİ VE BU TEKNİKLERİN NOTASYONU Rohat CEBE ÖZ Müzisyenler, 20. yüzyılın başlarından itibaren çalgısal tekniklerin ve yeni ses kaynaklarının gelişmesinde başka hiçbir müzik tarihi döneminde olmadığı kadar önemli bir rol oynamaya başlamışlardır. Müzik besteci tarafından yazılır. Besteci yaratıcılığını, imkanlar çerçevesinde kullanacağı çalgı ya da çalgı gruplarının teknik ve fiziksel özelliklerini dikkate alarak neticelendirir. Bu bir gereksinimdir. Bu gereksinim 20. yüzyılın başlarında kültürel, siyasal ve teknolojik gelişmeler paralelinde en hareketli ve bekli de en yaratıcı seviyelere ulaşmıştır. Çalgısal tekniklerin ve yeni ses kaynaklarının gelişimi, yeni yazım ve çalım tekniklerini de beraberinde getirmiştir. Bu dönemde yaşayan besteciler eserlerinde çalgılardan o ana kadar var olan tınıların dışında farklı tınılar ve renkler elde etme arayışına girmiş, bir grup besteci de geçmişten gelen mirası ret ederek elektronik tekniklerle geliştirilmiş yeni çalgıların yapımına ve bu çalgılardan farklı sesler elde etme çabasına girmişlerdir. Yeni çalgılar yaratma fikri bir yana var olan çalgılardan yeni tınılar elde etme çabası, beraberinde klasik notalamadan farklı bir notalama biçiminin ortaya çıkmasına sebebiyet vermiştir. Bu dönemde, yeniyi arama ve bulunan yenilikleri uygulama sadece besteciler tarafından değil aynı zamanda birçok solist çalgıcının kendi çalgısının ses kabiliyetini belirleme ve keşfetmesiyle de en yüksek seviyelerine ulaşmıştır. Bu makale; başta insan sesindeki gelişmeler olmak üzere, vurmalı çalgılar, piyano ve arp çalgılarındaki yeni çalım tekniklerini, eser örnekleri ve yeni yazım tekniklerinin notalanması da gösterilerek, 20. yüzyılın ilk çeyreğinden başlayıp günümüze kadar gelen süreç içerisindeki gelişmeleri incelenmeye çalışılmıştır. -
Noise in Music Or Music in Noise? a Short Discussion on the Incorporation of “Other” Sounds in Music Making
University of Alberta Noise in Music or Music in Noise? A Short Discussion on the Incorporation of “Other” Sounds in Music Making Essay Submitted as part of the Music History exam of the Qualifying Exams, for the degree of Doctor in Music Composition Faculty of Arts Department of Music by Nicolás Alejandro Mariano Arnáez Edmonton, Alberta January 2017 “We affirm that the world’s magnificence has been enriched by a new beauty: the beauty of speed. A racing car whose hood is adorned with great pipes, like serpents of explosive breath— a roaring car that seems to ride on grapeshot is more beautiful than the Victory of Samothrace.” (Marinetti 1909) Introduction When a physical source produces periodic or aperiodic vibrations in the air within a certain frequency, and there are human ears near by, they receive a meaning assigned by our brain. When we have the necessity of verbalize the sonic image produced by those vibrations, we need to choose a word available in our language that best describes what we felt sonically. Words associated with this practice of describing what we perceive are commonly “sound”, “noise”, “music”, “tone”, and such. The question is, what does make us to choose within one word or another? Many inquiries will arise if we analyze our selection. For example, if we say “that is music” we may be implying that music is not tone, or noise, or even sound! Personally speaking, I find a deep and intimate sensation of peace when hearing the sound of water moving in a natural environment, it generates that specific feeling on my human brain and body. -
John Cage's Entanglement with the Ideas Of
JOHN CAGE’S ENTANGLEMENT WITH THE IDEAS OF COOMARASWAMY Edward James Crooks PhD University of York Music July 2011 John Cage’s Entanglement with the Ideas of Coomaraswamy by Edward Crooks Abstract The American composer John Cage was famous for the expansiveness of his thought. In particular, his borrowings from ‘Oriental philosophy’ have directed the critical and popular reception of his works. But what is the reality of such claims? In the twenty years since his death, Cage scholars have started to discover the significant gap between Cage’s presentation of theories he claimed he borrowed from India, China, and Japan, and the presentation of the same theories in the sources he referenced. The present study delves into the circumstances and contexts of Cage’s Asian influences, specifically as related to Cage’s borrowings from the British-Ceylonese art historian and metaphysician Ananda K. Coomaraswamy. In addition, Cage’s friendship with the Jungian mythologist Joseph Campbell is detailed, as are Cage’s borrowings from the theories of Jung. Particular attention is paid to the conservative ideology integral to the theories of all three thinkers. After a new analysis of the life and work of Coomaraswamy, the investigation focuses on the metaphysics of Coomaraswamy’s philosophy of art. The phrase ‘art is the imitation of nature in her manner of operation’ opens the doors to a wide- ranging exploration of the mimesis of intelligible and sensible forms. Comparing Coomaraswamy’s ‘Traditional’ idealism to Cage’s radical epistemological realism demonstrates the extent of the lack of congruity between the two thinkers. In a second chapter on Coomaraswamy, the extent of the differences between Cage and Coomaraswamy are revealed through investigating their differing approaches to rasa , the Renaissance, tradition, ‘art and life’, and museums. -
Vasyl Tsanko O Uso Das Técnicas Expandidas No Início Da Aprendizagem De Um Instrumento: O Caso Particular Do Piano
Universidade de Aveiro Departamento de Comunicação e Arte 2020 VASYL TSANKO O USO DAS TÉCNICAS EXPANDIDAS NO INÍCIO DA APRENDIZAGEM DE UM INSTRUMENTO: O CASO PARTICULAR DO PIANO Universidade de Aveiro Departamento de Comunicação e Arte 2020 VASYL TSANKO O USO DAS TÉCNICAS EXPANDIDAS NO INÍCIO DA APRENDIZAGEM DE UM INSTRUMENTO: O CASO PARTICULAR DO PIANO Relatório realizado no âmbito da disciplina de Prática Ensino Supervisionada apresentado à Universidade de Aveiro para cumprimento dos requisitos necessários à obtenção do grau de Mestre em Ensino de Música, realizado sob a orientação científica da Professora Doutora Helena Maria da Silva Santana, Professora Auxiliar do Departamento de Comunicação e Arte da Universidade de Aveiro. Dedico este trabalho a quem procure ser melhor que ontem o júri Presidente Doutor António Manuel Chagas Rosa Professor Auxiliar, Universidade Aveiro Vogal – Arguente principal Doutor Luís dos Santos Cardoso Diretor Pedagógico, Escola de Artes da Bairrada Vogal – Orientador Doutora Helena Maria da Silva Santana Professora Auxiliar, Universidade de Aveiro agradecimentos Ao tempo que me foi atribuído para viver neste mundo. Aos meus pais, à irmã e às avós por serem o meu “porto de abrigo” e por me fazerem ser quem sou. Ao Diogo e a sua família por se terem tornado a minha família em Portugal. À Professora Doutora Helena Santana por me ter aturado e por ter dedicado uma imensidão de tempo ao aportuguesamento das minhas construções linguísticas. À família Vieira pelos seres maravilhosos que são. A todos os participantes do Projeto por terem tido coragem para desbravar as terras desconhecidas do mundo das técnicas expandidas. -
Doctoral Dissertation Template
UNIVERSITY OF OKLAHOMA GRADUATE COLLEGE ALLISON NELSON: PIANIST, TEACHER AND EDITOR A DOCUMENT SUBMITTED TO THE GRADUATE FACULTY in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the Degree of DOCTOR OF MUSICAL ARTS By LYNN WORCESTER Norman, Oklahoma 2015 ALLISON NELSON: PIANIST, TEACHER AND EDITOR A DOCUMENT APPROVED FOR THE SCHOOL OF MUSIC BY ______________________________ Dr. Jane Magrath, Chair ______________________________ Dr. Stephen Beus, Co-Chair ______________________________ Dr. Barbara Fast ______________________________ Dr. Edward Gates ______________________________ Dr. Eugene Enrico ______________________________ Dr. Joseph Havlicek © Copyright by LYNN WORCESTER 2015 All Rights Reserved. ACKNOWLEDGMENTS This work would not have been possible without the guidance and support of the faculty members who served on my committee, Dr. Jane Magrath, Dr. Barbara Fast, Dr. Edward Gates, Dr. Eugene Enrico, Dr. Stephen Beus and Dr. Joseph Havlicek. To Dr. Jane Magrath: Thank you for your patience and continued support through every turn and for showing me how to be the finest professional I can be. Your guidance has allowed me to come in to my own as a pianist, teacher and writer. Special gratitude is reserved for Dr. Allison Nelson who shared her time, memories, and efforts over the course of this past year. Her wisdom, energy, and passion for music will stay with me for the rest of my life. Thank you to all of Dr. Nelson’s colleagues and former students who shared their time and participated in this study. A special thanks is owed to my family—my father, Mark Worcester, my mother, Eiki Worcester and my sister, Leya Worcester—whose love and dedication will always be cherished. -
Cage's Credo: the Discovery of New Imaginary Landscapes of Sound By
JOHN CAGE: The Works for Percussion 1 Cage’s Credo: The Discovery of Percussion Group Cincinnati New Imaginary Landscapes of Sound by Paul Cox ENGLISH 1. CREDO IN US (1942) 12:58 “It’s not a physical landscape. It’s a term discovery of new sounds. Cage found an ideal for percussion quartet (including piano and radio or phonograph. FIRST VERSION reserved for the new technologies. It’s a land- incubator for his interest in percussion and With Dimitri Shostakovich: Symphony No.5, New York Philharmonic/Leonard Bernstein scape in the future. It’s as though you used electronics at the Cornish School in Seattle, Published by DSCH-Publishers. Columbia ML 5445 (LP) technology to take you off the ground and go where he worked as composer and accompa- 2. IMAGINARY LANDSCAPE No. 5 (1952) 3:09 like Alice through the looking glass.” nist for the dance program. With access to a for any 42 recordings, score to be realized as a magnetic tape — John Cage large collection of percussion instruments and FIRST VERSION, using period jazz records. Realization by Michael Barnhart a radio studio, Cage created his first “Imagi- 3. IMAGINARY LANDSCAPE No. 4, “March No. 2” (1942) 4:26 John Cage came of age during the pioneer- nary Landscape,” a title he reserved for works for 12 radios. FIRST VERSION ing era of electronic technology in the 1920s. using electronic technology. CCM Percussion Ensemble, James Culley, conductor With new inventions improving the fidelity of The Cornish radio studio served as de facto 4. IMAGINARY LANDSCAPE No. 1 (1939) 6:52 phonographs and radios, a vast array of new music laboratory where Cage created and for 2 variable-speed turntables, frequency recordings, muted piano and cymbal, voices, sounds and music entered the American broadcast the Imaginary Landscape No. -
A Handbook of Cello Technique for Performers
CELLO MAP: A HANDBOOK OF CELLO TECHNIQUE FOR PERFORMERS AND COMPOSERS By Ellen Fallowfield A Thesis Submitted to The University of Birmingham for the degree of DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY Department of Music College of Arts and Law The University of Birmingham October 2009 University of Birmingham Research Archive e-theses repository This unpublished thesis/dissertation is copyright of the author and/or third parties. The intellectual property rights of the author or third parties in respect of this work are as defined by The Copyright Designs and Patents Act 1988 or as modified by any successor legislation. Any use made of information contained in this thesis/dissertation must be in accordance with that legislation and must be properly acknowledged. Further distribution or reproduction in any format is prohibited without the permission of the copyright holder. Abstract Many new sounds and new instrumental techniques have been introduced into music literature since 1950. The popular approach to support developments in modern instrumental technique is the catalogue or notation guide, which has led to isolated special effects. Several authors of handbooks of technique have pointed to an alternative, strategic, scientific approach to technique as an ideological ideal. I have adopted this approach more fully than before and applied it to the cello for the first time. This handbook provides a structure for further research. In this handbook, new techniques are presented alongside traditional methods and a ‘global technique’ is defined, within which every possible sound-modifying action is considered as a continuous scale, upon which as yet undiscovered techniques can also be slotted. -
Multiphonics of the Grand Piano – Timbral Composition and Performance with Flageolets
Multiphonics of the Grand Piano – Timbral Composition and Performance with Flageolets Juhani VESIKKALA Written work, Composition MA Department of Classical Music Sibelius Academy / University of the Arts, Helsinki 2016 SIBELIUS-ACADEMY Abstract Kirjallinen työ Title Number of pages Multiphonics of the Grand Piano - Timbral Composition and Performance with Flageolets 86 + appendices Author(s) Term Juhani Topias VESIKKALA Spring 2016 Degree programme Study Line Sävellys ja musiikinteoria Department Klassisen musiikin osasto Abstract The aim of my study is to enable a broader knowledge and compositional use of the piano multiphonics in current music. This corpus of text will benefit pianists and composers alike, and it provides the answers to the questions "what is a piano multiphonic", "what does a multiphonic sound like," and "how to notate a multiphonic sound". New terminology will be defined and inaccuracies in existing terminology will be dealt with. The multiphonic "mode of playing" will be separated from "playing technique" and from flageolets. Moreover, multiphonics in the repertoire are compared from the aspects of composition and notation, and the portability of multiphonics to the sounds of other instruments or to other mobile playing modes of the manipulated grand piano are examined. Composers tend to use multiphonics in a different manner, making for differing notational choices. This study examines notational choices and proposes a notation suitable for most situations, and notates the most commonly produceable multiphonic chords. The existence of piano multiphonics will be verified mathematically, supported by acoustic recordings and camera measurements. In my work, the correspondence of FFT analysis and hearing will be touched on, and by virtue of audio excerpts I offer ways to improve as a listener of multiphonics. -
Tracing Noise: Writing In-Between Sound by Mitch Renaud Bachelor
Tracing Noise: Writing In-Between Sound by Mitch Renaud Bachelor of Music, University of Toronto, 2012 A Thesis Submitted in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree of Master of Arts in Interdisciplinary Studies in the Department of French, the School of Music, and Cultural, Social, and Political Thought Mitch Renaud, 2015 University of Victoria All rights reserved. This thesis may not be reproduced in whole or in part, by photocopy or other means, without the permission of the author. ii Supervisory Committee Tracing Noise: Writing In-Between Sound by Mitch Renaud Bachelor of Music, University of Toronto, 2012 Supervisory Committee Emile Fromet de Rosnay, Department of French and CSPT Supervisor Christopher Butterfield, School of Music Co-Supervisor Stephen Ross, Department of English and CSPT Outside Member iii Abstract Supervisory Committee Emile Fromet de Rosnay (Department of French and CSPT) Supervisor Christopher Butterfield (School of Music) Co-Supervisor Stephen Ross (Department of English and CSPT) Outside Member Noise is noisy. Its multiple definitions cover one another in such a way as to generate what they seek to describe. My thesis tracks the ways in which noise can be understood historically and theoretically. I begin with the Skandalkonzert that took place in Vienna in 1913. I then extend this historical example into a theoretical reading of the noise of Derrida’s Of Grammatology, arguing that sound and noise are the unheard of his text, and that Derrida’s thought allows us to hear sound studies differently. Writing on sound must listen to the noise of the motion of différance, acknowledge the failings, fading, and flailings of sonic discourse, and so keep in play the aporias that constitute the field of sound itself. -
Noise on the Grid: Rhythmic Pulse in Experimental And
NOISE ON THE GRID: RHYTHMIC PULSE IN 2.1. Noise as Irregular Vibrations While Russolo’s distribution was the incorporation of EXPERIMENTAL AND ELECTRONIC NOISE MUSIC extra-musical sound in music, John Cage took a step In the first chapter of his classic writing on the further by exhausting this idea and “extending the physiological basis of the music theory, The Sensations process of incorporation” to everything potentially Mo H. Zareei Ajay Kapur Dale A. Carnegie of Tone, Herman Helmholtz argues that the differences audible [12]. In other words, if Luigi Russolo and the between noises and musical tones are rooted in our aural Futurists ‘brought incidental noise to the foreground, Victoria University of California Institute of the Arts Victoria University of John Cage would give permission to all composers to Wellington Valencia CA, USA Wellington perceptions, stating that musical tones are perceived as periodic, and noises are perceived as non-periodic use any sound in composing music’[3]. Nevertheless, New Zealand School of Music Wellington, New Zealand motions [11]. However, in Russolo’s view, although Cage himself credits Varese, who at the same time was leading the European front, “for having fathered irregularity of motions in terms of time and intensity still vouches for the difference between “sound” and noise”[12]. Varese, who called music “organized ABSTRACT his Futurist Manifesto in 1913. Calling for integration of “noise”, it is not ‘sufficient enough to make a sharp sound”, found “electronics” a new “liberating medium” more dissonant, stranger and harsher sounds into music, distinction’ [16]. As Trevor Wishart suggests, this that would help liberate sound from “the arbitrary, This paper presents a discussion on the effect of metric Russolo tried to ‘conquer the infinite variety of noise- distinction ‘is a property of the way we hear rather than paralyzing tempered system” [24]. -
'1/F Noise' in Music
"1/f noise"in music:Music from 1/f nOiSe RiChardF. Vossa) and JohnClarke Departmentof Physics, University of California andMaterials and Molecular Research Division, Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory, Berkeley, California94720 (Received30January 1976; revised 8 September 1977} Thespectral density offluctuations inthe audio power ofmany musical selections andof English speech variesapproximately asl/f (f isthe frequency) down to a frequencyof5X 10 -4 Hz.This resultAmplies thatthe audio-power fluctuations arecorrelated over all times in thesame manner as"l/f noise"in electroniccomponents. Thefrequency fluctuations ofmusic also have a 1/f spectraldensity atfrequencies down tothe inverse ofthe length of the piece of music. The frequency fluctuations ofEnglish sp•, h have a quitedifferent behavior, with a singlecharacteristic timeof about 0.1 s, the average length of a syllable.The observations onmusic suggest that 1/f noiseisa goodchoice for stochastic composition. Compositionsin which the frequency andduration ofeach note were determined by1/f noisesources soundedpleasing. Those generated bywhite-noise sources sounded toorandom, while those generated by l/f 2 noisesounded too correlated. PACSnumbers: •,3.75.Wx, 43.60.Cg, 43.75.--z, 43.70.--h INTRODUCTION A secondcharacterization of the average behavior of V(t) is the autocorrelationfunction, (V(t)V(t+ 7)). The spectral density of many physical quantities varies as 1/f •, wheref is the frequencyand 0.5• < 7 •<1.5, over (V(t)V(t+•')) is a measureOf how the fluctuatingquanti- manydecades. Thusvacuum tubes, • carbonresistors, a ties at times t and t + ß are related. For a stationary semiconductingdevices, s continuous4's or discontinuous6 process(V(t)V(t + •)) is independentof t anddepends metal films, ionic solutions,? films at the supercondUct- only on the time difference 7.