Kirar, Masinko, Begena, Kebero and Washint
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The KNIGHT REVISION of HORNBOSTEL-SACHS: a New Look at Musical Instrument Classification
The KNIGHT REVISION of HORNBOSTEL-SACHS: a new look at musical instrument classification by Roderic C. Knight, Professor of Ethnomusicology Oberlin College Conservatory of Music, © 2015, Rev. 2017 Introduction The year 2015 marks the beginning of the second century for Hornbostel-Sachs, the venerable classification system for musical instruments, created by Erich M. von Hornbostel and Curt Sachs as Systematik der Musikinstrumente in 1914. In addition to pursuing their own interest in the subject, the authors were answering a need for museum scientists and musicologists to accurately identify musical instruments that were being brought to museums from around the globe. As a guiding principle for their classification, they focused on the mechanism by which an instrument sets the air in motion. The idea was not new. The Indian sage Bharata, working nearly 2000 years earlier, in compiling the knowledge of his era on dance, drama and music in the treatise Natyashastra, (ca. 200 C.E.) grouped musical instruments into four great classes, or vadya, based on this very idea: sushira, instruments you blow into; tata, instruments with strings to set the air in motion; avanaddha, instruments with membranes (i.e. drums), and ghana, instruments, usually of metal, that you strike. (This itemization and Bharata’s further discussion of the instruments is in Chapter 28 of the Natyashastra, first translated into English in 1961 by Manomohan Ghosh (Calcutta: The Asiatic Society, v.2). The immediate predecessor of the Systematik was a catalog for a newly-acquired collection at the Royal Conservatory of Music in Brussels. The collection included a large number of instruments from India, and the curator, Victor-Charles Mahillon, familiar with the Indian four-part system, decided to apply it in preparing his catalog, published in 1880 (this is best documented by Nazir Jairazbhoy in Selected Reports in Ethnomusicology – see 1990 in the timeline below). -
“Choosing an Influence, Or Bach the Inexhaustible: the Heterophony of the Voices of Twentieth- Century Composers”
Min-Ad: Israel Studies in Musicology Online, Vol. 13, 2015-16 Yulia Kreinin -“Choosing an Influence, or Bach the Inexhaustible: The Heterophony of the Voices of Twentieth- Century Composers” “Choosing an Influence, or Bach the Inexhaustible: The Heterophony of the Voices of Twentieth-Century Composers” YULIA KREININ Bach’s influence on posterity has been evident for over 250 years. In fact, since 1829, the year of Mendelssohn’s historic performance of the St. Matthew Passion, Bach has been one of the most respected figures in European musical culture. By the start of the twentieth century, Bach’s cultural presence was a given. Nevertheless, the twentieth century witnessed a new stage in the appreciation and understanding of Bach. In the first half of the century, “Back to Bach” was a significant motto for two waves of neoclassicism. From the 1960s on, Bach’s passion genre tradition was revived and reinterpreted, while other forms of homage to him blossomed (preludes and fugues, concerti grossi, works for solo strings). Composers’ spiritual dialogue with Bach took on a new importance. In this context, it is appropriate to investigate the reason(s) for the unique persistence of Bach’s influence into the twentieth century, an influence that surpasses that of other major composers of the past, including Mozart and Beethoven. Many scholars have addressed this conundrum; musicological research on Bach’s influence can be found in the four volumes of Bach und die Nachwelt (English, “Bach and Posterity”), published in Germany,1 and the seven volumes of Bach Perspectives, published in the United States.2 Nevertheless, “Why Bach?” has found only a partial answer and merits further examination. -
Cool Trombone Lover
NOVEMBER 2013 - ISSUE 139 YOUR FREE GUIDE TO THE NYC JAZZ SCENE NYCJAZZRECORD.COM ROSWELL RUDD COOL TROMBONE LOVER MICHEL • DAVE • GEORGE • RELATIVE • EVENT CAMILO KING FREEMAN PITCH CALENDAR “BEST JAZZ CLUBS OF THE YEAR 2012” SMOKE JAZZ & SUPPER CLUB • HARLEM, NEW YORK CITY FEATURED ARTISTS / 7:00, 9:00 & 10:30pm ONE NIGHT ONLY / 7:00, 9:00 & 10:30pm RESIDENCIES / 7:00, 9:00 & 10:30pm Fri & Sat, Nov 1 & 2 Wed, Nov 6 Sundays, Nov 3 & 17 GARY BARTZ QUARTET PLUS MICHAEL RODRIGUEZ QUINTET Michael Rodriguez (tp) ● Chris Cheek (ts) SaRon Crenshaw Band SPECIAL GUEST VINCENT HERRING Jeb Patton (p) ● Kiyoshi Kitagawa (b) Sundays, Nov 10 & 24 Gary Bartz (as) ● Vincent Herring (as) Obed Calvaire (d) Vivian Sessoms Sullivan Fortner (p) ● James King (b) ● Greg Bandy (d) Wed, Nov 13 Mondays, Nov 4 & 18 Fri & Sat, Nov 8 & 9 JACK WALRATH QUINTET Jason Marshall Big Band BILL STEWART QUARTET Jack Walrath (tp) ● Alex Foster (ts) Mondays, Nov 11 & 25 Chris Cheek (ts) ● Kevin Hays (p) George Burton (p) ● tba (b) ● Donald Edwards (d) Captain Black Big Band Doug Weiss (b) ● Bill Stewart (d) Wed, Nov 20 Tuesdays, Nov 5, 12, 19, & 26 Fri & Sat, Nov 15 & 16 BOB SANDS QUARTET Mike LeDonne’s Groover Quartet “OUT AND ABOUT” CD RELEASE LOUIS HAYES Bob Sands (ts) ● Joel Weiskopf (p) Thursdays, Nov 7, 14, 21 & 28 & THE JAZZ COMMUNICATORS Gregg August (b) ● Donald Edwards (d) Gregory Generet Abraham Burton (ts) ● Steve Nelson (vibes) Kris Bowers (p) ● Dezron Douglas (b) ● Louis Hayes (d) Wed, Nov 27 RAY MARCHICA QUARTET LATE NIGHT RESIDENCIES / 11:30 - Fri & Sat, Nov 22 & 23 FEATURING RODNEY JONES Mon The Smoke Jam Session Chase Baird (ts) ● Rodney Jones (guitar) CYRUS CHESTNUT TRIO Tue Cyrus Chestnut (p) ● Curtis Lundy (b) ● Victor Lewis (d) Mike LeDonne (organ) ● Ray Marchica (d) Milton Suggs Quartet Wed Brianna Thomas Quartet Fri & Sat, Nov 29 & 30 STEVE DAVIS SEXTET JAZZ BRUNCH / 11:30am, 1:00 & 2:30pm Thu Nickel and Dime OPS “THE MUSIC OF J.J. -
Counterpoint | Music | Britannica.Com
SCHOOL AND LIBRARY SUBSCRIBERS JOIN • LOGIN • ACTIVATE YOUR FREE TRIAL! Counterpoint & READ VIEW ALL MEDIA (6) VIEW HISTORY EDIT FEEDBACK Music Written by: Roland John Jackson $ ! " # Counterpoint, art of combining different melodic lines in a musical composition. It is among the characteristic elements of Western musical practice. The word counterpoint is frequently used interchangeably with polyphony. This is not properly correct, since polyphony refers generally to music consisting of two or more distinct melodic lines while counterpoint refers to the compositional technique involved in the handling of these melodic lines. Good counterpoint requires two qualities: (1) a meaningful or harmonious relationship between the lines (a “vertical” consideration—i.e., dealing with harmony) and (2) some degree of independence or individuality within the lines themselves (a “horizontal” consideration, dealing with melody). Musical theorists have tended to emphasize the vertical aspects of counterpoint, defining the combinations of notes that are consonances and dissonances, and prescribing where consonances and dissonances should occur in the strong and weak beats of musical metre. In contrast, composers, especially the great ones, have shown more interest in the horizontal aspects: the movement of the individual melodic lines and long-range relationships of musical design and texture, the balance between vertical and horizontal forces, existing between these lines. The freedoms taken by composers have in turn influenced theorists to revise their laws. The word counterpoint is occasionally used by ethnomusicologists to describe aspects of heterophony —duplication of a basic melodic line, with certain differences of detail or of decoration, by the various performers. This usage is not entirely appropriate, for such instances as the singing of a single melody at parallel intervals (e.g., one performer beginning on C, the other on G) lack the truly distinct or separate voice parts found in true polyphony and in counterpoint. -
Studies in Instrumentation and Orchestration and in the Recontextualisation of Diatonic Pitch Materials (Portfolio of Compositions)
Studies in Instrumentation and Orchestration and in the Recontextualisation of Diatonic Pitch Materials (Portfolio of Compositions) by Chris Paul Harman Submitted to The University of Birmingham for the degree of DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY Department of Music School of Humanities The University of Birmingham September 2011 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: The present document examines eight musical works for various instruments and ensembles, composed between 2007 and 2011. Brief summaries of each work’s program are followed by discussions of instrumentation and orchestration, and analysis of pitch organization. Discussions of instrumentation and orchestration explore the composer’s approach to diversification of instrumental ensembles by the inclusion of non-orchestral instruments, and redefinition of traditional hierarchies among instruments in a standard ensemble or orchestral setting. Analyses of pitch organization detail various ways in which the composer renders diatonic -
Italian Forces in Ethiopia Surrender; 120 Amerieans On
T *d,gmop ---------- ---- -■ .... .... Italian Forces in Ethiopia Surrender; 120 Amerieans on '_______________ _________ ;------- C Chosen to Wear Crown of Croatia cean’s Broad Reach Fascist Forces Up to British Today Uoaks Liner’s Fate; Duke of Aosta List of Passengers Surrender Necessary Re- i Capitulation of Last Ma« 24 Ambulance Drivers Japs Believe Urges. Goods cause Italians Rail Out jor - Stronghold hi Included Among Those O f Food, and Water; Northeast Ethiopia ] «.299-T oh EgypUan America Will About Egyptian Steam* Be Delivered Amba Alaji Defenders Conies After Italian^: er 2amzam Several m > TgT • : Liner Reported Sunk Reduced to Material Go into War Allowed One Day ^ Groups of Missionar* 1 0 J M a Z l f o e s On voyage from New Impossibility of Tak Collect the Woundedjl ics Also Aboard Ves - - - - - - I York to Alexandria No ing Care of Wounded Own Position Is One of Duke and General .t|$ Nelson Rockefeller Says' Definite Word as to sel Reported Sunk in And Cease Fighting. Waiting for Roosevelt Surrender Tomontraf* South Atlantic Ocean, Trade in HUler-Domi- What Occurred to Ship To Move Must Abide noted W orld Would Rome, M ay 19.— (A>)— The Cairo, Egypt, May 19. , New York, May 19.— (/P)— New York, May 19.— (A*)— Duke of Aosta, viceroy of By AxU Pact Terms. — About 7,000 Italian aoldiem Be Impossible Task. The broad expanse of the Philip Faversham, 33-year- Ethiopia, has surrendered are surrendering in E ^ o ” " old son of the late William V ■ South Atlantic— or possibly Tokyo, May 19.—(JP)—The Japa today and their commai New York, May 19.-r(P)—Nel limself and his troops to the Faversham, actor, was among {he Indian ocean— cloaked the nese press declared today that at Alma Alaji, the Duke son A. -
On Study of Conception and Application of Counterpoint Texture in Composing Technological Theory
ISSN 1927-0232 [Print] Higher Education of Social Science ISSN 1927-0240 [Online] Vol. 11, No. 6, 2016, pp. 12-15 www.cscanada.net DOI:10.3968/9257 www.cscanada.org On Study of Conception and Application of Counterpoint Texture in Composing Technological Theory ZHANG Shenghao[a],* [a]China West Normal University, Nanchong, China. counterpoint texture is the indispensable step in music *Corresponding author. composing. Received 5 September 2016; accepted 8 November 2016 Published online 26 December 2016 1. TEXTURE CONCEPTION IN Abstract COMPOSING TECHNOLOGICAL THEORY The music composing technological theory is the premise for music to develop and the counterpoint texture is 1.1 Spatial Structure and Time Structure especially important in composing. No matter in time or With musical terminology, time structure is called “musical space, it should show the music arts, while spatiality is the form”. Whatever composition has its fixed duration and main expression in counterpoint texture. Understanding corresponding structural form. No matter its content is a to counterpoint texture is the indispensable part of paragraph or many paragraphs, it should be combined with composing. By briefly introducing counterpoint texture, practice and both constitute the musical form together. this article analyzes its main expressive types and studies Only after enjoying the whole piece of music composition its practice so as to provide reference for relevant people for its duration can we know its structural form. This is and make our music pieces to develop better and better. the musical time structure, being musical form. Music pieces are different from other works. Composer of polyphonic music Key words: Music should be enjoyed by ear. -
Title SCHOLARSHIP on ETHIOPIAN MUSIC
View metadata, citation and similar papers at core.ac.uk brought to you by CORE provided by Kyoto University Research Information Repository SCHOLARSHIP ON ETHIOPIAN MUSIC: PAST, PRESENT Title AND FUTURE PROSPECTS Author(s) SIMENEH, Betreyohannes African study monographs. Supplementary issue (2010), 41: Citation 19-34 Issue Date 2010-03 URL http://dx.doi.org/10.14989/108286 Right Type Departmental Bulletin Paper Textversion publisher Kyoto University African Study Monographs, Suppl.41: 19-34, March 2010 19 SCHOLARSHIP ON ETHIOPIAN MUSIC: PAST, PRESENT AND FUTURE PROSPECTS SIMENEH Betreyohannes Institute of Ethiopian Studies, Addis Ababa University ABSTRACT Broad and signifi cant appraisals on Ethiopian studies have been carried out with thematic and disciplinary orientations from authors such as Bahru Zewde, Alula Pankhurest, Gebre Yntiso and Belete Bizuneh. One might expect music to be a relevant aspect of such works, yet it is hardly addressed, resulting in a dearth of independent and comprehensive assessments of Ethiopian music scholarship; a rare exception is the 3 volume Ethiopian Chris- tian Liturgical Chant: An Anthology edited by Kay Kaufman Shelemay and Peter Jeffery (1993–1997). Generally speaking, music is one of the most neglected themes in Ethiopian studies, especially as compared to the dominant subjects of history and linguistics. Although some progress in musical studies has recently developed, the existing scholarly literature remains confi ned to limited themes. Beside inadequate attention to various topics there are problems of misconceptions and lack of reciprocity in contemporary scholarship. This paper outlines the evolution of Ethiopian music scholarship and exposes general trends in the exist- ing body of knowledge by using critical works from a variety of disciplines. -
Serbian Music: Yugoslav Contexts
Serbian Music: Yugoslav Contexts SERBIAN MUSIC: YUGOSLAV CONTEXTS Edited by Melita Milin and Jim Samson Published by Institute of Musicology SASA Technical editor Goran Janjić Cover design Aleksandra Dolović Number of copies 300 Printed by Colorgrafx ISBN 978-86-80639-19-2 SERBIAN MUSIC: YUGOSLAV CONTEXTS EDITED BY MELITA MILIN JIM SAMSON INSTITUTE OF MUSICOLOGY OF THE SERBIAN ACADEMY OF SCIENCES AND ARTS BELGRADE 2014 This book has been published thanks to the financial support of the Ministry of edu- cation, science and technological development of the Republic of Serbia. Cover illustration: Vera Božičković Popović, Abstract Landscape, 1966. Courtesy of Zepter Museum, Belgrade. CONTENTS PREFACE............................................................................................................7 Melita Milin INTRODUCTION.............................................................................................9 Jim Samson 1. SERBIAN MUSIC IN WESTERN HISTORIOGRAPHY......................17 Katy Romanou 2. WRITING NATIONAL HISTORIES IN A MULTINATIONAL STATE..........................................................................................................29 Melita Milin 3. DISCIPLINING THE NATION: MUSIC IN SERBIA UNTIL 1914 ................................................................................................47 Biljana Milanović 4. IMAGINING THE HOMELAND: THE SHIFTING BORDERS OF PETAR KONJOVIĆ’S YUGOSLAVISMS........................................73 Katarina Tomašević 5. THE INTER-WAR CORRESPONDENCE BETWEEN MILOJE -
Conversations with an Ethnomusicologist and Cardinal Paulos Tzadua 1972-2000
213 Conversations with an ethnomusicologist and Cardinal Paulos Tzadua 1972-2000 Cynthia Tse Kimberlin Music Research Institute,USA [email protected] Abstract On February 24, 1977, Paulos Tzadua became Archbishop of Addis Ababa, in the midst of the horrors of the Red Terror. His compassionate and caring leadership of Ethiopia’s Catholic Church earned him the notice of Pope John Paul II who named him a Cardinal on May 25, 1985. As the first cardinal from Ethiopia in history, “his elevation raised his profile giving him the added stature and authority in dealing with Ethiopia’s Marxist leaders on numerous issues, including the church’s efforts to relieve suffering caused by famine. (San Francisco Chronicle, 26 May1985) 1. Introduction I first met Abba Paulos in April of 1972 as a US Fulbright scholar conducting a year of fieldwork in Ethiopia. At the time my husband, daughter, and I were living in a rented house located in Addis Ababa just up the street from Ras Mackonnen Bridge. We wished to enroll our daughter at a catholic school and also wanted to record an Ethiopian orthodox church service since Easter was soon to be commemorated. Aleqa Berhanu Mekonnen who teaches zema at the Haile Selassie University (HSU) Theological School suggested recording an all night service at the Holy Trinity Cathedral and that the Institute of Ethiopian Studies (IES) should write a letter of permission on my behalf.1 Berhanu and I went to the church to introduce myself and to ask if I could record the all night service on Sunday April 2nd. -
Some Aspects of Indigenous Ethiopian Music, Ecclesiastical and Secular
Durham E-Theses Some aspects of indigenous Ethiopian music, Ecclesiastical and Secular Powne, J. M. F. How to cite: Powne, J. M. F. (1963) Some aspects of indigenous Ethiopian music, Ecclesiastical and Secular, Durham theses, Durham University. Available at Durham E-Theses Online: http://etheses.dur.ac.uk/9700/ Use policy The full-text may be used and/or reproduced, and given to third parties in any format or medium, without prior permission or charge, for personal research or study, educational, or not-for-prot purposes provided that: • a full bibliographic reference is made to the original source • a link is made to the metadata record in Durham E-Theses • the full-text is not changed in any way The full-text must not be sold in any format or medium without the formal permission of the copyright holders. Please consult the full Durham E-Theses policy for further details. Academic Support Oce, Durham University, University Oce, Old Elvet, Durham DH1 3HP e-mail: [email protected] Tel: +44 0191 334 6107 http://etheses.dur.ac.uk DISSERTATION SOME ASPECTS OF INDIGEI^IOUS ETHIOPIAN MUSIC, ECCLESIASTICAL . AND SECULAE. presented to Durham University by J.M.F. POVJNE B.A. Dunelm. for the degree of MASTER OF AETS. December, 1963- ATabreviations. The six works that are referred to most frequently in this dissertation are identified by the follovring abbreviations. Other references are given in full in the text as they occur. M~V : an article on Ethiopian Music by C. Mondon- Vidaillhet, "La Musique ethiopienne," in . "I'Encyclopedie de la musique," edited by A. -
International Journal of Social Sciences and Management a Rapid Publishing Journal
International Journal of Social Sciences and Management A Rapid Publishing Journal ISSN 2091-2986 CrossRef, Google Scholar, International Society of Universal Research in Sciences (EyeSource), Journal TOCs, NewAvailable Jour, Scientific online Indexing at: Services, InfoBase Index, Open Academic Journals Index http://www.ijssm.org(OAJI), Scholarsteer, Jour Informatics, Directory of Research Journals Indexing (DRJI), International& Society for Research Activity http://www.nepjol.info/index.php/IJSSM/index (ISRA): Journal Impact Factor (JIF), Simon Fraser University Library, etc. Vol- 2(4), October 2015 Impact factor*: 3.389 *Impact factor is issued by SJIF INNO SPACE. Kindly note that this is not the IF of Journal Citation Report (JCR). For any type of query or feedback kindly contact at email ID: [email protected] R.N. Pati et al. (2015) Int. J. Soc. Sci. Manage. Vol-2, issue-4: 315-326 DOI: 10.3126/ijssm.v2i4.13620 Research Article CULTURAL RIGHTS OF TRADITIONAL MUSICIANS IN ETHIOPIA: THREATS AND CHALLENGES OF GLOBALISATION OF MUSIC CULTURE R.N. Pati1*, Shaik Yousuf. B1 and Abebaw Kiros2 1Department of Anthropology, Institute of Paleoenvironment and Heritage Conservation, Mekelle University, Mekelle, Ethiopia. 2Department of Music and Visual Arts, College of Social Sciences, AdiHaqi campus, Mekelle University, Mekelle, Ethiopia. Corresponding author’s email: [email protected] Abstract Ethiopia upholds unique cultural heritage and diverse music history in entire African continent. The traditional music heritage of Ethiopia has been globally recognized with its distinct music culture and symbolic manifestation. The traditional songs and music of the country revolves around core chord of their life and culture. The modern music of Ethiopia has been blended with combination of elements from traditional Ethiopian music and western music which has created a new trend in the music world.