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Listado De Generos Autorizados.Xls
POR SUBGENERO LISTADO DE GENEROS AUTORIZADOS ACTUALIZADO AL 10 / 10 / 2006 SUBGENERO CODIGO GENERO AFRO 500 INTERNACIONAL AGOGO 594 INTERNACIONAL AIRES ESPAÑOLES 501 INTERNACIONAL ALBORADA 502 INTERNACIONAL ALEGRO VIVACE 455 SINFONICO Y CAMARA ANATEADA 627 FOLKLORE ANDANTE 400 SINFONICO Y CAMARA ARIA 401 SINFONICO Y CAMARA AUQUI AUQUI 633 FOLKLORE BAGUALA 300 FOLKLORE BAILECITO 301 FOLKLORE BAILE 402 INTERNACIONAL BAILES 302 FOLKLORE BAION 503 INTERNACIONAL BALADA 100 MELODICO BALLET 403 SINFONICO Y CAMARA BAMBUCO 595 INTERNACIONAL BARCAROLA 504 INTERNACIONAL BATUCADA 505 INTERNACIONAL BEAT 101 MELODICO BEGUINE 102 MELODICO BERCEUSE 404 SINFONICO Y CAMARA BLUES 103 MELODICO BOCETO 405 SINFONICO Y CAMARA BOGALOO 105 MELODICO BOLERO 104 MELODICO BOMBA 506 INTERNACIONAL BOOGIE BOOGIE 106 MELODICO BOSSA NOVA 507 INTERNACIONAL BOTECITO 508 INTERNACIONAL BULERIAS 509 INTERNACIONAL CACHACA 615 INTERNACIONAL CACHARPAYA 302 FOLKLORE CAJITA DE MUSICA 406 SINFONICO Y CAMARA CALIPSO 107 MELODICO CAMPERA 303 FOLKLORE CAN CAN 510 INTERNACIONAL CANCION 108 MELODICO CANCION DE CUNA 453 SINFONICO Y CAMARA CANCION FOLKLORICA 358 FOLKLORE Página 1 POR SUBGENERO LISTADO DE GENEROS AUTORIZADOS ACTUALIZADO AL 10 / 10 / 2006 SUBGENERO CODIGO GENERO CANCION INDIA 643 FOLKLORE CANCION INFANTIL 407 SINFONICO Y CAMARA CANCION MAPUCHE 642 FOLKLORE CANDOMBE 1 POPULAR CANON 408 SINFONICO Y CAMARA CANTATA 409 SINFONICO Y CAMARA CANTE JONDO 511 INTERNACIONAL CANZONETTA 109 MELODICO CAPRICCIO 410 SINFONICO Y CAMARA CARAMBA 304 FOLKLORE CARNAVAL 348 FOLKLORE CARNAVALITO -
De La Capilla De Músicos Al Buena Vista Social Club. Música, Etnia Y Sociedad En América Latina
Rev7-04 1/8/02 14:21 Página 187 Rainer Huhle De la Capilla de Músicos al Buena Vista Social Club. Música, etnia y sociedad en América Latina 1. El encuentro colonial El interés por la música “culta” durante los casi tres siglos de la época colonial en Amé- rica Latina, si bien es de fechas recientes, experimenta en la actualidad un auge casi vertigi- noso. Un repertorio hace pocos años casi desconocido ha encontrado el interés de los músi- cos y las empresas discográficas de tal manera que, para dar un ejemplo, una pequeña joya del repertorio virreinal peruano, el himno quechua Hanac Pachap que se encuentra en el Ritual Formulario e Institución de Curas (Lima 1631) del padre Juan Pérez Bocanegra, está disponible ahora en por lo menos una docena de diferentes grabaciones en CD. Esta popula- ridad de un repertorio no muy grande hace que no sólo los musicólogos sino también los intérpretes –que en el campo de la música antigua muchas veces también son investigado- res– estén buscando incansablemente nuevas piezas y nuevos elementos para demostrar la especificidad del repertorio americano. La producción de fuentes escritas sobre la música colonial y sus características queda un poco detrás de ese auge, aunque también se pueden notar grandes avances en la investigación que permiten un mejor entendimiento del contexto social e ideológico que dieron origen a esas obras. Año tras año se descubren nuevas obras, sabemos más de las biografías de los compositores –europeos y nativos– que trabajaban en las Américas. Y poco a poco se llega a dimensionar el aporte y el rol que las poblaciones indígenas (y negras) jugaron en ese contexto de la producción musical durante la colonia. -
International Communication Research Journal
International Communication Research Journal NON-PROFIT ORG. https://icrj.pub/ U.S. POSTAGE PAID [email protected] FORT WORTH, TX Department of Journalism PERMIT 2143 Texas Christian University 2805 S. University Drive TCU Box 298060, Fort Worth Texas, 76129 USA Indexed and e-distributed by: EBSCOhost, Communication Source Database GALE - Cengage Learning International Communication Research Journal Vol. 54, No. 2 . Fall 2019 Research Journal Research Communication International ISSN 2153-9707 ISSN Vol. 54, No. 2 54,No. Vol. Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication inJournalismandMass Education for Association A publication of the International Communication Divisionofthe Communication of theInternational A publication . Fall 2019 Fall International Communication Research Journal A publication of the International Communication Division, Association for Education in Journalism & Mass Communication (AEJMC) Editor Uche Onyebadi Texas Christian University Associate Editors Editorial Consultant Ngozi Akinro Yong Volz Wayne Wanta Website Design & Maintenance Editorial University of Florida Texas Wesleyan University Missouri School of Journalism Editorial Assistant Book Review Editor Jennifer O’Keefe Zhaoxi (Josie) Liu Texas Christian University Editorial Advisory Board Jatin Srivastava, Lindita Camaj, Mohammed Al-Azdee, Ammina Kothari, Jeannine Relly, Emily Metzgar, Celeste Gonzalez de Bustamante, Yusuf Kalyango Jr., Zeny Sarabia-Panol, Margaretha Geertsema-Sligh, Elanie Steyn Editorial Review Board Adaobi Duru Gulilat Menbere Tekleab Mark Walters University of Louisiana, USA Bahir Dar University, Ethiopia Aoyama Gakuin University, Japan Ammina Kothari Herman Howard Mohamed A. Satti Rochester Institute of Technology, USA Angelo State University, USA American University of Kuwait, Kuwait Amy Schmitz Weiss Ihediwa Samuel Chibundu Nazmul Rony San Diego State University USA Universiti Tunku Abdul Rahman (UTAR), Slippery Rock University, USA Anantha S. -
Download the Clarinet Saxophone Classics Catalogue
CATALOGUE 2017 www.samekmusic.com Founded in 1992 by acclaimed clarinetist Victoria Soames Samek, Clarinet & Saxophone Classics celebrates the single reed in all its richness and diversity. It’s a unique specialist label devoted to releasing top quality recordings by the finest artists of today on modern and period instruments, as well as sympathetically restored historical recordings of great figures from the past supported by informative notes. Having created her own brand, Samek Music, Victoria is committed to excellence through recordings, publications, learning resources and live performances. Samek Music is dedicated to the clarinet and saxophone, giving a focus for the wonderful world of the single reed. www.samek music.com For further details contact Victoria Soames Samek, Managing Director and Artistic Director Tel: + 44 (0) 20 8472 2057 • Mobile + 44 (0) 7730 987103 • [email protected] • www.samekmusic.com Central Clarinet Repertoire 1 CC0001 COPLAND: SONATA FOR CLARINET Clarinet Music by Les Six PREMIERE RECORDING Featuring the World Premiere recording of Copland’s own reworking of his Violin Sonata, this exciting disc also has the complete music for clarinet and piano of the French group known as ‘Les Six’. Aaron Copland Sonata (premiere recording); Francis Poulenc Sonata; Germaine Tailleferre Arabesque, Sonata; Arthur Honegger Sonatine; Darius Milhaud Duo Concertant, Sonatine Victoria Soames Samek clarinet, Julius Drake piano ‘Most sheerly seductive record of the year.’ THE SUNDAY TIMES CC0011 SOLOS DE CONCOURS Brought together for the first time on CD – a fascinating collection of pieces written for the final year students studying at the paris conservatoire for the Premier Prix, by some of the most prominent French composers. -
A Chinese Clarinet Legend Also in This Issue
Vol. 45 • No. 1 December 2017 Tao AChunxiao: Chinese Clarinet Legend Also in this issue... ClarinetFest® 2017 Report The Genesis of Gustav Jenner’s Clarinet Sonata D’ADDARIO GIVES ME THE FREEDOM TO PRODUCE THE SOUND I HEAR IN MY HEAD. — JONATHAN GUNN REINVENTING CRAFTSMANSHIP FOR THE 21ST CENTURY. President’sThe EDITOR Rachel Yoder [email protected] ASSOCIATE EDITOR Jessica Harrie [email protected] EDITORIAL BOARD Dear ICA Members, Mitchell Estrin, Heike Fricke, Jessica Harrie, ope you are enjoying a wonderful new season Caroline Hartig, Rachel Yoder of music making with fulflling activities and MUSIC REVIEWS EDITOR events. Many exciting things are happening in Gregory Barrett – [email protected] our organization. Te ICA believes that if you Hdo good things, good things happen! I want to thank everyone AUDIO REVIEWS EDITOR who has contributed to our Capital Campaign. We especially Chris Nichols – [email protected] wish to thank Alan and Janette Stanek for their amazing gift of $11,250.00 to fund our competitions for the coming GRAPHIC DESIGN ClarinetFest® 2018. Te ICA is grateful for your generosity Karry Tomas Graphic Design and the generosity of all Capital Campaign donors. Please [email protected] visit www.youcaring.com/internationalclarinetassociation to Caroline Hartig make your donation today. We would love to hear your story ADVERTISING COORDINATOR and look forward to our continued campaign which will last Elizabeth Crawford – [email protected] through ClarinetFest® 2018. Also, visit www.clarinet.org/ donor-wall to check out our donor wall with many photos and thank-yous to those who INDEX MANAGER contributed to the ICA for ClarinetFest® 2017. -
Bases Xxxiii Festival Nacional De La Cueca Y La Tonada
BASES XXXIII FESTIVAL NACIONAL DE LA CUECA Y LA TON ADA INEDITA CONTEXTO La Ilustre Municipalidad de Valparaíso, junto a la Asociación Regional de Clubes de Cueca Quinta Región, han sido los gestores del “Festival Nacional de la Cueca y la Tonada Inédita”. Desde el año 1985 a la fecha, ya han transcurrido 32 años, realizando este magno evento en nuestro escenario natural, Caleta Portales, lugar típico de nuestro querido Puerto que es ciudad patrimonio de la Humanidad y capital cultural de Chile. El Festival tiene como fin convocar a distintos compositores, interpretes nacionales del folclor Chileno, para mostrar sus distintas creaciones q ue están llenas de creatividad, buscando la preservación de nuestras raíces folclóricas, enriqueciendo así, el patrimonio folclórico nacional mediante estas nuevas composiciones musicales y que podrán exponer en este tradicional Festival. DESCRIPCIÓN DE LA INSTITUCIÓN NOMBRE: ASOCIACION REGIONAL DE CLUBES DE CUECA V REGIÓN DIRECCIÓN: AVENIDA WASHINGTON Nº 16, VALPARAÍSO TELEFONO: 9 - 42594587 La Asociación Regional de Clubes de Cueca Quinta Región, fue fundada el día 21 de diciembre del año 1981, su personalidad jurídica Nº 1446 del 15 /12/1989. Actualmente cuenta con 13 Clubes Asociados con sus respectivas Personalidades Jurídicas, con ello se cumple el objetivo único y principal que es educar y mantener activas las tradiciones nacionales en los niños, jóvenes, adultos y adultos mayores. DIRECTIVA PRESIDENTE: Pedro Adolfo Guerrero Rivera. RUT 15.581.244 - 3 SECRETARIO: Nelson Delgado Almonacid. RUT 6.334.422 - 2 TESORERO: Freddy Méndez Madariaga RUT 9.735.118 - K CONVOCATORIA: Se invita a participar a los autores y compositores a nivel Nacional. -
La Nueva Canción and Its Significance
Excerpt * Temple University Press 1 La Nueva Canción and Its Significance uring the 1960s and 1970s, profound political changes were taking place in Chile and in other parts of Latin America. New political Dand social movements of students, workers, peasants, urban shanty- town dwellers, and other groups mobilized to demand rights and political inclusion along with deeper democratization and structural changes in elit- ist systems. The 1960s were marked by the Cuban Revolution and the war in Vietnam, and many young people in Chile, as in other countries, were strongly anti-imperialist and in favor of progressive social change. These popular movements coalesced to form a powerful force that was instrumen- tal in electing the democratic socialist Salvador Allende president in 1970. Allende’s goal was to preside over a peaceful, constitutional path to social- ism in Chile. He served for three turbulent years, attempting to implement a program to reduce social inequalities, until he was overthrown in the U.S.- backed military coup of 1973. Political and Social Context In Chile in the early 1960s, social divisions were severe. Some 25 percent of the population had access to sewage services, and only 10–11 percent of rural populations had supplied drinking water. In 1960, 16.4 percent of the population was illiterate.1 Tens of thousands of people had built crude, leaky shacks to live in on the outskirts of Santiago that lacked plumbing, run- ning water, and electricity. Workers had few rights and lived in overcrowded Excerpt * Temple University Press 2 Chapter 1 tenements, shantytowns, or single-room company housing; miners lived in company towns near the mines, enduring harsh conditions. -
And the Chilean Cueca
The ambiguity of "Community" and the Chilean Cueca Author Monk, Susan Published 2011 Journal Title Music Education Research and Innovation Version Version of Record (VoR) Copyright Statement © 2011 ASME and the Author(s). The attached file is reproduced here in accordance with the copyright policy of the publisher. Please refer to the journal's website for access to the definitive, published version. Downloaded from http://hdl.handle.net/10072/173305 Link to published version http://www.asme.edu.au Griffith Research Online https://research-repository.griffith.edu.au THE AMBIGUITY OF “COMMUNITY” AND THE CHILEAN CUECA SUE MONK University of Queensland expressed her concern at the apparent focus on INTRODUCTION mining, stating that this neither reflected the diversity of development within Chile nor the We have tended to rely on cultural relativism in its interests of the Chilean students. The third most simplistic form, and in a way that is heavily comment came from an academic who had reliant on liberal humanism. That is, we tend to resort to fairly basic relativist arguments about equal worth, attended all five colloquiums and expressed when the strongest arguments focus on the political concern that very little had changed in Australia in economies of uneven access to resources and the terms of recognising the diversity across Latin intervention of education (and performance) into America. One week after the colloquium, at those economies. At this level, we have fallen far another university campus, a visiting Chilean behind; discussions around issues of canon formation and control have gone on in English departments for scholar addressed a public forum about the twenty years, often at a level of critical sophistication student strikes and occupations of schools and that music departments only gesture towards (Wong, university campuses that had been occurring in 2006, p. -
3. La Música Norteña Mexicana En Chile 133 ISBN 978-607-484-456-6 Tomo II
¡Arriba el Norte...! Música de acordeón y bajo sexto Tomo II Transnacionalización de la música norteña mexicana ¡Arriba el Norte...! Música de acordeón y bajo sexto Tomo II Transnacionalización de la música norteña mexicana Luis Omar Montoya Arias Coordinador INSTITUTO NACIONAL DE ANTROPOLOGÍA E HISTORIA ¡Arriba el Norte...! Música de acordeón y bajo sexto Tomo II Transnacionalización de la música norteña mexicana Luis Omar Montoya Arias Coordinador INSTITUTO NACIONAL DE ANTROPOLOGÍA E HISTORIA Luis Omar Montoya Arias, coordinador ÍNDICE ¡Arriba el Norte...! Música de acordeón y bajo sexto Tomo II Tomo II. Transnacionalización de la música norteña mexicana Presentación 9 Testimonio Musical de México, 59 Primera edición: diciembre de 2013 III. Medios masivos de comunicación 11 1. Cine y literatura en la música norteña mexicana 12 © y Instituto Nacional de Antropología e Historia 2. La radio en la construcción social de la música norteña 32 Córdoba 45, Col. Roma, Delegación Cuauhtémoc México, DF, 06700 mexicana www. inah.gob.mx IV. Cosmopolitismo 60 Quedan reservados los derechos de autor y de intérprete de piezas musicales u otros documentos que aparecen en esta obra discográfica. 1. La música norteña mexicana en Holanda 62 2. Corridos Prohibidos colombianos 88 ISBN 978-607-484-452-8 Obra completa 3. La música norteña mexicana en Chile 133 ISBN 978-607-484-456-6 Tomo II. Transnacionalización de la música norteña mexicana 4. Pioneros de la música norteña mexicana en Colombia 159 Queda prohibida la reproducción parcial o total, directa o indirecta, del contenido de la presente obra sin contar previamente con la autorización expresa y por escrito de los editores, en términos de la Ley Federal del Derecho V. -
Chile by Martin Nicholas and Ivan.Pdf
FLAG • The Chilean flag is also known in Spanish as La Estrella Solitaria (The Lone Star). • It was adopted on 18 October 1817. • The flag of Chile consists of two equal horizontal bands of white and red, with a blue square the same height as the white band in the canton, which bears a white five-pointed star in the centre. CAPITAL • The capital of Chile is called ‘Santiago’. • Santiago is the biggest city in Chile. • It sits in a valley surrounded by the snow- capped Andes and the Chilean Coast Range. • Plaza de Armas, the grand heart of the city’s old colonial core, is home to 2 neoclassical landmarks: the 1808 Palacio de la Real Audiencia, housing the National History Museum, and the 18th-century Metropolitan Cathedral. POPULATION • The population of Chile is 18,183,803. • The population rate growth for Chile was decreasing in 1990. • By 2050 the population is expected to reach approximately 20.2 million people. • About 85% of the country's population lives in urban areas, with 40% living in Greater Santiago. FOOD • Pastel de Choclo: corn casserole with meat stuffing. • Empanadas: pastry filled with meat, cheese or mussels. • Cazuela: homemade stew with beef, chicken, corn, rice and potatoes. • Asado: barbeque of beef, pork or chicken. FESTIVALS • Viña del Mar International Song Festival: This festival the largest and best known music festival in Latin America. • Lollalpalooza Chile: this festival is the Chile based version of the popular music festival Lollapalooza. • Ultra Chile: this is an outdoor electronic music festival that is a part of Ultra Music Festival’s worldwide expansion, which has now spread to 20 different countries. -
A Critical and Performance Edition of Agustin Barrios's Cueca
University of Kentucky UKnowledge Theses and Dissertations--Music Music 2018 A CRITICAL AND PERFORMANCE EDITION OF AGUSTIN BARRIOS’S CUECA: COMPARATIVE ANALYSIS OF FORM, NOTATION, AND PERFORMANCE PRACTICE OF BARRIOS’S WORK TO TRADITIONAL CHILEAN CUECAS FROM THE BEGINNING OF THE TWENTIETH-CENTURY Enrique Sandoval-Cisternas University of Kentucky, [email protected] Author ORCID Identifier: https://orcid.org/0000-0003-1188-7383 Digital Object Identifier: https://doi.org/10.13023/etd.2018.253 Right click to open a feedback form in a new tab to let us know how this document benefits ou.y Recommended Citation Sandoval-Cisternas, Enrique, "A CRITICAL AND PERFORMANCE EDITION OF AGUSTIN BARRIOS’S CUECA: COMPARATIVE ANALYSIS OF FORM, NOTATION, AND PERFORMANCE PRACTICE OF BARRIOS’S WORK TO TRADITIONAL CHILEAN CUECAS FROM THE BEGINNING OF THE TWENTIETH-CENTURY" (2018). Theses and Dissertations--Music. 120. https://uknowledge.uky.edu/music_etds/120 This Doctoral Dissertation is brought to you for free and open access by the Music at UKnowledge. It has been accepted for inclusion in Theses and Dissertations--Music by an authorized administrator of UKnowledge. For more information, please contact [email protected]. STUDENT AGREEMENT: I represent that my thesis or dissertation and abstract are my original work. Proper attribution has been given to all outside sources. I understand that I am solely responsible for obtaining any needed copyright permissions. I have obtained needed written permission statement(s) from the owner(s) of each third-party copyrighted matter to be included in my work, allowing electronic distribution (if such use is not permitted by the fair use doctrine) which will be submitted to UKnowledge as Additional File. -
Stoltzmanresolve Digibooklet.Pdf
1 CONCERTO FOR CLARINET AND ORCHESTRA (1947) I. A wizardly weave of contrapuntal themes and rhythmic motives instantly engulfs us. The solo clarinet enters on the intervals that gave historic birth to the instrument: octave, fifth, and twelfth, its harmonic backbone. The theme creates a sweeping arch over seven measures long eloquently encompassing all the clarinet’s registers. The first movement coda ends with a twinkle as the clarinet giggles a bluesy trill; followed by a glockenspiel exclama- tion point and a timpani plop! I am reminded of my interview with Lukas Foss on his student memories of Hindemith at Tanglewood. “After class he took us down to the pond for a swim. I’ll never forget the sound of his plump little body landing in the water with a plop!” II. The ostinato takes a five note pizzicato pattern with a jazz syncopation before the fifth note. The groove slides over to another beat at each entrance making a simple steady 2/2 time excitingly elusive. Riding that groove is a rapid clarinet lick right out of the “King of Swing”’s bag. A rhythm section (timpani, snare drum, triangle, and tambourine) sets a “Krupa-like” complexity, and before you know it the ride ends with the band disappearing clean as a clarinet pianissimo. III. Perhaps the longest, most melancholic, beautiful melody ever written for the clarinet; twenty measures of breath- taking calm and majesty. Balancing this sweeping aria is a recitative (measures 51-71). Hindemith gives the return of the song to solo oboe surrounded by soft, tiny woodwind creatures and muted murmurings for two solo violins.