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A Level Music
A level Music Areas of Study – Other Perspectives NB: updates to this document were made in April 2021 and these are highlighted in yellow. © artwork: Mark Bolitho | Origami photography Pearson Education Ltd/Justin Hoffman Introduction This qualification features a Component entitled Appraising. The purpose of this component is for students to develop their listening and appraising skills through the study of music across a variety of styles and genres. The content is grouped into six areas of study, containing either two or three set works. This component gives students the opportunity to reflect on, analyse and evaluate music in aural and/or written form. To achieve this objective, students need to use their knowledge and understanding of musical elements, context and language to make critical judgements about the repertoire and context of music within the areas of study. Students should also study a range of pieces beyond these set works. The suggested other musical pieces for each area of study (see Appendix 4 of the specification) provide students with breadth, enabling them to place their knowledge of musical elements, context and language in a wider context, and apply their knowledge and understanding to more pieces of music. The suggested other music can help students to relate their learning to music in the set works, but their study is not compulsory. Teachers can identify and teach other pieces of music to support their students’ learning. The following music and musicians are examples of how each of the areas of study can be approached from a diverse range of other perspectives. The pieces have been chosen to encourage students to think beyond the mainstream and over-represented composers and styles of music, and instead to consider alternative and less well-known types and origins of music. -
The Balkans of the Balkans: the Meaning of Autobalkanism in Regional Popular Music
arts Article The Balkans of the Balkans: The Meaning of Autobalkanism in Regional Popular Music Marija Dumni´cVilotijevi´c Institute of Musicology, Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts, 11000 Belgrade, Serbia; [email protected] Received: 1 April 2020; Accepted: 1 June 2020; Published: 16 June 2020 Abstract: In this article, I discuss the use of the term “Balkan” in the regional popular music. In this context, Balkan popular music is contemporary popular folk music produced in the countries of the Balkans and intended for the Balkan markets (specifically, the people in the Western Balkans and diaspora communities). After the global success of “Balkan music” in the world music scene, this term influenced the cultures in the Balkans itself; however, interestingly, in the Balkans themselves “Balkan music” does not only refer to the musical characteristics of this genre—namely, it can also be applied music that derives from the genre of the “newly-composed folk music”, which is well known in the Western Balkans. The most important legacy of “Balkan” world music is the discourse on Balkan stereotypes, hence this article will reveal new aspects of autobalkanism in music. This research starts from several questions: where is “the Balkans” which is mentioned in these songs actually situated; what is the meaning of the term “Balkan” used for the audience from the Balkans; and, what are musical characteristics of the genre called trepfolk? Special focus will be on the post-Yugoslav market in the twenty-first century, with particular examples in Serbian language (as well as Bosnian and Croatian). Keywords: Balkan; popular folk music; trepfolk; autobalkanism 1. -
Punk Aesthetics in Independent "New Folk", 1990-2008
PUNK AESTHETICS IN INDEPENDENT "NEW FOLK", 1990-2008 John Encarnacao Student No. 10388041 Master of Arts in Humanities and Social Sciences University of Technology, Sydney 2009 ii Acknowledgements I would like to thank my supervisor Tony Mitchell for his suggestions for reading towards this thesis (particularly for pointing me towards Webb) and for his reading of, and feedback on, various drafts and nascent versions presented at conferences. Collin Chua was also very helpful during a period when Tony was on leave; thank you, Collin. Tony Mitchell and Kim Poole read the final draft of the thesis and provided some valuable and timely feedback. Cheers. Ian Collinson, Michelle Phillipov and Diana Springford each recommended readings; Zac Dadic sent some hard to find recordings to me from interstate; Andrew Khedoori offered me a show at 2SER-FM, where I learnt about some of the artists in this study, and where I had the good fortune to interview Dawn McCarthy; and Brendan Smyly and Diana Blom are valued colleagues of mine at University of Western Sydney who have consistently been up for robust discussions of research matters. Many thanks to you all. My friend Stephen Creswell’s amazing record collection has been readily available to me and has proved an invaluable resource. A hearty thanks! And most significant has been the support of my partner Zoë. Thanks and love to you for the many ways you helped to create a space where this research might take place. John Encarnacao 18 March 2009 iii Table of Contents Abstract vi I: Introduction 1 Frames -
An Interview with Mike Paradinas
In Praise of Good Speakers: An Interview with Mike Paradinas Bittles‘ Magazine | Interview I first stumbled upon the twisted world of Mike Paradinas in 1994 through his remix EP of indie heroes The Auteurs. Across forty odd minutes of sonic experimentation he chewed up the original tracks and added huge layers of distortion until what remained was something of a truly mind-expanding listen. Yet just when it would seem that the tracks were too fucked up for comfort and your ears would start to complain, the music would suddenly break into a heartbreaking melody, or a moment of magnificent beauty that lifted the entire project to epic heights. By JOHN BITTLES Thus a musical love affair was born as I eagerly tracked down the albums Tango N’ Vectif and Bluff Limbo and took my first tentative steps into a world of exquisite noise. The music on these early releases was by turns angry, fearful, and wonderfully melodic. It took the blueprint of artists like Aphex Twin and B12 and filled it full of gleeful experimentation and musical contrasts. One minute you are bombarded with almost unlistenable noise, the next you are swimming in melancholic grooves. Both albums were playful slippery beasts that would sneak up behind the listener and caress with one hand while pinching roughly with the other. More releases followed. Stand outs included the Fear single on Virgin Records and albums such as Makesaracket under his Jake Slazenger alias. In 2007 he released Duntisbourne Abbots Soulmate Devastation Technique (album titles are not his strong point) which was just as difficult and obtuse as its title. -
The History of Rock Music - the 2000S
The History of Rock Music - The 2000s The History of Rock Music: The 2000s History of Rock Music | 1955-66 | 1967-69 | 1970-75 | 1976-89 | The early 1990s | The late 1990s | The 2000s | Alpha index Musicians of 1955-66 | 1967-69 | 1970-76 | 1977-89 | 1990s in the US | 1990s outside the US | 2000s Back to the main Music page (Copyright © 2006 Piero Scaruffi) Bards and Dreamers (These are excerpts from my book "A History of Rock and Dance Music") Bards of the old world order TM, ®, Copyright © 2008 Piero Scaruffi All rights reserved. Traditionally, the purposefulness and relevance of a singer-songwriter were defined by something unique in their lyrical acumen, vocal skills and/or guitar or piano accompaniment. In the 1990s this paradigm was tested by the trend towards larger orchestrastion and towards electronic orchestration. In the 2000s it became harder and harder to give purpose and meaning to a body of work mostly relying on the message. Many singer-songwriters of the 2000s belonged to "Generation X" but sang and wrote for members of "Generation Y". Since "Generation Y" was inherently different from all the generations that had preceeded it, it was no surprise that the audience for these singer-songwriters declined. Since the members of "Generation X" were generally desperate to talk about themselves, it was not surprising that the number of such singer- songwriters increased. The net result was an odd disconnect between the musician and her or his target audience. The singer-songwriters of the 2000s generally sounded more "adult" because... they were. -
Digital Shoegaze
SENTIREASCOLTAREDIGital MAGAZINE LUGLIO/AGosto N. 45/46 garneau°dadamatto°capillary action°ital tek°function°isengrind°el topo°feiner ITALIANS REMIX IT BETTER°DILLON°ELEFANT°FRANCESCO CUSA primavera sound°mi ami°my bloody valentine°angelica KLUSTER°MUDHONEY°KURT WEILL Pyramids*Fuck Buttons*Televise Digital Shoegaze DIRETTORE 4 NEWS Edoardo Bridda COOR D IN A MENTO Teresa Greco CON S ULENTI A LL A RE da ZIONE 6 TURN ON Daniele Follero THOMAS FUNCTION, BLACK DEVIL DISCO, ITAL TEK, CAPILLARY ACTION...... Stefano Solventi ST A FF Gaspare Caliri Nicolas Campagnari 16 TUNE IN Antonello Comunale FRANCESCO DILLON, REMIX ITALIA... Antonio Puglia HA NNO C OLL A BOR A TO Gianni Avella, Paolo Bassotti, Davide Brace, Marco 28 DroP OUT Braggion, Filippo Bordignon, Marco Canepari, Manfredi Lamartina, Gabriele Maruti, Stefano Pifferi, Andrea DIGITAL SHOEGAZE, FRANCESCO CUSA Provinciali, Costanza Salvi, Vincenzo Santarcangelo, Giancarlo Turra, Fabrizio Zampighi, Giuseppe Zucco 44 RECENSIONI GUI da S PIRITU A LE TRICKY, EL TOPO, MICAH P. HINSON,SIGUR ROS Adriano Trauber (1966-2004) GR A FI ca 96 WE ARE DEMO Nicolas Campagnari 98 REARVIEW Mirror IN C OPERTIN A KLUSTER, MUDHONEY, MOGWAI.... Pyramids SentireAscoltare online music magazine Registrazione Trib.BO N° 7590 del 28/10/05 Editore Edoardo Bridda 116 CUlt MOVIE Direttore responsabile Antonello Comunale AMERICA, AMERICA, DOVE VAI? Provider NGI S.p.A. Copyright © 2008 Edoardo Bridda. Tutti i diritti riservati.La riproduzione totale o parziale, in qualsiasi forma, su qualsiasi supporto e con qualsiasi 120 LA SERA DELLA PRIMA mezzo, è proibita senza autorizzazione scritta di SentireAscoltare IL DIVO, INDIANA JONES E IL REGNO DEL TESCHIO DI CRISTALLO 122 I COSIDDETTI CONTEMPORANEI KURT WEILL SA 3 S W Sarà pubblicato in ottobre su Kemado il film The Fountain (in Italia L’albero della For All Of Us doveva uscire il prossimo 22 sto disco costituisce un’introduzione, sarà nuovo album di Marissa Nadler. -
Arhai's Balkan Folktronica: Serbian Ethno Music Reimagined for British
Ivana Medić Arhai’s Balkan Folktronica... DOI: 10.2298/MUZ1416105M UDK: 78.031.4 78.071.1:929 Бацковић Ј. Arhai’s Balkan Folktronica: Serbian Ethno Music Reimagined for British Market* Ivana Medić1 Institute of Musicology SASA (Belgrade) Abstract This article focuses on Serbian composer Jovana Backović and her band/project Arhai, founded in Belgrade in 1998. The central argument is that Arhai made a transition from being regarded a part of the Serbian ethno music scene (which flourished during the 1990s and 2000s) to becoming a part of the global world music scene, after Jovana Backović moved from her native Serbia to the United Kingdom to pursue an international career. This move did not imply a fundamental change of her musical style, but a change of cultural context and market conditions that, in turn, affected her cultural identity. Keywords Arhai, Jovana Backović, world music, ethno, Balkan Folktronica Although Serbian composer, singer and multi-instrumentalist Jovana Backović is only 34 years old, the band Arhai can already be considered her lifetime project. The Greek word ‘Arhai’ meaning ‘beginning’ or ‘ancient’ it is aptly chosen to summarise Backović’s artistic mission: rethinking tradition in contemporary context. Нer interest in traditional music was sparked by her father, himself a professional musician and performer of both traditional and popular folk music (Medić 2013). Backović founded Arhai in Belgrade in 1998, while still a pupil at music school Slavenski, and continued to perform with the band while receiving instruction in classical composition and orchestration at the Belgrade Faculty of Music. In its first, Belgrade ‘incarnation’, Arhai was a ten-piece band that developed a fusion of traditional music from the Balkans with am bient sounds and jazz-influenced improvisation, using both acoustic and electric instruments and a quartet of fe male vocalists. -
Radical Pay Reforms Spark Anger in University Staff
“When China awakes, she will astonish the world” Varsity takes you to the heart of the biggest, most complicated country on the planet Page 14 No. 604 The Independent Cambridge Student Newspaper since 1947 Friday October 15, 2004 Radical pay reforms spark GU in financial anger in university staff crisis Senate House debate reveals bitter opposition £4,500 missing expenses Calls for CUSU integration Sarah Marsh he Chine Mbubaegbu AFURIOUS DEBATE over Cambridge’s new pay and grading structure took place this Tuesday. At THE CAMBRIDGE University the University parliament, Senate on-Dem-Bussc Graduate Union has found itself in a House, many senior academics voiced l-V state of serious disarray after a number of fears of mass pay cuts and a devalua- key resignations. This follows several tion of junior and non-academic roles. years of financial mismanagement by t Mocke There are concerns that this will con- r past Executives, which has until now tribute to a growing divide between lbe gone unnoticed by the University. senior university management and the A This summer, a meeting of the rest of the University. Standing Advisory Committee on Vice-President of the Association Student Matters, which includes mem- of University Teachers (AUT), Dr bers of both CUSU and the Graduate Silvia Martinelli, said that this would Union (GU), found that the Union’s be the most radical and detrimental financial papers up until 2002-3 ‘pre- reform in Cambridge for a hundred sented a most unsatisfactory position.’ years. The AUT’s secretary Nick Sarah Airey, President of the GU for Savage asserted there was “A huge 2003-4, kept the Graduate Union amount of unhappiness right from afloat, whilst trying to rectify the finan- the head of the school of physical sci- cial situation. -
PARIS 2015 TERM 1 October 25 — November 6
Red Bull Music Academy Application Info PARIS 2015 TERM 1 October 25 — November 6 TERM 2 November 15 — November 27 APPLY January 21 — March 4 Go to redbullmusicacademy.com to find everything you need to apply for the Red Bull Music Academy in Paris. WHAT IS THE ACADEMY? Since 1998, the Red Bull Music Academy has exercise in pulling people from every corner devoted itself to bringing talent and ideas together of the globe together under one roof — and then in inspiring places. Each and every year, this creating a dialogue that continues long after meeting of minds sees 60 selected participants the Academy ends. collaborate and share with one another, as well as listen to the stories and sounds of pioneering What participants learn at the Academy is that, musical figures — special guest speakers whose while our languages and experiences may footsteps we continue to walk in. vary, what everyone has in common is a desire to explore music’s weird and wonderful ability At each Academy, the past and the present to communicate. You don’t need to be able to play meet to identify and explore future possibilities a dozen instruments, build a synth from scratch, in sound — in the custom-built studios working or know every lyric Björk has ever written. on new music, on the RBMA Radio airwaves, You don’t need to have released music on a label, and on the dancefloors of our month-long run or headlined a stage. But if the idea of being of club and live events in the city’s finest venues. -
Dossier Pédagogique Musiques Électroniques
Les musiques électroniques Médiathèque de Magny le Hongre - Saison culturelle 2012-2013 En collaboration avec la scène de musiques actuelles File 7 REMERCIEMENTS 3 LA BANDE SON DU DOSSIER 4 PREFACE 5 LA CONQUETE DE L’ELECTRIQUE : REPERES HISTORIQUES 7 UNE RECHERCHE INSTRUMENTALE DE LONGUE HALEINE 7 L’ELECTROACOUSTIQUE : LA MUSIQUE CONTEMPORAINE INVENTE L’ELECTRO 8 MUSIQUES ELECTRONIQUES, UN TERME PLURIEL 12 FAMILLE DOWNTEMPO : L’ELECTRO EN MODE APAISE 12 AMBIENT (784.21) 12 TRIP HOP (784.22) 13 ABSTRACT HIP HOP (784.22) 14 ELECTRO DUB (784.23) 15 ELECTRO JAZZ (784.53) 16 FAMILLE CLUB : LE CŒUR DU MOUVEMENT 17 HOUSE MUSIC (FAMILLE 784.3) 17 TECHNO (784.41) 18 MINIMAL (784.33 – 784.41 – ETC .) 19 TRANCE (784.42) 20 HARDCORE – HARDTEK (784.43) 21 DANCE MUSIC (784.8) 22 FAMILLE BREAKBEAT : SYNCOPE SUR LE DANCEFLOOR 22 JUNGLE – DRUM’N’BASS (784.7) 22 BIG BEAT (784.51) 24 DUBSTEP (784.34) 25 FAMILLE EXPERIMENTALE : RECHERCHE ET INNOVATION 26 ELECTRONICA – IDM (FAMILLE 784.6) 26 NOUVELLES PRATIQUES ET RENOUVEAU IDENTITAIRE 28 LAISSEZ NOUS RAVER ! LES NOUVEAUX NOMADES 28 LES DJ : RETOUR VERS UN MUSICIEN EN DEVENIR 30 BIBLIOGRAPHIE 34 OUVRAGES EN LIGNE 34 2 Réseau des Médiathèques du SAN du Val d’Europe Remerciements La partie « Musiques électroniques, un terme pluriel » utilise principalement les textes réalisés par Pascal Acoulon, Janick Tual, Nadège Vauclin de la médiathèque de Noisy-le-Sec. Merci à eux pour l’aimaBle autorisation d’utilisation de leur production. Merci à Cedric Heurteux et aux discothécaires de la médiathèque Gérard Billy de Lagny sur Marne. -
Everett Rock Band/Musician List "T" Last Update: 6/28/2020
Everett Rock Band/Musician List "T" Last Update: 6/28/2020 "T" List for Bands/Musicians Genre* From & Genre 311 R Los Angeles, CA Rock 322 J Seattle Jazz 322 J Seattle Jazz 10 Cent Monkey Pk R Clinton Punk / Rock / Alternative 10 Killing Hands E P R Bellingham's Electro / Pop / Rock 12 Gauge Pump H Everett Hip Hop 12 Stones R Al Mandeville, LA Rock / Alternative 12th Fret Band CR Snohomish Classic Rock 13 MAG M R Spokane Metal / Hard Rock 13 Scars R Pk Tacoma Rock / Punk 13th & Nowhere R Everett Rock 2 Big 2 Spank CR Carnation Classic Rock / Rock / Rockabilly 2 Guys And A Broad B R C Everett Blues / Rock / Country 2 Libras E R Seattle Electronic Rock 20 Riverside H J Fk Everett Jazz / Hip Hop / Funk 20 Sting Band F Bellingham's Folk / Bluegrass / Roots Music 20/20 A Cappella Ac Ellensburg A Cappella 206 A$$A$$IN H Rp Seattle Hip Hop / Rap 20sicem H Seattle Hip Hop 21 Guns: Seattle's Tribute to Green Day Al R Seattle Alternative Rock 2112 (Rush Tribute) Pr CR R Lakewood Progressive / Classic Rock / Rock 21feet R Seattle Rock 21st & Broadway R Pk Sk Ra Everett/Seattle Rock / Punk / Ska / Reggae 22 Kings Am F R San Diego, CA Americana / Folk-Rock 24 Madison Fk B RB Local Rock, Funk, Blues, Motown, Jazz, Soul, RnB, Folk 25th & State R Everett Rock 29A R Seattle Rock 2KLIX Hc South Seattle Hardcore 3 Doors Down R Escatawpa, Mississippi Rock 3 INCH MAX Al R Pk Seattle's Alternative / Rock / Punk 3 Miles High R P CR Everett Rock / Pop / Classic Rock 3 Play Ricochet BG B C J Seattle bluegrass, ragtime, old-time, blues, country, jazz 3 PM TRIO -
Electronics in Music Ebook, Epub
ELECTRONICS IN MUSIC PDF, EPUB, EBOOK F C Judd | 198 pages | 01 Oct 2012 | Foruli Limited | 9781905792320 | English | London, United Kingdom Electronics In Music PDF Book Main article: MIDI. In the 90s many electronic acts applied rock sensibilities to their music in a genre which became known as big beat. After some hesitation, we agreed. Main article: Chiptune. Pietro Grossi was an Italian pioneer of computer composition and tape music, who first experimented with electronic techniques in the early sixties. Music produced solely from electronic generators was first produced in Germany in Moreover, this version used a new standard called MIDI, and here I was ably assisted by former student Miller Puckette, whose initial concepts for this task he later expanded into a program called MAX. August 18, Some electronic organs operate on the opposing principle of additive synthesis, whereby individually generated sine waves are added together in varying proportions to yield a complex waveform. Cage wrote of this collaboration: "In this social darkness, therefore, the work of Earle Brown, Morton Feldman, and Christian Wolff continues to present a brilliant light, for the reason that at the several points of notation, performance, and audition, action is provocative. The company hired Toru Takemitsu to demonstrate their tape recorders with compositions and performances of electronic tape music. Other equipment was borrowed or purchased with personal funds. By the s, magnetic audio tape allowed musicians to tape sounds and then modify them by changing the tape speed or direction, leading to the development of electroacoustic tape music in the s, in Egypt and France.