Results for ' Slovak Music Composers'

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  1.  11
    Adorno in Czechoslovakia: Music, Theory, Aesthetics.Vladimír Fulka - 2020 - Espes. The Slovak Journal of Aesthetics 9 (2):3-22.
    The aim of this paper is to examine how Adorno's aesthetic and musicological thinking was received in Czech and Slovak musicology in the decades between the 60s and the 80s. The focus is on the Czech and Slovak translation of some of Adorno’s musicological treatises and lectures – especially those concerning his views on the Second Vienna School and the musical poetics of its immediate successors – which were published in former Czechoslovakia. The study offers an interesting perspective (...)
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  2.  49
    Classical music why bother?: hearing the world of contemporary culture through a composer's ears.Joshua Fineberg - 2006 - New York: Routledge.
    The famous quip "I don't know much about art, but I know what I like" sums up many people's ideas about how to judge a work of art; but there are inherent limitations if we rely on immediate impressions in judging what should be enduring products of our culture. While some might criticize this as a return to "elitism," Joshua Fineberg argues that without some way of determining intrinsic value, there can be no movement forward for creators or their audience. (...)
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  3.  10
    Musical Space: A Composer's View.Anthony Gilbert - 1981 - Critical Inquiry 7 (3):605-611.
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  4.  10
    Contemporary Music from Turkey: Turkish composer Özkan Manav's approaches to the local materials in.Zeynep Gülçin ÖZKİŞİ - 2013 - Journal of Turkish Studies 8 (Volume 8 Issue 9):2069-2069.
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  5.  21
    Microstructural musical linguistics: composers' pulses are liked most by the best musicians.Manfred Clynes - 1995 - Cognition 55 (3):269-310.
  6.  36
    Composing in Fragments: Music in the Essay Films of Resnais and Godard.Nora M. Alter - 2012 - Substance 41 (2):24-39.
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  7.  3
    Interactive music systems: Machine listening and composing.Eliot Handelman - 1995 - Artificial Intelligence 79 (2):349-359.
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  8.  10
    European music and the contemporary Canadian composer.Walter H. Kemp - 1995 - History of European Ideas 20 (1-3):483-490.
  9. What Is It to Compose a Musical Work?Maria Elisabeth Reicher - 2000 - Grazer Philosophische Studien 58 (1):203-221.
    The paper deals with the question whether musical works are created or discovered. In the preliminaries some ontological presuppositions concerning the nature of a musical work setting the stage for the whole debate and the Creationist and Platonist views are discussed. The psychological concepts of creation and discovery are distinguished from their ontological counterparts and it turns out that only the ontological ones are relevant in this context and that the Creationist arguments fail to prove the point in question. Finally (...)
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  10.  71
    Did Bach compose musical works? An evaluation of Goehr's watershed thesis.John Dyck - unknown
    This thesis evaluates Lydia Goehr’s claim that the musical work-concept did not regulate musical practice before the watershed date of 1800. In the first chapter, I evaluate Goehr’s arguments for this claim from historical musicology. I appeal both to recent secondary research sources in musicology, and to philosophical analysis. The second and third chapters focus on philosophical aspects of Goehr’s watershed claim. In the second chapter, I focus on understanding Goehr’s claim that a regulative shift occurred during the watershed date—that (...)
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  11.  32
    Acoustic Constraints and Musical Consequences: Exploring Composers' Use of Cues for Musical Emotion.Michael Schutz - 2017 - Frontiers in Psychology 8.
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  12.  46
    The Producer as Composer: Shaping the Sounds of Popular Music.Virgil Moorefield - 2010 - MIT Press.
    The evolution of the record producer from organizer to auteur, from Phil Spector and George Martin to the rise of hip-hop and remixing.
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  13. Part III. Music on screen. Instrumentalising music for the film : Pianos, harps, and fiddles in backbreaking moves of social labour / Lydia Goehr ; composing for the films in the age of digital media.James Buhler - 2022 - In Gianmario Borio (ed.), Immediacy and the mediations of music: critical approaches after Theodor W. Adorno. New York: Routledge.
     
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  14. PART III. Music on Screen. Instrumentalising Music for the Film : Pianos, Harps, and Fiddles in Backbreaking Moves of Social Labour / Lydia Goehr ; Composing for the Films in the Age of Digital Media.James Buhler - 2022 - In Gianmario Borio (ed.), Immediacy and the mediations of music: critical approaches after Theodor W. Adorno. New York: Routledge.
     
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  15. Artificial Intelligence and Musical Composition: How Can Intelligent Computers Help Compose Music.C. Ames - 1990 - In R. Kurzweil (ed.), The Age of Intelligent Machines. MIT Press.
  16. Envisioning Autonomy through Improvising and Composing: Castoriadis visiting creative music education practice.Panagiotis A. Kanellopoulos - 2012 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 44 (2):151-182.
    Do psychological perspectives constitute the only way through which the role of musical creativity in education can be addressed, researched and theorised? This essay attempts to offer an alternative view of musical creativity as a deeply social and political form of human praxis, by proposing a perspective rooted in the thought of the political philosopher and activist Cornelius Castoriadis (1922–1997). This is done in two steps. First, an attempt is made to place the pursuit of the concept of musical creativity (...)
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  17.  6
    Stvaralaštvo hrvatskih skladateljica u udžbenicima Glazbene kultureArtwork by female composers in primary Music education.Marijo Krnić & Ani Silić - 2022 - Metodicki Ogledi 28 (2):236-280.
    Glazbena djela skladateljica važan su, ali nedovoljno obrađen segment glazbeno-povijesne baštine te u nedovoljnoj mjeri zastupljen element suvremene glazbene kulture. Djeca se s djelima skladateljica u prvom redu upoznaju u okviru osnovnoškolske nastave glazbe. U radu je prikazano istraživanje kojemu je cilj bio utvrditi zastupljenost djela skladateljica namijenjenih za slušanje i pjevanje u udžbenicima za Glazbenu kulturu koji su u uporabi u Hrvatskoj, a posebno djela hrvatskih skladateljica. U istraživanju je analiziran 21 udžbenik triju hrvatskih nakladničkih kuća. Rezultati ukazuju na (...)
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  18.  31
    Of Mozart, parrots and cherry blossoms in the wind: a composer explores mysteries of the musical mind.Bruce Adolphe - 1999 - New York: Limelight Editions.
    The exhilarating mix of humor, philosophy, fact and whimsy that marks these essays derives from more than 200 lectures Bruce Adolphe has given over most of the ...
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  19. Wittgenstein Listens to Mahler: How to Do Philosophy and Compose Music in the Breakdown of Tradition?Béla Szabados - 2007 - Dialogue 46 (1):91-113.
    ABSTRACTThis article retrieves, situates, and interprets Ludwig Wittgenstein's overlooked remarks about the composer Gustav Mahler, and connects them with Wittgenstein's philosophical perspective and practice, as well as with his musical aesthetics.
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  20.  18
    Exploring the Multi-Layered Affordances of Composing and Performing Interactive Music with Responsive Technologies.Anna Einarsson & Tom Ziemke - 2017 - Frontiers in Psychology 8.
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  21. Musical meaning and expression.Stephen Davies - 1994 - Ithaca: Cornell University Press.
    We talk not only of enjoying music, but of understanding it. Music is often taken to have expressive import--and in that sense to have meaning. But what does music mean, and how does it mean? Stephen Davies addresses these questions in this sophisticated and knowledgeable overview of current theories in the philosophy of music. Reviewing and criticizing the aesthetic positions of recent years, he offers a spirited explanation of his own position. Davies considers and rejects in (...)
  22.  34
    A Cycle of Cathay. The Chinese Vogue in England during the Seventeenth and Elighteenth CenturiesThe Musical Experience of Composer, Performer, ListenerA Picture Book of Ancient Art.William A. Appleton, Roger Sessions, Stuart Piggott & Glyn E. Daniel - 1952 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 10 (3):288.
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  23.  58
    Musical Time/Musical Space.Robert P. Morgan - 1980 - Critical Inquiry 6 (3):527-538.
    There is no question, of course, that music is a temporal art. Stravinsky, noting that it is inconceivable apart from the elements of sound and time, classifies it quite simply as "a certain organization in time, a chrononomy."1 His definition stands as part of a long and honored tradition that encompasses such diverse figures as Racine, Lessing, and Schopenhauer. Schopenhauer, putting the case in its strongest terms, remarks that music is "perceived solely in and through time, to the (...)
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  24.  10
    Bannan, Nicholas. 2019. Every Child a Composer: Music Education in an Evolutionary Perspective.Piotr Podlipniak - 2022 - Evolutionary Studies in Imaginative Culture 6 (1):97-100.
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  25.  10
    From music to sound: the emergence of sound in 20th- and 21st-century music.Makis Solomos - 2020 - New York, NY: Routledge.
    From Music to Sound is an examination of the six musical histories whose convergence produces the emergence of sound, offering a plural, original history of new music. Both well-known and lesser-known works and composers are anaylsed in detail, from Debussy to contemporary music in the early 21st century; from rock to electronica; from the sound objects of the earliest musique concrète to current electroacoustic music; from the Poème électronique of Le Corbusier-Varèse-Xenakis to the most recent (...)
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  26.  14
    On Composing: Doing It, Teaching It, Living It.David Ward-Steinman - 2011 - Philosophy of Music Education Review 19 (1):5.
    This paper is concerned with the craft and pedagogy of contemporary classical composition, starting with an examination of French pedagogy as I received it from Darius Milhaud and Nadia Boulanger in the late 1950s. I discuss their different points of view (briefly the global approach to composition vs. what might be termed the molecular), the composition process itself (what can and what cannot be taught), counterpoint, improvisation, writer's block, the current state of the art, our sister arts, and the changing (...)
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  27.  90
    Musical Understandings: And Other Essays on the Philosophy of Music.Stephen Davies - 2011 - Oxford, GB: New York;Oxford University Press.
    In this chapter, I discuss the kinds of understanding expected of and evinced by skilled listeners, performers, analysts, and composers. I confine the discussion to Western, purely instrumental music, mainly with the classical tradition in mind.[1] And I refer primarily to the Anglophone literature of "analytic" philosophy of music. As will become apparent, my concern is with an analysis that maps what are meant to be familiar aspects of musical experience. I investigate the various understandings expected of (...)
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  28. Defending musical platonism.Julian Dodd - 2002 - British Journal of Aesthetics 42 (4):380-402.
    This paper sees me clarify, elaborate, and defend the conclusions reached in my ‘Musical Works as Eternal Types’ in the wake of objections raised by Robert Howell, R. A. Sharpe, and Saam Trivedi. In particular, I claim that the thesis that musical works are discovered rather than created by their composers is obligatory once we commit ourselves to thinking of works of music as types, and once we properly understand the ontological nature of types and properties. The central (...)
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  29.  6
    Music autopsies: essays and interviews (1999-2022).Benjamin Dwyer - 2023 - Hofheim: Wolke.
    Part I. Ireland and beyond. SacrumProfanum : mapping cultural damage through music ; Second glance at Ted Hughes's Crow : transcendence interrupted ; Joycean aesthetics and mythic imagination in the music of Frank Corcoran ; 'In exile anyway' : Jonathan Creasy interviews Benjamin Dwyer ; ...eleven reflections on Beckett, music and silence ; 'Insight - deeper' : Benjamin Dwyer interviews Kevin Volans ; Umbilical : the story of Oedipus, the story of Jocasta -- Part II. Beyond Ireland. (...)
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  30. Bad music: the music we love to hate.Christopher Washburne & Maiken Derno (eds.) - 2004 - New York: Routledge.
    Why are some popular musical forms and performers universally reviled by critics and ignored by scholars-despite enjoying large-scale popularity? How has the notion of what makes "good" or "bad" music changed over the years-and what does this tell us about the writers who have assigned these tags to different musical genres? Many composers that are today part of the classical "canon" were greeted initially by bad reviews. Similarly, jazz, country, and pop musics were all once rejected as "bad" (...)
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  31.  13
    Music and postwar transitions in the 19th and 20th centuries.Anaïs Fléchet, Martin Guerpin, Philippe Gumplowicz & Barbara L. Kelly (eds.) - 2023 - [New York]: Berghahn Books.
    Music and Postwar Transitions in the 19th and 20th Centuries is the first book to highlight the significance of the idea of 'postwar transition' in the field of music and to demonstrate how the contribution of musicians, composers, and their publics have influenced contemporary understandings of war. At the intersection of four domains including: the relationship between music and war culture, commemorative and consolatory dimensions of music, migration and exile, and the links between music, (...)
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  32.  9
    Music in the flesh: an early modern musical physiology.Bettina Varwig - 2023 - Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
    Music in the Flesh reimagines the lived experiences of music-making subjects (composers, musicians, listeners) in the long European seventeenth century. There are countless historical testimonies of the powerful effects of music upon early-modern bodies, described as moving, ravishing, painful, dangerous, curative, miraculous, and encompassing "the circulation of the humors, purification of the blood, dilation of the vessels and pores. In asking what this all meant at the time, the author considers musical scores and their surrounding texts (...)
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  33.  4
    Music-dance: sound and motion in contemporary discourse.Patrizia Veroli & Gianfranco Vinay (eds.) - 2018 - New York, NY: Routledge.
    Music-Dance explores the identity of choreomusical work, its complex authorship and its modes of reception as well as the cognitive processes involved in the reception of dance performance. Scholars of dance and music analyse the ways in which a musical score changes its prescriptive status when it becomes part of a choreographic project, the encounter between sound and motion on stage, and the intersection of listening and seeing. As well as being of interest to musicologists and choreologists considering (...)
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  34. Music and multimodal mental imagery.Bence Nanay - forthcoming - In Music and Mental Imagery. Routledge.
    Mental imagery is early perceptual processing that is not triggered by corresponding sensory stimulation in the relevant sense modality. Multimodal mental imagery is early perceptual processing that is triggered by sensory stimulation in a different sense modality. For example, when early visual or tactile processing is triggered by auditory sensory stimulation, this amounts to multimodal mental imagery. Pulling together philosophy, psychology and neuroscience, I will argue in this paper that multimodal mental imagery plays a crucial role in our engagement with (...)
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  35.  7
    Music criticism in Vienna, 1896-1897: critically moving forms.Sandra MacColl & Sandra McColl - 1996 - New York: Oxford University Press.
    Music Criticism in Vienna records a culture in which musical criticism had achieved the status of a minor art form. The period covered - October 1896 to December 1897 - was an eventful time in Vienna. Bruckner died, then Brahms; Mahler arrived; premieres of works by Czech composers coincidedwith increasing tension in the Empire between Czechs and Germans; Puccini's La Boheme reached Vienna on its sensational progress around the world; and the great programme music debate continued. These (...)
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  36.  22
    Music and the Ineffable.Vladimir Jankelevich (ed.) - 2003 - Princeton University Press.
    Vladimir Jankélévitch left behind a remarkable uvre steeped as much in philosophy as in music. His writings on moral quandaries reflect a lifelong devotion to music and performance, and, as a counterpoint, he wrote on music aesthetics and on modernist composers such as Fauré, Debussy, and Ravel. Music and the Ineffable brings together these two threads, the philosophical and the musical, as an extraordinary quintessence of his thought. Jankélévitch deals with classical issues in the philosophy (...)
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  37.  14
    Postmodern Music and its Future.Marcin Rychter - 2019 - Eidos. A Journal for Philosophy of Culture 3 (3):43-56.
    The essay presents an attempt at characterizing contemporary music’s culture by identifying a dialectical tension between “modern” and “postmodern” currents in it. After initial considerations on the manifold usages of the term “postmodernism,” five composers’ approaches will be analyzed: John Cage, Philip Glass (and other minimalists), Bernhard Lang, Mauricio Kagel and Johannes Kreidler. However different they may be from one another, all these composers are being interpreted as undermining, in various ways, the practice and theoretical background of (...)
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  38. Dance, Music and Dramaturgy: collaboration plan and dramaturgical apparatus.João Paulo Lucas & César Lignelli - 2017 - Revista Brasileira de Estudos de Presença 7 (1):19-44.
    Dance, Music and Dramaturgy: collaboration plan and dramaturgical apparatus – The unfolding of the concept of dramaturgy and the problematics of contemporary choreography are, today, a vast and diverse field of research, bearing numerous disclosures that lead to their reciprocal implication. Apart from that, dance and music share significant complementary ties allowing for the consideration of a common compositional inquiry. Reflecting on the compositional processes of dance and music, this article cross-examines the collaboration between choreographers and (...), integrating the incidence of dramaturgy in the strategies of choreographic and musical composition. (shrink)
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  39. Performing Musical Works Authentically: A Response to Dodd.S. Davies - 2013 - British Journal of Aesthetics 53 (1):71-75.
    A kind of musical authenticity Julian Dodd thinks has been neglected, interpretive authenticity, as he calls it, is intended to provide both an insightful and faithful understanding of the work. This kind of authenticity is distinguished from score compliance authenticity (a view I have defended) on grounds that an authentic musical interpretation can sometimes deliberately depart from the score. I argue that none of the four examples Dodd offers in favour of this hypothesis is uncontroversial. I have less faith than (...)
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  40.  33
    A composer's world.Paul Hindemith - 1952 - Gloucester, Mass.: P. Smith.
    inch....this work is likely to become a standart work very quickly and is to be recommended to all schools where recorder studies are undertaken inch. (Oliver James,Contact Magazine) A novel and comprehensive approach to transferring from the C to F instrument. 430 music examples include folk and national songs (some in two parts), country dance tunes and excerpts from the standard treble repertoire of•Bach, Barsanti, Corelli, Handel, Telemann, etc. An outstanding feature of the book has proved to be Brian (...)
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  41.  85
    Composers and Performers.Junyeol Kim - 2020 - Philosophia 48 (4):1469-1481.
    We take performers of classical music as producers of creative performances. We sometimes criticize a performer’s performance by saying ‘That is not what the composer wants’. The literature takes this kind of criticism, which I call ‘intentionalist criticism’, to be in tension with performers’ creativity—taking the criticism to be an attempt to restrict performers’ creativity by historical authenticity. This paper aims to construct a possible understanding of intentionalist criticisms according to which those criticisms are grounded in our respect of (...)
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  42.  21
    The Composer in the Liberal Arts College.Elliott Schwartz - 2011 - Philosophy of Music Education Review 19 (1):37.
    This essay explores the role of music composition within the curriculum of a typical small liberal arts college and the faculty composer's role(s) in facilitating the study of composition. The relationship between composition and campus performance is discussed, particularly in light of the increased emphasis on performance in formerly all-male colleges (Amherst, Williams, Bowdoin, Dartmouth, and so on) after the advent of coeducation in the 1970s. Other topics include teaching strategies for introducing non-major students to composition, the rise of (...)
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  43.  8
    How Musical Rhythm Reveals Human Attitudes.Gustav Becking - 2011 - Lang. Edited by Nigel Nettheim.
    What is the broadest significance of musical rhythm? Human attitudes to the world are reflected in it, according to Gustav Becking. Writing in the 1920s, Becking proposed a novel method of finding systematic differences of attitude between individual composers, between nations, and between historical time periods. He dealt throughout with Western classical music, from the period approximately 1600-1900. His method was to observe in fine detail the pattern of motion and pressure traced out by a small baton allowed (...)
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  44.  4
    White musical mythologies: sonic presence in modernism.Edmund Mendelssohn - 2023 - Stanford, California: Stanford University Press.
    Examining a series of modernist thinkers and composers who engaged with non-European cultures as they pursued pure sound as a privileged presence, White Musical Mythologies pairs Erik Satie with Bergson, Edgard Varèse with Bataille, Pierre Boulez with Artaud, and John Cage with Derrida to offer an ambitious intellectual history of the colonial roots of modernist musical thought. Each of the musicians studied in this book re-created or appropriated non-European forms of expression as they conceived music ontologically, often thinking (...)
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  45.  8
    Music and the myth of wholeness: toward a new aesthetic paradigm.Tim Hodgkinson - 2016 - Cambridge, Massachusetts: The MIT Press.
    A new theory of aesthetics and music, grounded in the collision between language and the body. In this book, Tim Hodgkinson proposes a theory of aesthetics and music grounded in the boundary between nature and culture within the human being. His analysis discards the conventional idea of the human being as an integrated whole in favor of a rich and complex field in which incompatible kinds of information—biological and cultural—collide. It is only when we acknowledge the clash of (...)
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  46.  65
    Tonality, Musical Form, and Aesthetic Value.Walter Horn - 2015 - Perspectives of New Music 53.
    It has been claimed by Diana Raffman, that atonal (and in particular serial) music can have no aesthetic value, because it is in an important sense meaningless. This worthlessness is claimed to result from cognitive/psychological facts about human listeners that have been confirmed by empirical investigations such as those conducted by Lerdahl and Jackendoff. Similar assertions about the necessary inferiority of 12-tone music have been made by, among others, Taruskin, Cavell, and Goldman, some of whom echo Raffman’s suggestion (...)
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  47.  6
    Music's immanent future: the deleuzian turn in music studies.Sally Macarthur, Judith Irene Lochhead & Jennifer Robin Shaw (eds.) - 2016 - Burlington, VT, USA: Ashgate.
    The conversations generated by the chapters in Music's Immanent Future grapple with some of music's paradoxes: that music of the Western art canon is viewed as timeless and universal while other kinds of music are seen as transitory and ephemeral; that in order to make sense of music we need descriptive language; that to open up the new in music we need to revisit the old; that to arrive at a figuration of music (...)
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  48.  6
    Unsayable music: six reflections on musical semiotics, electroacoustic and digital music.Paulo César de Amorim Chagas - 2014 - Leuven: Leuven University Press.
    Profound theoretical and philosophical approach to contemporary music Unsayable Music presents theoretical, critical and analytical reflections on key topics of contemporary music including acoustic, electroacoustic and digital music, and audiovisual and multimedia composition. Six essays by Paulo C. Chagas approaching music from different perspectives such as philosophy, sociology, cybernetics, musical semiotics, media, and critical studies. Chagas’s practical experience, both as a composer of contemporary music and sound director of the Electronic Music Studio of (...)
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  49.  5
    Musical Functionalism: The Musical Thoughts of Arnold Schoenberg and Paul Hindemith.Magnar Breivik - 2011 - Pendragon Press.
    In this book the concept of functionalism, well-known in 20th-century architecture and design, is used to investigate the musical thoughts of two of the leading composers at the time of the Bauhaus, the time of Adolf Loos and Le Corbusier. Functionalism may be characterized by the functional treatment of the chosen material, by functional design, and by a focus on the work's intended function. This tripartite requirement also defines the concept of musical functionalism as developed in this study, and (...)
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  50.  7
    Music Training, and the Ability of Musicians to Harmonize, Are Associated With Enhanced Planning and Problem-Solving.Jenna L. Winston, Barbara M. Jazwinski, David M. Corey & Paul J. Colombo - 2022 - Frontiers in Psychology 12.
    Music training is associated with enhanced executive function but little is known about the extent to which harmonic aspects of musical training are associated with components of executive function. In the current study, an array of cognitive tests associated with one or more components of executive function, was administered to young adult musicians and non-musicians. To investigate how harmonic aspects of musical training relate to executive function, a test of the ability to compose a four-part harmony was developed and (...)
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