Results for 'Popular music Psychological aspects.'

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  1.  6
    Listening to the unconscious: adventures in popular music and psychoanalysis.Kenneth M. Smith - 2023 - New York: Bloomsbury Academic. Edited by Stephen Overy.
    An examination of the unconscious as it relates to popular music and the first truly interdisciplinary book on philosophy and popular music with equal weight given to each discipline.
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  2.  9
    Musical intimacy: construction, connection, and engagement.Zack Stiegler - 2023 - New York: Bloomsbury Academic. Edited by Todd Campbell.
    Analyzes popular music's aesthetics, production, marketing, and consumption toward articulating a clearer understanding of how intimacy is constructed, mediated, and perceived in and through music.
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  3.  8
    Science, music, and mathematics: the deepest connections.Michael Edgeworth McIntyre - 2021 - Hackensack, NJ: World Scientific Publishing.
    Professor Michael Edgeworth McIntyre is an eminent scientist who has also had a part-time career as a musician. From a lifetime's thinking, he offers this extraordinary synthesis exposing the deepest connections between science, music, and mathematics, while avoiding equations and technical jargon. He begins with perception psychology and the dichotomization instinct and then takes us through biological evolution, human language, and acausality illusions all the way to the climate crisis and the weaponization of the social media, and beyond that (...)
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  4.  34
    Disciplines of delight: the psychoanalysis of popular culture.Barry Richards - 1994 - London: Free Association Books.
    In recent times it has seemed to many people as if the unifying impact of mass forms of popular culture has been overshadowed by the postmodernism of cultural pluralism, identity politics, niche marketing and lifestyle diversity. Using insights from psychoanalysis, this new book suggests that powerful forces may still be at work extending and deepening their hold on popular experience through the unifying forms of modern culture. The practices and aesthetic codes of popular culture provide ways of (...)
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  5.  7
    Musical Beliefs: Psychoacoustic, Mythical, and Educational Perspectives.Robert Walker - 1990 - New York: Teachers College Press.
    In this book, the author argues that what constitutes music in various societies is culturally based, not the result of some universal aspect of human physical and psychological make-up. This is true not only in non-Western music cultures, but in the West as well. Contrary to popular belief among musicians and the general public, the basis of Western music and acoustics is not scientific, but superstitious. Pythagorean mathematics as it relates to harmonics does not work, (...)
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  6.  3
    On Some Psychological Aspects of the Chinese Musical System.Andrew Seth - 1892 - Philosophical Review 1 (2):154-178.
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  7.  28
    On some psychological aspects of the chinese musical system.Benjamin Ives Gilman - 1892 - Philosophical Review 1 (1):54-78.
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  8. Repetition as a structuring device. From sectional refrains to repeated verses : the rise of the AABA form / Olivier Julien ; Standard jazz harmony and the constraints of hypermeter : some thoughts on periodic forms and their phrase-rhythmic irregularities / Keith Salley and Daniel T. Shanahan ; A psychological perspective on repetition in popular music.Trevor de Clercq & Elizabeth Hellmuth Margulis - 2018 - In Olivier Julien & Christophe Levaux (eds.), Over and over: exploring repetition in popular music. New York: Bloomsbury Academic.
     
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  9.  17
    Mythic and theoretic aspects of the concept of 'the unconscious' in popular and psychological discourse.David Edwards - 2003 - Indo-Pacific Journal of Phenomenology 3 (1):1-14.
    It could be argued that mythology dramatizes aspects of our relationship with potent forces of which we have little understanding and over which we have little control. Moreover, many of these forces are less concrete than the forces of nature and arise from an apprehension of our existential predicaments, our interpersonal vulnerability and the intensity of our own psychological pain. This paper argues that in many contemporary discourses this territory is referred to more neutrally as ‘the unconscious'. Within this (...)
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  10.  30
    Otto Rudolph Ortmann, Music Philosophy, and Music Education.David J. Gonzol - 2004 - Philosophy of Music Education Review 12 (2):160-180.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Otto Rudolph Ortmann, Music Philosophy, and Music EducationDavid J. GonzolWhat is music? What should we teach when we teach music? How should we? In the early twentieth century, these most foundational questions relating to music education were addressed by the highly regarded, though less well known, educator and researcher, Otto Rudolph Ortmann. In 1922, he published an article in which he outlined a theory (...)
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  11.  11
    Over and over: exploring repetition in popular music.Olivier Julien & Christophe Levaux (eds.) - 2018 - New York: Bloomsbury Academic.
    From the Tin Pan Alley 32-bar form, through the cyclical forms of modal jazz, to the more recent accumulation of digital layers, beats, and breaks in Electronic Dance Music, repetition as both an aesthetic disposition and a formal property has stimulated a diverse range of genres and techniques. From the angles of musicology, psychology, sociology, and science and technology, Over and Over reassesses the complexity connected to notions of repetition in a variety of musical genres. The first edited volume (...)
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  12.  93
    How Classical Music is Better than Popular Music.James O. Young - 2016 - Philosophy 91 (4):523-540.
    In at least one respect, classical music is superior to popular music. Classical music has greater potential for expressiveness and, consequently, has more potential for psychological insight and profundity. The greater potential for expressiveness in classical music is due, in large part, to it greater harmonic resources. The harmonies in classical music are more likely to be functional, more contrary motion is employed, and modulation is more common. Although popular music employs (...)
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  13. Radical religious thought in Black popular music. Five Percenters and Bobo Shanti in Rap and Reggae.Martin Abdel Matin Gansinger - 2017 - Hamburg, Germany: Anchor.
    This book is discussing patterns of radical religious thought in popular forms of Black music. The consistent influence of the Five Percent Nation on Rap music as one of the most esoteric groups among the manifold Black Muslim movements has already gained scholarly attention. However, it shares more than a strong pattern of reversed racism with the Bobo Shanti Order, the most rigid branch of the Rastafarian faith, globally popularized by Dancehall-Reggae artists like Sizzla or Capleton. Authentic (...)
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  14.  97
    Music and consciousness: philosophical, psychological, and cultural perspectives.David Clarke & Eric Clarke (eds.) - 2011 - New York: Oxford University Press.
    What is consciousness? Why and when do we have it? Where does it come from, and how does it relate to the lump of squishy grey matter in our heads, or to our material and social worlds? While neuroscientists, philosophers, psychologists, historians, and cultural theorists offer widely different perspectives on these fundamental questions concerning what it is like to be human, most agree that consciousness represents a 'hard problem'. -/- The emergence of consciousness studies as a multidisciplinary discourse addressing these (...)
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  15.  12
    Listening in the Mix: Lead Vocals Robustly Attract Auditory Attention in Popular Music.Michel Bürgel, Lorenzo Picinali & Kai Siedenburg - 2021 - Frontiers in Psychology 12.
    Listeners can attend to and track instruments or singing voices in complex musical mixtures, even though the acoustical energy of sounds from individual instruments may overlap in time and frequency. In popular music, lead vocals are often accompanied by sound mixtures from a variety of instruments, such as drums, bass, keyboards, and guitars. However, little is known about how the perceptual organization of such musical scenes is affected by selective attention, and which acoustic features play the most important (...)
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  16.  10
    Listening Niches across a Century of Popular Music.Krumhansl Carol Lynne - 2017 - Frontiers in Psychology 8.
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  17.  8
    Pop/music + medien/kunst: der musikalisierte Alltag der digital culture.Werner Jauk - 2009 - Osnabrück: Electronic Publishing.
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  18. The meaning of music: a study in psychological aesthetics.Carroll C. Pratt - 1931 - New York: Johnson Reprint.
  19.  6
    Kamikaze Musike: Playlist.Peter Trawny - 2019 - Berlin: Matthes & Seitz Berlin.
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  20.  24
    Music cognition and aesthetic attitudes.Harold E. Fiske - 1993 - Lewiston, N.Y.: E. Mellen Press.
    This study develops a theory about the interaction between music cognition and affective response. The theory demonstrates how musical thinking, knowledge, and decision-making result in qualitative musical behaviour. It reports new findings about the cognitive representation of musical structures, imagery as an auditory-phenomenological descriptor of music, aesthetic response as an outcome of specific cognitive decisions, and the value of music in cross-cultural human development. Each of the seven essays identifies a problem in music psychology that is (...)
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  21.  11
    Brian O'Shaughnessy.Implications of Dual Aspectism - 2003 - In Johannes Roessler & Naomi Eilan (eds.), Agency and Self-Awareness: Issues in Philosophy and Psychology. Oxford University Press.
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  22. Why music moves us.Jeanette Bicknell - 2009 - New York: Palgrave-Macmillan.
    The tears of Odysseus -- History : music gives voice to the ineffable -- Tears, chills, and broken bones -- The music itself -- Explaining strong emotional responses to music I -- Explaining strong emotional responses to music II -- The sublime, revisited -- Conclusion : values.
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  23.  10
    Music and embodied cognition: listening, moving, feeling, and thinking.Arnie Cox - 2016 - Indianapolis: Indiana University Press.
    Mimetic comprehension -- Mimetic comprehension of music -- Metaphor and related means of reasoning -- Pitch height -- Temporal motion and musical motion -- Perspectives on musical motion -- Music and the external senses -- Musical affect -- Applications -- Review and implications.
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  24.  7
    Music and Consciousness 2: Worlds, Practices, Modalities.Ruth Herbert, Eric Clarke & David Clarke (eds.) - 2019 - Oxford: Oxford University Press.
    Consciousness has been described as one of the most mysterious things in the universe. Scientists, philosophers, and commentators from a whole range of disciplines can't seem to agree on what it is, generating a sizeable field of contemporary research known as consciousness studies. Following its forebear Music and Consciousness: Philosophical, Psychological and Cultural Perspectives, this volume argues that music can provide a valuable route to understanding consciousness, and also that consciousness opens up new perspectives for the study (...)
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  25. 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 (...)
  26. Music and the Emotions: The Philosophical Theories.Malcolm Budd - 1985 - Boston: Routledge.
    It has often been claimed, and frequently denied, that music derives some or all of its artistic value from the relation in which it stands to the emotions. This book presents and subjects to critical examination the chief theories about the relationship between the art of music and the emotions.
  27. Emotion and meaning in music.Leonard B. Meyer - 1956 - [Chicago]: University of Chicago Press.
    Analyzes the meaning expressed in music, the social and psychological sources of meaning, and the methods of musical communication This is a book meant for ...
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  28.  6
    Music and the crises of the modern subject.Michael Leslie Klein - 2015 - Indianapolis: Indiana University Press.
    Music and the symptom -- The acoustic mirror as formative of auditory pleasure and fantasy : Chopin's Berceuse, Brahms's Romanze, and Saariaho's "Parfum de l'instant" -- Debussy and the three machines of the Proustian narrative -- Chopin dreams : the Mazurka in C♯ minor as sinthome -- Intermezzo : on agency -- Postmodern quotation, the signifying chain, and the erasure of history -- Lutoslawski, molar and molecular.
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  29.  16
    The Routledge companion to music cognition.Richard Ashley & Renee Timmers (eds.) - 2017 - New York, NY: Routledge.
    This Companion addresses fundamental questions about the nature of music from a psychological perspective. Music cognition is presented as the field that investigates the psychological, physiological, and physical processes that allow music to take place, seeking to explain how and why music has such powerful and mysterious effects on us. This volume provides a comprehensive overview of research in music cognition, balancing accessibility with depth and sophistication. A diverse range of global scholars-music (...)
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  30.  84
    Music and Conceptualization.Mark Andrew DeBellis - 1995 - New York, NY: Cambridge University Press.
    This book is a philosophical study of the relations between hearing and thinking about music. The central problem it addresses is as follows: how is it possible to talk about what a listener perceives in terms that the listener does not recognize? By applying the concepts and techniques of analytic philosophy the author explores the ways in which musical hearing may be described as nonconceptual, and how such mental representation contrasts with conceptual thought. The author is both philosopher and (...)
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  31.  15
    Music.Nicholas Cook - 2010 - New York, NY: Sterling.
    Musical values -- Back to Beethoven -- A state of crisis? -- An imaginary object -- A matter of representation -- Music and the academy -- Music and gender.
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  32.  76
    Music in the moment.Jerrold Levinson - 1997 - Ithaca, N.Y.: Cornell University Press.
    Does aural understanding depend upon reflective awareness of musical architecture or large-scale musical structure? Jerrold Levinson thinks not.
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  33.  83
    Music, imagination, and culture.Nicholas Cook - 1990 - New York: Oxford University Press.
    Drawing on psychological and philosophical materials as well as the analysis of specific musical examples, Cook here defines the difference between music...
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  34. Music and its lovers.Vernon Lee - 1932 - London: G. Allen & Unwin.
     
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  35.  14
    Unfinished music.Richard Kramer - 2008 - New York: Oxford University Press.
    First things -- Emanuel Bach and the allure of the irrational -- Between enlightenment and romance -- Beethoven : confronting the past -- Fragments -- Death masks.
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  36.  13
    THEterm tonal music can be applied to a large variety of musical styles in the West. This includes that of the four periods (Baroque, Classical, Romantic, and Modern) into which Western art-music is commonly divided, as well as other musical styles from popular.Emmanuel Bigand & Bénédicte Poulin-Charronnat - 2008 - In Susan Hallam, Ian Cross & Michael Thaut (eds.), Oxford Handbook of Music Psychology. Oxford University Press.
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  37.  23
    Miscommunication of science: music cognition research in the popular press.Samuel A. Mehr - 2015 - Frontiers in Psychology 6.
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  38.  23
    Listening subjects: music, psychoanalysis, culture.David Schwarz - 1997 - Durham: Duke University Press.
    In Listening Subjects, David Schwarz uses psychoanalytic techniques to probe the visceral experiences of music listeners.
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  39.  10
    Music, metamorphosis and capitalism: self, poetics and politics.John Wall (ed.) - 2007 - Newcastle, UK: Cambridge Scholars Press.
    The essays in this volume look at various kinds of music from a number of perspectives, including the socio-political, the aesthetic and the psychological. The music under discussion here is diverse but fits loosely into the categories rock-pop, new music, rap, metal and music video, with the caveat that much of the music discussed here is historically layered and engages self-consciously in the deconstruction of music genres. If there is an interpretative theme that (...)
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  40.  6
    Connectionist representations of tonal music: discovering musical patterns by interpreting artificial neural networks.Michael Robert William Dawson - 2018 - Edmonton, Alberta: AU Press.
    Intended to introduce readers to the use of artificial neural networks in the study of music, this volume contains numerous case studies and research findings that address problems related to identifying scales, keys, classifying musical chords, and learning jazz chord progressions. A detailed analysis of networks is provided for each case study which together demonstrate that focusing on the internal structure of trained networks could yield important contributions to the field of music cognition.
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  41.  4
    The secret of music: a look at the listening life.Joshua McGuire - 2019 - Brunswick, Maine: Shanti Arts Publishing.
    What is this fleeting experience that sometimes hits us when we listen to music? Through several short essays adapted from lectures given at Vanderbilt University between 2008 and 2012, author Joshua McGuire answers this question while exploring what it takes to become better listeners of music. McGuire's premise is that listening to music in a fuller way shows us a fuller way to live, clarifying the way we listen to everything. Ironically, better listening involves a recognition of (...)
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  42. Moribund music: can classical music be saved?Carolyn Beckingham - 2009 - Portland: Sussex Academic Press.
    What's wrong with music? -- A century of cultural earthquakes -- Crossover music : help or hindrance? -- Opera : a special case? -- Are schools the solution? -- Where do we go from here?
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  43.  14
    Sound and affect: voice, music, world.Judith Lochhead, Eduardo Mendieta & Stephen Decatur Smith (eds.) - 2021 - Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
    Studies of affect and emotions have blossomed in recent decades across the humanities, neurosciences, and social sciences. In music scholarship, they have often built on the discipline's attention to what music theorists since the Renaissance have described as music's unique ability to arouse passions in listeners. In this timely volume, the editors seek to combine this 'affective turn' with the 'sound turn' in the humanities, which has profitably shifted attention from the visual to the aural, as well (...)
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  44. Characterizing Listener Engagement with Popular Songs Using Large-Scale Music Discovery Data.Blair Kaneshiro, Feng Ruan, Casey W. Baker & Jonathan Berger - 2017 - Frontiers in Psychology 8.
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  45. Music Communicates Affects, Not Basic Emotions – A Constructionist Account of Attribution of Emotional Meanings to Music.Julian Cespedes-Guevara & Tuomas Eerola - 2018 - Frontiers in Psychology 9.
    Basic Emotion theory has had a tremendous influence on the affective sciences, including music psychology, where most researchers have assumed that music expressivity is constrained to a limited set of basic emotions. Several scholars suggested that these constrains to musical expressivity are explained by the existence of a shared acoustic code to the expression of emotions in music and speech prosody. In this article we advocate for a shift from this focus on basic emotions to a constructionist (...)
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  46.  6
    Tween pop: children's music and public culture.Tyler Bickford - 2020 - Durham: Duke University Press.
    TWEEN POP examines the creation of the "tween" in the early 2000s as a gendered and raced consumer audience. The tween, aged nine to twelve, and usually thought of as a white girl, occupies a temporality between childhood and adolescence: she has aged out of children's products but is too young to fully engage in marketing directed at teenagers. But, as Tyler Bickford argues, this seemingly narrow market grew to broadly include four to fifteen year olds, with producers and marketers (...)
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  47. About communication of collectively improvised music. Communication Theoretical and Intercultural Aspects.Martin A. M. Gansinger - 2020 - Editions universitaires européennes.
    The musical method of collective improvisation expresses a conception of the game whose democratic-emancipatory basic attitude suggests comparisons with the concept of the ideal speech situation formulated by Jürgen Habermas. This presumption is explained in more detail within the framework of an introductory approach to collective improvisation as a process of relationship characterized by interactivity and synchronicity. After a discussion of improvisational action in music with regard to theoretical, historical and psychological aspects, the various developmental stages of free (...)
     
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  48.  11
    Enacting musical time: the bodily experience of new music.Mariusz Kozak - 2020 - New York, NY: Oxford University Press.
    A compelling approach among works on temporality, phenomenology, and the ecologies of the new sound worlds, Enacting Musical Time argues that musical time is itself the site of the interaction between musical sounds and a situated, embodied listener, created by the moving bodies of participants engaged in musical activities.
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  49.  10
    Voices, bodies, practices: performing musical subjectivities.Catherine Laws - 2019 - Leuven (Belgium): Leuven University Press. Edited by William Brooks, David Gorton, Thanh Thủy Nguyễn, Stefan Östersjö & Jeremy J. Wells.
    Who is the 'I' that performs? The arts of the twentieth and twenty-first centuries have pushed us relentlessly to reconsider our notions of the self, expression, and communication: to ask ourselves, again and again, who we think we are and how we can speak meaningfully to one another. Although in other performing arts studies, especially of theatre, the performance of selfhood and identity continues to be a matter of lively debate in both practice and theory, the question of how a (...)
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  50. Two Concepts of Groove: Musical Nuances, Rhythm, and Genre.Evan Malone - 2022 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 80 (3):345-354.
    Groove, as a musical quality, is an important part of jazz and pop music appreciative practices. Groove talk is widespread among musicians and audiences, and considerable importance is placed on generating and appreciating grooves in music. However, musicians, musicologists, and audiences use groove attributions in a variety of ways that do not track one consistent underlying concept. I argue that that there are at least two distinct concepts of groove. On one account, groove is ‘the feel of the (...)
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