Utvidet returrett til 31. januar 2025

Bøker i Musical Meaning and Interpretation-serien

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  • av Andrew Davis
    411,-

    Music and meaning in Puccini's last works

  • av Nina Penner
    319 - 915,-

    By exploring how practitioners past and present have addressed these issues, Storytelling in Opera and Musical Theater offers suggestions for how opera and musical theater can continue to entertain and enrich the lives of 21st-century audiences.

  • - Musical Expression, Meter, and the Body
    av John Paul Ito
    267 - 863,-

    As Focal Impulse Theory deftly illustrates, these movements are not merely physical reactions; they carry meaning and, in a very real sense, are meaning.

  • - The Construction of Musical Thought in Zarlino, Descartes, Rameau, and Weber
    av Jairo Moreno
    463,-

    Presents an application of Foucault's ideas to music theory.

  • - Structure and Meaning in His Werther Quartet
    av Peter H. Smith
    522,-

    This book is a substantial and timely contribution to Brahms studies. Its strategy is to focus on a single critical work, the C-Minor Piano Quartet, analyzing and interpreting it in great detail, but also using it as a stepping-stone to connect it to other central Brahms works in order to reach a new understanding of the composer's technical language and expressive intent. It is an original and worthy contribution on the music of a major composer."e; -Patrick McCrelessExpressive Forms in Brahms's Instrumental Music integrates a wide variety of analytical methods into a broader study of theoretical approaches, using a single work by Brahms as a case study. On the basis of his findings, Smith considers how Brahms's approach in this piano quartet informs analyses of similar works by Brahms as well as by Beethoven and Mozart.Musical Meaning and Interpretation-Robert S. Hatten, editor

  •  
    510,-

    Presents a survey of the problems and issues inherent in pursuing meaning and signification in music, and attempts to rectify the conundrums that have plagued philosophers, artists, and theorists since the time of Pythagoras. This collection brings together essays that reflect a variety of diverse perspectives on approaches to musical meaning.

  • - Listening, Moving, Feeling, and Thinking
    av Arnie Cox
    371 - 510,-

    Taking a cognitive approach to musical meaning, Arnie Cox explores embodied experiences of hearing music as those that move us both consciously and unconsciously. In this pioneering study that draws on neuroscience and music theory, phenomenology and cognitive science, Cox advances his theory of the "e;mimetic hypothesis,"e; the notion that a large part of our experience and understanding of music involves an embodied imitation in the listener of bodily motions and exertions that are involved in producing music. Through an often unconscious imitation of action and sound, we feel the music as it moves and grows. With applications to tonal and post-tonal Western classical music, to Western vernacular music, and to non-Western music, Cox's work stands to expand the range of phenomena that can be explained by the role of sensory, motor, and affective aspects of human experience and cognition.

  • - Romantic Narratives in Chopin, Schumann, and Brahms
    av Andrew Davis
    371 - 863,-

  • - Osvaldo Golijov, Kaija Saariaho, John Adams, and Tan Dun
    av Yayoi Uno Everett
    463,-

    Yayoi Uno Everett focuses on four operas that helped shape the careers of the composers Osvaldo Golijov, Kaija Saariaho, John Adams, and Tan Dun, which represent a unique encounter of music and production through what Everett calls "e;multimodal narrative."e; Aspects of production design, the mechanics of stagecraft, and their interaction with music and sung texts contribute significantly to the semiotics of operatic storytelling. Everett's study draws on Northrop Frye's theories of myth, Lacanian psychoanalysis via Slavoj iek, Linda and Michael Hutcheon's notion of production, and musical semiotics found in Robert Hatten's concept of troping in order to provide original interpretive models for conceptualizing new operatic narratives.

  • av David P. Neumeyer
    371 - 968,-

  • - Musico-Poetic Associations in Schubert's Song Cycle
    av Lauri Suurpaa
    463,-

    Lauri Suurpaa brings together two rigorous methodologies, Greimassian semiotics and Schenkerian analysis, to provide a unique perspective on the expressive power of Franz Schubert's song cycle. Focusing on the final songs, Suurpaa deftly combines textual and tonal analysis to reveal death as a symbolic presence if not actual character in the musical narrative. Suurpaa demonstrates the incongruities between semantic content and musical representation as it surfaces throughout the final songs. This close reading of the winter songs, coupled with creative applications of theory and a thorough history of the poetic and musical genesis of this work, brings new insights to the study of text-music relationships and the song cycle.

  • - A History through Musical Topic Theory
    av William Echard
    371 - 915,-

  • av Michael L. Klein
    424,-

    Departing from the traditional German school of music theorists, Michael Klein injects a unique French critical theory perspective into the framework of music and meaning. Using primarily Lacanian notions of the symptom, that unnamable jouissance located in the unconscious, and the registers of subjectivity (the Imaginary, the Symbolic Order, and the Real), Klein explores how we understand music as both an artistic form created by "e;the subject"e; and an artistic expression of a culture that imposes its history on this modern subject. By creatively navigating from critical theory to music, film, fiction, and back to music, Klein distills the kinds of meaning that we have been missing when we perform, listen to, think about, and write about music without the insights of Lacan and others into formulations of modern subjectivity.

  • - Compositional Theory and Practice in Nineteenth-Century Opera
    av Nicholas Baragwanath
    510,-

    The theory and practice of Italian musical composition

  • - A Study of Dance-Music Relations in 3/4 Time
    av Eric J. McKee
    467,-

    Studies music and social dance in the 18th and 19th centuries

  • - Essays in Analysis and Meaning
     
    463,-

    Shows how Brahms organized musical elements for expressive purposes

  • - Mozart, Beethoven, Schubert
    av Robert S. Hatten
    395,-

    A study of Mozart, Beethoven, and Schubert by an award-winning author.

  • av Michael L. Klein
    463,-

    Considers questions relating to music and meaning.

  • - Adorno and Beethoven's Late Style
    av Michael Spitzer
    495,-

    A provocative and innovative study of Adorno's writings on Beethoven

  • - Markedness, Correlation, and Interpretation
    av Robert S. Hatten
    318,-

    Presents an award-winning examination of Beethoven's music.

  • av Melanie Lowe
    415,-

    In so doing, we surprisingly regain something of the classical symphony's historical ways of meaning.

  • - The Impact of His Music on Popular Culture
    av Matthew G. Brown
    371,-

    Discusses Debussy's music in the context of pop culture

  • - Castrati, Travesti, and the Second Woman in Early-Nineteenth-Century Italian Opera
    av Naomi Andre
    267,-

    The early 19th century was a period of acute transition in operatic tradition and style, when time-honoured practices gave way to the developing aesthetics of Romanticism, and the heroic, the masculine, and the feminine were profoundly reconfigured. This book traces the development of female characters in these first decades of the century.

  • - The Theory and Practice of Embodied Interpretation
    av ROGER Pierce
    277,-

    Applying gesture to explore performance, therapeutic, and compositional practices

  •  
    510,-

    When Igor Stravinsky''s ballet Le Sacre du printemps (The Rite of Spring) premiered during the 1913 Paris season of Sergei Diaghilev''s Ballets Russes, its avant-garde music and jarring choreography scandalized audiences. Today it is considered one of the most influential musical works of the twentieth century. In this volume, the ballet finally receives the full critical attention it deserves, as distinguished music and dance scholars discuss the meaning of the work and its far-reaching influence on world music, performance, and culture. Essays explore four key facets of the ballet: its choreography and movement; the cultural and historical contexts of its performance and reception in France; its structure and use of innovative rhythmic and tonal features; and the reception of the work in Russian music history and theory.

  • av Leo Treitler
    371,-

    How meaning has been made in music throughout history

  • av Byron Almen
    371 - 411,-

    Byron Almen proposes an original synthesis of approaches to musical narrative from literary criticism, semiotics, historiography, musicology, and music theory, resulting in a significant critical reorientation of the field. This volume includes an extensive survey of traditional approaches to musical narrative illustrated by a wide variety of musical examples that highlight the range and applicability of the theoretical apparatus. Almen provides a careful delineation of the essential elements and preconditions of musical narrative organization, an eclectic analytical model applicable to a wide range of musical styles and repertoires, a classification scheme of narrative types and subtypes reflecting conceptually distinct narrative strategies, a wide array of interpretive categories, and a sensitivity to the dependence of narrative interpretation on the cultural milieu of the work, its various audiences, and the analyst. A Theory of Musical Narrative provides both an excellent introduction to an increasingly important conceptual domain and a complex reassessment of its possibilities and characteristics.

  • - Writings on Musical Form and Signification
    av David Lidov
    411,-

    If music is a universal language, is language a universal music?

  • av Marianne Wheeldon
    371,-

    Explores Claude Debussy's musical responses to the World War I. This work encompasses not only the duration of the war but also the last four years of Debussy's life, and the works that emerged during this time that reflect both wartime events and the composer's self-conscious desire to define his musical legacy.

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