Call#: Van Pelt Library M1002.L77 H85 1950z
Call#: Van Pelt Library M1002.L77 H85 1950z
Call#: University Museum Library MUSEUM ML3838 .B6 1976
tagged death life music relationship social by ncrimes ...on 01-OCT-08
Call#: Van Pelt Library ML3798 .N47 2005
tagged culture function music universals by ncrimes ...on 01-OCT-08
Call#: Van Pelt Library ML3545 .W67 2002
Call#: Van Pelt Library ML3545 .W67 2002
tagged culture function music universals by ncrimes ...on 01-OCT-08
tagged communication emotion function music social universals by ncrimes ...on 01-OCT-08
Call#: Van Pelt Library ML3830 .M965 2001
tagged communication emotion music universals by ncrimes ...on 01-OCT-08
Call#: Van Pelt Library ML3830 .M9822 2005
tagged communication language music universals by ncrimes ...on 01-OCT-08
Call#: Van Pelt Library ML3845 .S628 1998
tagged culture interactive language music particpation universals by ncrimes ...on 01-OCT-08
"All members of a culture that practice music are expected to be abelt to engage with music in culturally appropriate ways" (1: Cross 2008)
"Introduction
In this paper I shall make a number of claims about music. I shall claim that music,
like language, is a fundamental part of the human communicative toolkit. It is
unique and specific to humans, but music is not "natural" while language is
symbolic; music and language are both equally symbolic and natural domains of
human thought and behaviour. I shall propose that music - musicality - underpins
the intellectual and social flexibility displayed by modern humans. As a corollary of
this, I shall claim that many of the most important abstract concepts that frame and
give meaning to human interaction - such as social justice, that aspect of morality
which is concerned with the achievement of equity in human relations - have their
roots in human musicality. I am not proposing that without music there can be no
social justice; I am simply submitting that without musicality the flexibility in
managing social relations that characterises modern humans and that constitutes the
matrix within which abstract conceptions such as social justice can take form is less
likely to have arisen."
SOCIAL RELATIONSHIPS (Management of) - a function performed by all music - "music's inability to express unambiguous meaning underwrites its powers to manage situations of social uncertainty" (2)
HONEST SIGNALLING- "revealing the the receiver qualities of the signaller that are relevant to the communicative situation" (3) " Music, as an expression of emotion, constitutes an 'honest signal' in revealing to a listener qualities of the music's producer that are necessarily concomitant on the nature of the signal" (3)
MOOD INDUCTION PROCEDURE - Music can affect and control moods more effectively than other methods.
MANAGEMENT-ASSESSMENT FRAMEWORK - Animals make sounds to manage "their physical and social envireonments rather than to transmit information" (4)
EXPRESSIVE SIZE SYMBOLISM - A small animal transmits a low frequency to "broadcast an impression of large size" (4)
tagged culturally-enactive honest-signalling meaning motivational-structures signal social socio-intentional by ncrimes ...on 01-OCT-08
Call#: Storage: From RECORD page, use Place Request tab STORAGE ML60 .B63 1995
Call#: Storage: From RECORD page, use Place Request tab STORAGE ML60 .B63 1995
Call#: Van Pelt Library ML60 .B63 1995
Call#: Van Pelt Library ML60 .B63 1995
tagged cultures music universal by ncrimes ...on 01-OCT-08
New issues at the heart of Bach studies
As the official publication of the American Bach Society, Bach Perspectives has pioneered new areas of research in the life, times, and music of Bach since its first appearance in 1995. In a series long known for its major essays by leading Bach scholars and performers, Bach Perspectives, Volume 6 is no exception.
This volume opens with Joshua Rifkin's seminal study of the early source history of the B-minor orchestral suite. It not only elaborates on Rifkin's discovery that the work in its present form for solo flute goes back to an earlier version in A minor, ostensibly for solo violin, but also takes this discovery as the point of departure for a wide-ranging discussion of the origins and extent of Bach's output in the area of concerted ensemble music.
Jeanne Swack presents an enlightening comparison of Georg Phillip Telemann's and Bach's approach to the French overture as concerted movements in their church cantatas, and Steven Zohn views the B-minor orchestral suite from the standpoint of the "concert en ouverture," responding to Rifkin by suggesting that the early version of the B-minor orchestral suite may also have been scored for flute.
"Joshua Rifkin, whose essay on Bach's Ouverture, BWV 1067 forms the major part of this volume, is one of the most virtuosic scholars in the positivist musicology."--Early Music History
"Anyone concerned with Bach or Telemann scholarship, or even merely with German late-Baroque music, will profit from this book."--Music and Letters
Gregory Butler is a professor of musicology at the University of British Columbia, and the author of Bach's Clavier-Übung III: The Making of a Print.
Visit the Google Book Search page for this title
Visit the Google Book Search page for this title
Series:
Bach Perspectives
Subjects:
Music
tagged bach ouverture signifier telemann theological by ncrimes ...on 19-SEP-08
- The Journal of Musicology, Vol. 17, No. 4 (Autumn, 1999), pp. 546-584
- Published by: University of California Press
- Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/763932
- Telemann Research Since 1975
- Source: Acta Musicologica, Vol. 64, Fasc. 2 (Jul. - Dec., 1992), pp. 139-164
- Published by: International Musicological Society
- Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/932913
REVIEW OF:
Jeanne Swack (University of Wisconsin-Madison): the French ouverture as theological signifier in Telemann’s “Jesus sei mein erstes Wort” and “Christ ist erstanden von der Marter alle”
By the early eighteenth century, the French ouverture was well-established in German music as a signifier of both beginnings and of royalty. Both meanings stemmed from its origin as the opening movement of the Lullian tragédie lyrique and ballet, and both translated well into the newly-established genre of the madrigalian cantata, where an opening French ouverture could serve to symbolize beginnings, such as the beginning of the Church year in settings of Neumeister’s “Nun komm, der Heiden Heiland” by both Bach, as well as the Kingship of God.
Telemann, however, goes beyond Bach’s use of the French ouverture by sometimes composing French ouvertures in unusual positions within his cantatas, and at times juxtaposing chorale tunes onto the French ouverture structure in different ways than Bach does. In this paper, I will treat French ouverture movements from two cantatas by Telemann from his 1715 Neumeister cycle: “Jesus sey mein erstes Wort” ( 5th Sunday after Trinity), a cantata which concludes with a French ouverture as the last of ten movements; and “Christ ist erstanden von der Marter alle” (Easter), a cantata which begins somewhat more expectedly as a French ouverture, but which juxtaposes its archaic chorale tune with the French ouverture structure in an unusual fashion. The overriding consideration in Telemann’s unusual treatment of the French ouverture in each of these cases is his concern with the text, and especially in the case of “Jesus sey mein erstes Wort”, with employing the connotations of the French ouverture as a kind of theological exegesis of the cantata text.
tagged ouverture signifier telemann theological by ncrimes ...on 19-SEP-08
A review fo bach overtures metnioning the article
| Apr 2003 | |
| ISBN 0262024969 | |
| 1206 pp. | |
| 243 illus. | |
| Essential Sources in the Scientific Study of Consciousness |
|
Bernard J. Baars William P. Banks James B. Newman
|
tagged cognitive framing memory by ncrimes ...on 18-SEP-08
Call#: Annenberg Library Reserve Ann Res HM291 .G583
Call#: Annenberg Library Reserve Ann Res HM291 .G583
Call#: Annenberg Library Reserve Ann Res HM291 .G583
Call#: Annenberg Library Reserve Ann Res HM291 .G583
Call#: Annenberg Library Reserve Ann Res HM291 .G583
Call#: Annenberg Library Reserve Ann Res HM291 .G583
Call#: Van Pelt Library HM291 .G583
Call#: Van Pelt Library HM291 .G583
Call#: Van Pelt Library HM291 .G583
Call#: Van Pelt Library HM291 .G583
Call#: Van Pelt Library HM291 .G583
Call#: Van Pelt Library HM291 .G583
Call#: Van Pelt Library--4 East--Temporary Location Annenberg HM291 .G583
Call#: Van Pelt Library--4 East--Temporary Location Annenberg HM291 .G583
Call#: Van Pelt Library--4 East--Temporary Location Annenberg HM291 .G583
Call#: Van Pelt Library--4 East--Temporary Location Annenberg HM291 .G583
Call#: Van Pelt Library--4 East--Temporary Location Annenberg HM291 .G583
Call#: Van Pelt Library--4 East--Temporary Location Annenberg HM291 .G583
Call#: Van Pelt Library HM291 .G6 1973
Call#: Van Pelt Library HM291 .G6 1973
Call#: Van Pelt Library ML3830 .P33 2008
tagged biocultural cognition by ncrimes ...on 17-SEP-08
Review of music and meaning by Meyer, view brief overview of terms
tagged gestalt meaning by ncrimes ...on 17-SEP-08
Call#: Van Pelt Library BF109.W47 K56 2005
tagged gestalt theory by ncrimes ...on 17-SEP-08
tagged gestalt musicoogy theory by ncrimes ...on 17-SEP-08
Events that took palce around Dahlhaus's writing of Nineteenth Century Music in the late 1970s
tagged dialectic hegelian by ncrimes ...on 17-SEP-08
tagged dialectic hegelian by ncrimes ...on 17-SEP-08
tagged postpostcolonial by ncrimes ...and 1 other person ...on 08-SEP-08
| Introduction to the major strands of thought that have developed over the last century by world music scholars. A brief history of each theory and its founders is presented, along with practical applications. Topics covered include structural approaches, linguistics, Marxist explanations, cognition and communication theories, performance theory, gender, ethnicity, and identity studies, phenomenology, historical research, and postmodern, postcolonial, and global issues. (publisher) |
tagged analysis postpostcolonial by ncrimes ...and 1 other person ...on 08-SEP-08
| The Enlightenment saw a critical engagement with the ancient idea that music carries certain powers--it heals and pacifies, civilizes and educates. Yet this interest in musical utility seems to conflict with larger notions of aesthetic autonomy that emerged at the same time. This apparent conflict raises questions about the notion of an aesthetic-philosophical break between the 18th and 19th c. The English traveler and music scholar Charles Burney is connected with the ancient myth of Orpheus in discussions of 18th-c. musical travel, views on music's curative powers, interest in non-European music, and concerns about cultural identity. Arguing that what people said about music was central to some of the great Enlightenment debates surrounding such issues as human agency, cultural difference, and national identity, this book adds a new dimension to postcolonial studies, which has typically emphasized the literary and visual at the expense of the aural. It also demonstrates that these discussions must be viewed in context at the era's broad and well-entrenched transnational network, and emphasizes the importance of travel literature in generating knowledge at the time. (publisher) |



