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Books > Music > Theory of music & musicology > General
Carl Schachter is the world's leading practitioner of Schenkerian
theory and analysis. His articles and books have been broadly
influential, and are seen by many as models of musical insight and
lucid prose. Yet, perhaps his greatest impact has been felt in the
classroom. At the Mannes College of Music, the Juilliard School of
Music, Queens College and the Graduate Center of the City
University of New York, and at special pedagogical events around
the world, he has taught generations of musical performers,
composers, historians, and theorists over the course of his long
career. In Fall 2012, Schachter taught a doctoral seminar at the
CUNY Graduate Center in which he talked about the music and the
musical issues that have concerned him most deeply; the course was
in essence a summation of his extensive and renowned teaching. In
The Art of Tonal Analysis, music theorist Joseph Straus presents
edited transcripts of those lectures. Accompanied by abundant music
examples, including analytical examples transcribed from the
classroom blackboard, Straus's own visualizations of material that
Schachter presented aurally at the piano, and Schachter's own
extended Schenkerian graphs and sketches, this book offers a vivid
account of Schachter's masterful pedagogy and his deep insight into
the central works of the tonal canon. In making the lectures of one
of the world's most extraordinary musicians and musical thinkers
available to a wide audience, The Art of Tonal Analysis is an
invaluable resource for students and scholars of music.
The Culture of AIDS in Africa enters into the many worlds of
expression brought forth across this vast continent by the ravaging
presence of HIV/AIDS. Africans and non-Africans, physicians and
social scientists, journalists and documentarians share here a
common and essential interest in understanding creative expression
in crushing and uncertain times. They investigate and engage the
social networks, power relationships, and cultural structures that
enable the arts to convey messages of hope and healing, and of
knowledge and good counsel to the wider community. And from Africa
to the wider world, they bring intimate, inspiring portraits of the
performers, artists, communities, and organizations that have
shared with them their insights and the sense they have made of
their lives and actions from deep within this devastating epidemic.
Covering the wide expanse of the African continent, the 30 chapters
include explorations of, for example, the use of music to cope with
AIDS; the relationship between music, HIV/AIDS, and social change;
visual approaches to HIV literacy; radio and television as tools
for "edutainment;" several individual artists' confrontations with
HIV/AIDS; various performance groups' response to the epidemic;
combating HIV/AIDS with local cultural performance; and more.
Source material, such as song lyrics and interviews, weaves
throughout the collection, and contributions by editors Gregory Baz
and Judah M. Cohen bookend the whole, to bring together a vast
array of perspectives and sources into a nuanced and profoundly
affective portrayal of the intricate relationship between HIV/AIDS
and the arts in Africa.
"Over the Rainbow" exploded into worldwide fame upon its
performance by Judy Garland in the MGM film musical The Wizard of
Oz (1939). Voted the greatest song of the twentieth century in a
2000 survey, it is a masterful, delicate balance of sophistication
and child-like simplicity in which composer Harold Arlen and
lyricist E. Y. "Yip" Harburg poignantly captured the hope and
anxiety harbored by Dorothy's character. In Arlen and Harburg's
Over the Rainbow, author Walter Frisch traces the history of this
song from its inception during the development of The Wizard of
Oz's screenplay, to its various reinterpretations over the course
of the twentieth century. Through analysis of the song's music and
lyrics, this Oxford Keynotes volume provides a close reading of the
piece while examining the evolution of its meaning as it traversed
widely varying cultural contexts. From its adoption as a jazz
standard by generations of pianists, to its contribution to Judy
Garland's role as a gay icon, to its reemergence as a chart-topping
recording by Hawaiian singer Israel Kamakawiwo'ole, "Over the
Rainbow" continues to engage audiences and performers alike in
surprising ways. Featuring a companion website with audio and video
supplements, this book leaves no path unexplored as it succeeds in
capturing the extent of this song's impact on the world.
Music Education for Children with Autism Spectrum Disorder: A
Resource for Teachers provides foundational information about
autism spectrum disorder and strategies for engaging students with
ASD in music-based activities such as singing, listening, moving,
and playing instruments. This practical resource supplies
invaluable frameworks for teachers who work with early-years
students. The book first provides readers with background
information about ASD and how students with this condition manage
their behaviors in school environments. It then progresses to
provide teachers with information about planning music-based
instruction for students on the spectrum. In the book's midsection,
readers learn how students with ASD perceive, remember, and
articulate pitch perception. Following chapters present a series of
practical ideas for engaging students with ASD though songs and
singing and concentrate on skills in music listening, most notably
on activities that motivate students with ASD to interact with
others through joint attention. Challenges that individuals with
ASD experience in motor processing are examined, including
difficulties with gait and coordination, motor planning, object
control, and imitation. This is followed by practical teaching
suggestions for engaging students with activities in which movement
is mediated through sound (e.g., drum beats) and music. Closing
chapters introduce non-pitched percussion instruments along with
activities in which children engage in multisensory experiences by
playing instruments-musical activities described in preceding
chapters are combined with stories and drama to create musical
narratives. Music Education for Children with Autism Spectrum
Disorder is accompanied by a companion website that supplies
helpful supplemental materials including audio of songs notated in
the book for easy access.
Music Criticism in Vienna is a close study of the work of some two dozen music critics in Vienna in the fifteen months from October 1896 to December 1897, a period which saw the deaths of Bruckner and Brahms and the rise of Mahler and Richard Strauss. It reconstructs in detail the climate of musical debate in a major centre around the turn of the century.
Movies have never been the same since MTV. While the classic
symphonic film score promised direct insight into a character's
mind, the expanded role of popular music has made more ambiguous
the question of when, if ever, we are allowed to see or share a
character's emotions. As a result, the potential for irony and
ambiguity has multiplied exponentially, and characterization and
narrative capacities have fragmented. At the most basic level, this
new aesthetic has required filmgoers to renegotiate some of their
most basic instinctual connections with the human voice and with
any sense of a filmmaking self. Music videos widened the creative
vocabulary of filmmaking: they increased speeds of event in cinema
and deflecting filmmakers from narrative, characterization, and
storytelling toward a concentration on situation, feeling, mood,
and time. Popular Music and the New Auteur charts the impact of
music videos on seven visionary directors: Martin Scorsese, Sofia
Coppola, David Lynch, Wong Kar-Wai, the Coen brothers, Quentin
Tarantino, and Wes Anderson. Ashby and his contributors define
these filmmakers' relation to the soundtrack as their key authorial
gesture. These filmmakers demonstrate a fresh kind of cinematic
musicality by writing against music rather than against script, and
allowing pop songs a determining role in narrative and imagery.
Featuring important new theoretical work by some of the most
stimulating and provocative writers in the area today, Popular
Music and the New Auteur will be required reading for all who study
film music and sound. It will also be particularly relevant for
readers in popular music studies, and its intervention in the
ongoing debate on auteurism will make it necessary reading in film
studies.
How does the immediate experience of musical sound relate to
processes of meaning construction and discursive mediation?
This question lies at the heart of the studies presented in
Experience and Meaning in Music Performance, a unique
multi-authored work that both draws on and contributes to current
debates in a wide range of disciplines, including ethnomusicology,
musicology, psychology, and cognitive science. Addressing a wide
range of musical practices from Indian raga and Afro-Brazilian
Congado rituals to jazz, rock, and Canadian aboriginal fiddling,
the coherence of this study is underpinned by its three main
themes: experience, meaning, and performance. Central to all of the
studies are moments of performance: those junctures when sound and
meaning are actually produced. Experience-what people do, and what
they feel, while engaging in music-is equally important. And
considered alongside these is meaning: what people put into a
performance, what they (and others) get out of it, and, more
broadly, how discourses shape performances and experiences of
music. In tracing trajectories from moments of musical execution,
this volume a novel and productive view of how cultural practice
relates to the experience and meaning of musical performance.
A model of interdisciplinary study, and including access to an
array of audio-visual materials available on an extensive companion
website, Experience and Meaning in Music Performance is essential
reading for scholars and students of ethnomusicology and music
psychology.
Until recently, most scholars neglected the power of hearing cinema
as well as seeing it. Understanding Sound Tracks Through Film
Theory breaks new ground by redirecting the arguments of
foundational texts within film theory to film sound tracks. The
book includes sustained analyses of particular films according to a
range of theoretical approaches: psychoanalysis, feminism, genre
studies, post-colonialism, and queer theory. The films come from
disparate temporal and industrial contexts: from Classical
Hollywood Gothic melodrama (Rebecca (1940)), to contemporary,
critically-acclaimed science fiction (Gravity (2013)). Along with
sound tracks from canonical American films, such as The Searchers
(1956) and To Have and Have Not (1944), Walker analyzes independent
Australasian films: examples include Heavenly Creatures (1994), a
New Zealand film that uses music to empower its queer female
protagonists; and Ten Canoes (2006), the first Australian feature
film with a script entirely in Aboriginal languages. Understanding
Sound Tracks Through Film Theory thus not only calls new attention
to the significance of sound tracks-it also focuses on the sonic
power of characters representing those whose voices have all too
often been drowned out. Dominant studies of film music tend to be
written for those who are already musically trained. Similarly,
studies of film sound tend to be jargon-heavy. By contrast,
Understanding Sound Tracks Through Film Theory is both rigorous and
accessible to all scholars with a basic grasp of cinematic and
musical structures. Moreover, the book brings together film
studies, musicology, history, politics, and culture. Therefore,
Understanding Sound Tracks Through Film Theory will resonate for
scholars across the liberal arts, and for anyone interested in
challenging the so-called "hegemony of the visual."
This book puts sampling studies on the academic map by focusing on
sampling as a logic of exchange between audio-visual media. While
some recent scholarship has addressed sampling primarily in
relation to copyright, this book is a first: a critical study of
sampling and remixing across audio-visual media. Of special
interest here are works that bring together both audio and visual
sampling: music that samples film and television; underground dance
and multimedia scenes that rely on sampling; Internet "memes" that
repurpose music videos, trailers and news broadcasts; films and
videos that incorporate a wide range of sampling aesthetics; and
other provocative variations. Comprised of four sections titled
"roots," "scenes," "cinema" and "web" this collection digs deep
into and across sampling practices that intervene in popular
culture from unconventional or subversive perspectives. To this
end, Sampling Media extends the conceptual boundaries of sampling
by emphasizing its inter-medial dimensions, exploring the politics
of sampling practice beyond copyright law, and examining its more
marginal applications. It likewise puts into conversation
compelling instances of sampling from a wide variety of historical
and contemporary, global and local contexts.
Drawing generously from four centuries of Italian, German and
French art song, Exploring Art Song Lyrics embraces the finest of
the literature and presents the repertoire with unprecedented
clarity and detail. Each of the over 750 selections comprises the
original poem, a concise English translation, and an IPA
transcription which is uniquely designed to match the musical
setting. Enunciation and transcription charts are included for each
language on a single, easy to read page. A thorough discussion of
the method of transcription is provided in the appendix. With its
wide-ranging scope of repertoire, and invaluable tools for
interpretation and performance, Exploring Art Song Lyrics is an
essential resource for the professional singer, voice teacher, and
student.
Music is one of the most distinctive cultural characteristics of
Latin American countries. But, while many people in the United
States and Europe are familiar with musical genres such as salsa,
merengue, and reggaeton, the musical manifestations that young
people listen to in most Latin American countries are much more
varied than these commercially successful ones that have entered
the American and European markets. Not only that, the young people
themselves often have little in common with the stereotypical image
of them that exists in the American imagination.
Bridging this divide between perception and reality, Music and
Youth Culture in Latin America brings together contributors from
throughout Latin America and the US to examine the ways in which
music is used to advance identity claims in several Latin American
countries and among Latinos in the US. From young Latin American
musicians who want to participate in the vibrant jazz scene of New
York without losing their cultural roots, to Peruvian rockers who
sing in their native language (Quechua) for the same reasons, to
the young Cubans who use music to construct a post-communist social
identification, this volume sheds new light on the complex ways in
which music provides people from different countries and social
sectors with both enjoyment and tools for understanding who they
are in terms of nationality, region, race, ethnicity, class,
gender, and migration status. Drawing on a vast array of fields
including popular music studies, ethnomusicology, sociology, and
history, Music and Youth Culture in Latin America is an
illuminating read for anyone interested in Latin American music,
culture, and society."
Beating Time and Measuring Music in the Early Modern Era chronicles
the shifting relationships between ideas about time in music and
science from the sixteenth through the early nineteenth centuries.
Centered on theories of musical meter, the book investigates the
interdependence between theories of meter and conceptualizations of
time from the age of Zarlino to the invention of the metronome.
These formulations have evolved throughout the history of Western
music, reflecting fundamental reevaluations not only of music but
also of time itself. Drawing on paradigms from the history of
science and technology and the history of philosophy, author Roger
Mathew Grant illustrates ways in which theories of meter and time,
informed by one another, have manifested themselves in the field of
music. During the long eighteenth century, treatises on subjects
such as aesthetics, music theory, mathematics, and natural
philosophy began to reflect an understanding of time as an absolute
quantity, independent of events. This gradual but conclusive change
had a profound impact on the network of ideas connecting time,
meter, character, and tempo. Investigating the impacts of this
change, Grant explores the timekeeping techniques - musical and
otherwise - that implemented this conceptual shift, both
technologically and materially. Bringing together diverse strands
of thought in a broader intellectual history of temporality,
Grant's study fills an unexpected yet conspicuous gap in the
history of music theory, and is essential reading for music
theorists and composers as well as historical musicologists and
practitioners of historically informed performance.
All normal human beings alive in the last fifty thousand years
appear to have possessed, in Mark Turner's phrase, "irrepressibly
artful minds." Cognitively modern minds produced a staggering list
of behavioral singularities--science, religion, mathematics,
language, advanced tool use, decorative dress, dance, culture,
art--that seems to indicate a mysterious and unexplained
discontinuity between us and all other living things. This brute
fact gives rise to some tantalizing questions: How did the artful
mind emerge? What are the basic mental operations that make art
possible for us now, and how do they operate? These are the
questions that occupy the distinguished contributors to this
volume, which emerged from a year-long Getty-funded research
project hosted by the Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral
Sciences at Stanford. These scholars bring to bear a range of
disciplinary and cross-disciplinary perspectives on the
relationship between art (broadly conceived), the mind, and the
brain. Together they hope to provide directions for a new field of
research that can play a significant role in answering the great
riddle of human singularity.
Today, Claude Debussy's position as a central figure in
twentieth-century concert music is secure, and scholarship has long
taken for granted the enduring musical and aesthetic contributions
of his compositions. Yet this was not always the case. Unknown to
many concert-goers and music scholars is the fact that for years
after his death, Debussy's musical aesthetic was perceived as
outmoded, decadent, and even harmful for French music. In Debussy's
Legacy and the Construction of Reputation, Marianne Wheeldon
examines the vicissitudes of the composer's posthumous reception in
the 1920s and 30s, and analyzes the confluence of factors that
helped to overturn the initial backlash against his music. Rather
than viewing Debussy's artistic greatness as the cause of his
enduring legacy, she considers it instead as an effect, tracing the
manifold processes that shaped how his music was received and how
its aesthetic worth was consolidated. Speaking to readers both
within and beyond the domain of French music and culture, Debussy's
Legacy and the Construction of Reputation enters into dialogue with
research in the sociology of reputation and commemoration,
examining the collective nature of the processes of artistic
consecration. By analyzing the cultural forces that came to bear on
the formation of Debussy's legacy, Wheeldon contributes to a
greater understanding of the inter-war period-the cultural
politics, debates, and issues that confronted musicians in 1920s
and 30s Paris-and offers a musicological perspective on the subject
of reputation building, to date underrepresented in recent writings
on reputation and commemoration in the humanities. Debussy's Legacy
and the Construction of Reputation is an important new study,
groundbreaking in its methodology and in its approach to musical
influence and cultural consecration.
This book explores the way in which singing can foster experiences
of belonging through ritual performance. Based on more than two
decades of ethnographic, pedagogical and musical research, it is
set against the backdrop of "the new Ireland" of the late 20th and
early 21st centuries. Charting Ireland's growing multiculturalism,
changing patterns of migration, the diminished influence of
Catholicism, and synergies between indigenous and global forms of
cultural expression, it explores rights and rites of belonging in
contemporary Ireland. Helen Phelan examines a range of religious,
educational, civic and community-based rituals including religious
rituals of new migrant communities in "borrowed" rituals spaces;
baptismal rituals in the context of the Irish citizenship
referendum; rituals that mythologize the core values of an
educational institution; a ritual laboratory for students of
singing; and community-based festivals and performances. Her
investigation peels back the physiological, emotional and cultural
layers of singing to illuminate how it functions as a potential
agent of belonging. Each chapter engages theoretically with one of
five core characteristic of singing (resonance, somatics,
performance, temporality, and tacitness) in the context of
particular performed rituals. Phelan offers a persuasive proposal
for ritually-framed singing as a valuable and potent tool in the
creation of inclusive, creative and integrated communities of
belonging.
More than any rock artist since The Beatles, Radiohead's music
inhabits the sweet spot between two extremes: on the one hand,
music that is wholly conventional and conforms to all expectations
of established rock styles, and, on the other hand, music so
radically experimental that it thwarts any learned notions. While
averting mainstream trends but still achieving a significant level
of success in both US and UK charts, Radiohead's music includes
many surprises and subverted expectations, yet remains accessible
within a framework of music traditions. In Everything in its Right
Place: Analyzing Radiohead, Brad Osborn reveals the functioning of
this reconciliation of extremes in various aspects of Radiohead's
music, analyzing the unexpected shifts in song structure, the
deformation of standard 4/4 backbeats, the digital manipulation of
familiar rock 'n' roll instrumentation, and the expected
resolutions of traditional cadence structures. Expanding on recent
work in musical perception, focusing particularly on form, rhythm
and meter, timbre, and harmony, Everything in its Right Place
treats Radiohead's recordings as rich sonic ecosystems in which a
listener participates in an individual search for meaning, bringing
along expectations learned from popular music, classical music, or
even Radiohead's own compositional idiolect. Radiohead's violations
of these subjective expectation-realization chains prompt the
listener to search more deeply for meaning within corresponding
lyrics, biographical details of the band, or intertextual
relationships with music, literature, or film. Synthesizing
insights from a range of new methodologies in the theory of pop and
rock, and specifically designed for integration into music theory
courses for upper level undergraduates, Everything in its Right
Place is sure to find wide readership among scholars and students,
as well as avid listeners who seek a deeper understanding of
Radiohead's distinctive juxtapositional style.
Tonality and Transformation is a groundbreaking study in the
analysis of tonal music. Focusing on the listener's experience,
author Steven Rings employs transformational music theory to
illuminate diverse aspects of tonal hearing - from the infusion of
sounding pitches with familiar tonal qualities to sensations of
directedness and attraction. In the process, Rings introduces a
host of new analytical techniques for the study of the tonal
repertory, demonstrating their application in vivid interpretive
set pieces on music from Bach to Mahler. The analyses place the
book's novel techniques in dialogue with existing tonal
methodologies, such as Schenkerian theory, avoiding partisan debate
in favor of a methodologically careful, pluralistic approach. Rings
also engages neo-Riemannian theory-a popular branch of
transformational thought focused on chromatic harmony-reanimating
its basic operations with tonal dynamism and bringing them into
closer rapprochement with traditional tonal concepts. Written in a
direct and engaging style, with lively prose and plain-English
descriptions of all technical ideas, Tonality and Transformation
balances theoretical substance with accessibility: it will appeal
to both specialists and non-specialists. It is a particularly
attractive volume for those new to transformational theory: in
addition to its original theoretical content, the book offers an
excellent introduction to transformational thought, including a
chapter that outlines the theory's conceptual foundations and
formal apparatus, as well as a glossary of common technical terms.
A contribution to our understanding of tonal phenomenology and a
landmark in the analytical application of transformational
techniques, Tonality and Transformation is an indispensible work of
music theory.
Over the last century, developments in electronic music and art
have enabled new possibilities for creating audio and audio-visual
artworks. With this new potential has come the possibility for
representing subjective internal conscious states, such as the
experience of hallucinations, using digital technology. Combined
with immersive technologies such as virtual reality goggles and
high-quality loudspeakers, the potential for accurate simulations
of conscious encounters such as Altered States of Consciousness
(ASCs) is rapidly advancing. In Inner Sound, author Jonathan Weinel
traverses the creative influence of ASCs, from Amazonian chicha
festivals to the synaesthetic assaults of neon raves; and from an
immersive outdoor electroacoustic performance on an Athenian
hilltop to a mushroom trip on a tropical island in virtual reality.
Beginning with a discussion of consciousness, the book explores how
our subjective realities may change during states of dream,
psychedelic experience, meditation, and trance. Taking a broad view
across a wide range of genres, Inner Sound draws connections
between shamanic art and music, and the modern technoshamanism of
psychedelic rock, electronic dance music, and electroacoustic
music. Going beyond the sonic into the visual, the book also
examines the role of altered states in film, visual music, VJ
performances, interactive video games, and virtual reality
applications. Through the analysis of these examples, Weinel
uncovers common mechanisms, and ultimately proposes a conceptual
model for Altered States of Consciousness Simulations (ASCSs). This
theoretical model describes how sound can be used to simulate
various subjective states of consciousness from a first-person
perspective, in an interactive context. Throughout the book, the
ethical issues regarding altered states of consciousness in
electronic music and audio-visual media are also examined,
ultimately allowing the reader not only to consider the design of
ASCSs, but also the implications of their use for digital society.
Punk rock and hip-hop. Disco and salsa. The loft jazz scene and the
downtown composers known as Minimalists. In the mid-1970s, New York
City was a laboratory where all the major styles of modern music
were reinvented--block by block, by musicians who knew, admired,
and borrowed from one another. Crime was everywhere, the government
was broke, and the infrastructure was collapsing. But rent was
cheap, and the possibilities for musical exploration were
limitless."Love Goes to Buildings on Fire "is the first book to
tell the full story of the era's music scenes and the phenomenal
and surprising ways they intersected. From New Year's Day 1973 to
New Year's Eve 1977, the book moves panoramically from post-Dylan
Greenwich Village, to the arson-scarred South Bronx barrios where
salsa and hip-hop were created, to the lower Manhattan lofts where
jazz and classical music were reimagined, to ramshackle clubs like
CBGB and the Gallery, where rock and dance music were hot-wired for
a new generation.
In this book author Cathy Benedict challenges and reframes
traditional ways of addressing many of the topics we have come to
think of as social justice. Offering practical suggestions for
helping both teachers and students think philosophically (and thus
critically) about the world around them, each chapter engages with
important themes through music making and learning as it presents
scenarios, examples of dialogue with students, unit ideas and
lesson plans geared toward elementary students (ages 6-14).
Taken-for-granted subjects often considered beyond the
understanding of elementary students such as friendship, racism,
poverty, religion, and class are addressed and interrogated in such
a way that honours the voice and critical thinking of the
elementary student. Suggestions are given that help both teachers
and students to pause, reflect and redirect dialogue with questions
that uncover bias, misinformation and misunderstandings that too
often stand in the way of coming to know and embracing difference.
Guiding questions, which anchor many curricular mandates, are used
throughout in order to scaffold critical and reflective thinking
beginning in the earliest grades of elementary music education.
Where does social justice reside? Whose voice is being heard and
whose is being silenced? How do we come to think of and construct
poverty? How is it that musics become used the way they are used?
What happens to songs initially intended for socially driven
purposes when their significance is undermined? These questions and
more are explored encouraging music teachers to embrace a path
toward socially just engagements at the elementary and middle
school levels.
Although La Monte Young is one of the most important composers of
the late twentieth century, he is also one of the most elusive.
Generally recognized as the patriarch of the minimalist
movement-Brian Eno once called him "the daddy of us all"-he
nonetheless remains an enigma within the music world. Early in his
career Young eschewed almost completely the conventional musical
institutions of publishers, record labels, and venues, in order to
create compositions completely unfettered by commercial concerns.
At the same time, however, he exercised profound influence on such
varied figures as Terry Riley, Cornelius Cardew, Andy Warhol, Yoko
Ono, David Lang, Velvet Underground, and entire branches of
electronica and drone music. For half a century he and his partner
and collaborator, Marian Zazeela, have worked in near-seclusion in
their Tribeca loft, creating works that explore the furthest
extremes of conceptual audacity, technical sophistication,
acoustical complexity, and overt spirituality. Because Young gives
interviews only rarely, and almost never grants access to his
extensive archives, his importance as a composer has heretofore not
been matched by a commensurate amount of scholarly scrutiny. Draw A
Straight Line and Follow It: The Music and Mysticism of La Monte
Young stands as the first monograph to examine Young's life and
work in detail. The book is a culmination of a decade of research,
during which the author gained rare access to the composer and his
archives. Though loosely structured upon the chronology of the
composer's career, the book takes a multi-disciplinary approach
that combines biography, musicology, ethnomusicology, and music
analysis, and illuminates such seemingly disparate aspects of
Young's work as integral serialism and indeterminacy, Mormon
esoterica and Vedic mysticism, and psychedelia and psychoacoustics.
The book is a long-awaited, in-depth look at one of America's most
fascinating musical figures.
Policy and the Political Life of Music Education is the first book
of its kind in the field of Music Education. It offers a
far-reaching and innovative outlook, bringing together expert
voices who provide a multifaceted and global set of insights into a
critical arena for action today: policy. On one hand, the book
helps the novice to make sense of what policy is, how it functions,
and how it is discussed in various parts of the world; while on the
other, it offers the experienced educator a set of critically
written analyses that outline the state of the play of music
education policy thinking. As policy participation remains largely
underexplored in music education, the book helps to clarify to
teachers how policy thinking does shape educational action and
directly influences the nature, extent, and impact of our programs.
The goal is to help readers understand the complexities of policy
and to become better skilled in how to think, speak, and act in
policy terms. The book provides new ways to understand and
therefore imagine policy, approximating it to the lives of
educators and highlighting its importance and impact. This is an
essential read for anyone interested in change and how to better
understand decision-making within music and education. Finally,
this book, while aimed at the growth of music educators'
knowledge-base regarding policy, also fosters 'open thinking'
regarding policy as subject, helping educators straddling arts and
education to recognize that policy thinking can offer creative
designs for educational change.
Discovering Music Theory is a suite of workbooks and corresponding
answer books that offers all-round preparation for the updated
ABRSM Music Theory exams from 2020, including the new online
papers. This full-colour workbook will equip students of all ages
with the skills, knowledge and understanding required for the ABRSM
Grade 4 Music Theory exam. Written to make theory engaging and
relevant to developing musicians of all ages, it offers: -
straightforward explanations of all new concepts - progressive
exercises to build skills and understanding, step by step -
challenge questions to extend learning and develop music-writing
skills - helpful tips for how to approach specific exercises -
ideas for linking theory to music listening, performing and
instrumental/singing lessons - clear signposting and progress
reviews throughout - a sample practice exam paper showing you what
to expect in the new style of exams from 2020 As well as fully
supporting the ABRSM theory syllabus, Discovering Music Theory
provides an excellent resource for anyone wishing to develop their
music literacy skills, including GCSE and A-Level candidates, and
adult learners.
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