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It is the first monograph in which the concertos of all composers
active in this field in the Republic of Venice in the years
1695-1740 are methodically discussed. The Venetian instrumental
concerto from Vivaldi's time is portrayed here through an extensive
and thorough survey of the most complete and representative musical
material that allowed for the making of conclusions as to its
typology, form, style and technique. The concertos discussed here
include 974 works by fifteen composers active in Venice, Brescia,
Bergamo and Padua. Such an approach not only gives an exhaustive
but also a more objective view on the history of the Baroque
concerto in its Venetian variant. It shows Vivaldi's work in a new
and broad context, which allows us to better understand its unique
character.
Collaborative Creativity is a powerful methodology for groups that
uses short bursts of creative challenges to help people go beyond
rational/conscious thinking and uncover, with constructive
consequences, the emotional/irrational sphere that influences
behaviour. It was developed by Peter Comber specifically for the
complex environment of the healthcare industry, and this how-to
manual for managers of healthcare companies offers practical advice
on how to employ creative processes in their sector.
This book is the first monographic study of nineteenth-century
transcriptions of Chopin's music. The work is based on the
quantitatively and qualitatively rich source material, which formed
the basis for considerations from the perspective of social
history, music analysis and aesthetics. Thanks to these multiple
perspectives, as well as the time range and the source base, this
study may contribute to the history of the reception of Chopin's
work in nineteenth-century culture; it may also prove significant
in overcoming the attitude that aesthetically deprecates
transcriptions and in adopting a different stance, regarding such
adaptations as valuable texts of musical culture.
This book is the first monographic study of Tadeusz Baird - one of
the greatest Polish composers of the second half of the 20th
century, a connoisseur of music tradition and a prophet of the
future of music (postmodernity), a composer of worldwide renown, an
erudite. Baird was deeply engaged in art, aware of the threats and
problems of contemporary world, and endowed with a sense of a
mission. His personality was shaped by traumatic experiences during
World War II and during the late 1940s and early 1950s. He was very
demanding of himself and others. As signaled in the title, the book
is an extensive, monographic representation of the composer's work
and concepts in their stylistic, cultural, and esthetic contexts.
From Aristotle to Heidegger, philosophers distinguished two orders
of time, before, after and past, present, future, presenting them
in a wide range of interpretations. It was only around the turn of
the 1970s that two theories of time which deliberately went beyond
that tradition, enhancing our notional apparatus, were produced
independently of one another. The nature philosopher Julius T.
Fraser, founder of the interdisciplinary International Society for
the Study of Time, distinguished temporal levels in the evolution
of the Cosmos and the structure of the human mind: atemporality,
prototemporality, eotemporality, biotemporality and nootemporality.
The author of the book distinguishes two 'dimensions' in time: the
dimension of the sequence of time (syntagmatic) and the dimension
of the sizes of duration or frequency (systemic). On the systemic
scale, the author distinguishes, in human ways of existing and
acting, a visual zone, zone of the psychological present, zone of
works and performances, zone of the natural and cultural
environment, zone of individual and social life and zone of
history, myth and tradition. In this book, the author provides a
synthesis of these theories.
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