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Why do most musical performers and musical researchers continue to
inhabit divergent epistemic spaces? To what extent is the act of
musical performance coextensive with the act of doing musical
research, and vice versa? At what point in the research process can
a performative act transform into a scholarly one, and a scholarly
act into performative one? These, and other related questions, form
the central focus of this book with each chapter offering a fresh
perspective on a particular topic in music performance studies:
improvisational traditions, historical performance practices,
analysis and performance, sports psychology, cross-cultural musical
interactions, and institutional challenges. This book is aimed at
music researchers, teachers, students, and practicing musicians
interested in the intersection of academic and performance research
and bridges the divide between the research of university-trained
musicologists, scholars from other fields who focus on music, and
the growing community of musical artist-researchers. Material in
the book is supported by performance outcomes offered by the
contributors on a separate YouTube channel and on the Routledge
online portal.
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Postmodernity's Musical Pasts (Hardcover)
Tina Fruhauf; Contributions by Tina Fruehauf, Lawrence Kramer, Joshua S. Walden, Max Noubel, …
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R3,579
R2,616
Discovery Miles 26 160
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Postmodernity's Musical Pasts covers topics from classical to
popular and neo-traditional musics to concerns of the disciplines
of musicology. These provide insights how the progression of time
and history can be conceptually understood after 1945.
Postmodernity's Musical Pasts relies on an extensive and varied
spectrum of topics, from both the centre and the periphery of the
musicological canon, that mirror the eclectic and diverse nature of
the postwar era itself. The first section, 'Time and the
(Post)Modern', investigates how to understand manifestations of the
past in musical composition with regard to time, on the one hand,
and with regard to genre, style, and idiom, on the other. The
second section, 'Manifestations of History', shows how time and
history manifest themselves in art music. A third section,
'Receptions of the Past', takes the contrasts and transitional
moments of post-1945 practices further by looking at the
temporality of reception from different angles. A final part
investigates questions of nostalgia and the temporalities of
belonging. The volume subverts the understanding of temporality as
linear progression of past, present, and future. It offers new
avenues of conceptual thinking relevant for those engaged in the
study of music history and culture and for the humanities at large.
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