973 resultados para Tropicalismo (Movimento musical)
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Neste vídeo, a voz off já está presente durante o letreiro de título. Em seguida é apresentada uma nova tela contendo o título e o autor da obra que será utilizada como exemplo para o exercício em questão, como é comum de se ver em partituras impressas. Vê-se também parte da partitura que será estudada. Em seguida é apresentada uma nova tela, contendo o primeiro compasso da partitura, que apresenta dois pentagramas: uma com clave de sol e outra com clave de fá. A voz off explica a teoria e os conceitos abordados, utilizando o ponteiro do mouse realçado sobre a partitura, como forma de ilustrar o que está sendo falado. A proposta do vídeo é que o aluno perceba a relação de movimento entre as vozes, um conceito que envolve analisar a relação entre uma nota e a nota seguinte na partitura. Uma vez explicada a relação de movimento entre aquelas notas específicas, o produtor do vídeo apaga as setas criadas, e quando passa a analisar a relação de movimento entre duas novas notas, cria novas setas, que também serão apagadas após encerrada a explicação pontual. A voz off faz algumas considerações importantes para a melhor compreensão dos conceitos abordados no vídeo. São apresentados alguns casos especiais que poderiam resultar em dúvida, explicando melhor como identificar os movimentos nesses casos.O vídeo está dividido em duas partes, das quais esta é a primeira.
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Videoaula destinada ao curso de Educação Musical
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A investigação incide na forma como as expressões artísticas se difundem e conjugam com a prática regular dos profissionais de educação de infância na sua escola. Recolhemos dados referentes à Equipa de Animação do Gabinete Coordenador de Educação Artística, constituída por educadores e professores, um departamento da Secretaria Regional de Educação e Cultura da Madeira, formada em 1986, com a finalidade de motivar e disseminar, através das suas intervenções artísticas nas escolas, educadores e professores para uma educação baseada também nas áreas expressivoartísticas. Tendo sido consignado à educação artística um direito humano universal para todos os aprendentes pela Convenção sobre os Direitos da Criança da Unicef adoptada pela Assembleia Geral das Nações Unidas em 1989 e ratificada por Portugal em 1990, tornava-se pertinente reflectir e averiguar a forma como se concretiza este projecto em particular, divisar se a prática se coaduna com a política a nível do reconhecimento do valor da educação artística na escola. O estudo insere-se no quadro da acção da Equipa de Animação, norteado por metodologias qualitativas, com aplicação de inquéritos por questionário, entrevistas e observações no ambiente dos sujeitos. Pretendemos apurar a forma como consubstancia os seus objectivos, o impacto que exerce na comunidade escolar, se os educadores nas escolas apreciam e dão continuidade às actividades propostas e se a motivação extrínseca é capaz de contribuir para uma motivação intrínseca a ponto de serem promovidos mais projectos relacionados com a educação artística. A emergente necessidade de um compromisso mais intenso com o desenvolvimento das emoções, quer na criança, quer no adulto, conferem às expressões artísticas a importante missão de as promover como processo inovador. Neste quadro, tornou-se relevante descobrir que lugar fica reservado nas escolas para a implementação de projectos a partir das propostas da Equipa de Animação. Assim, o tema subjacente ao estudo insere-se no vasto universo da expressão/comunicação e abarca uma série de subtemas, todos eles relacionados com a área das expressões. Pretende-se que esta investigação contribua para a clarificação dos axiomas referidos e que suscite uma atenção e interesse renovados, como componente efectiva do novo quadro conceptual de todo e qualquer profissional de educação. Como principais resultados reporta-se que uma motivação vinda do exterior é uma mais valia, sobretudo de uma equipa especializada. Que a intervenção da Equipa de Animação funciona como elemento impulsionador para a crescente dinamização de actividades, sobretudo, no âmbito da expressão musical e dramática. Que esta dinâmica depende do educador que aufere da animação. Que é do inteiro agrado das crianças esta forma de teatro na escola e que é motivadora de aprendizagens. A nível formativo, permaneceu revigorada a necessidade de formação contínua para uma prática educativa mais direccionada para o desenvolvimento da criatividade, através da dimensão artística, num contributo efectivo para a maturação e transformação do ser humano.
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This work exams the presence of music in the imaginary constitution of spaces, taking as study s object part of the musical production of the Armorial Movement, officially casted in 1970 in the city of Recife, Pernambuco. From that so called, by the Armorial s discourse, the essence of the brazilian northeastern popular art , the armorialists has intended to make an art that express an idea of northeasternity and brazility . Tries to demonstrate how the music has exerted a basic function of condensation and spreading of the armorial aesthetics, auditorily delimiting the territory of Brazilian Northeastern and, at the same time, trying to impose a sonority to it. This work still analyses the elaboration of what would be a proper soundscape of the Northeastern and how this elaboration passes trough the desire of crystallization of an idealized space, perpetual, escape line of the characteristic modernizing and postmodernizing experience of the twentieth century, product, in turn, of the anxiety of conservation of the Northeastern as a shelter to the traditions that has been evidenced by the construction of an visibility and, also, an audibility to the so called northeastern universe. It analyses, too, the way as works the confrontation between the idea of a so called northeastern soundscape - sonorous events set taken as typical from the rural space - and a sonorous archives series produced since 1920 with the regionalist discourse, showing how was elaborated an armorial music that has intended to represent the brazilian Northeastern. It evidences how, to the elaboration of armorial music, it was managed elements from the European musical culture so called scholar. It argues that the utilization of, to the manufacture of the armorial thinking and aesthetics, of a European mimical capital, so called that way by Stephen Greenblat, was consequence of the intellectual leadership of the Movement, centered in the writer Ariano Suassuna. It argues that Suassuna, followed by the musicians and the artists of the Movement, has searched to evidence a genetic linking between what he has considered the Brazilian true popular art and the medieval Iberian culture. For in such a way, the music was taken as a formation element of the social imaginary and directed to verify a relationship between the Northeastern idealized by the Armorial and the music produced by the Movement. This work has searched, therefore, through the analysis of the armorial music, to study the possible confluences between music and the space that has produced it to, by this analysis, to think the complicity between music and history
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Coordenação de Aperfeiçoamento de Pessoal de Nível Superior (CAPES)
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Coordenação de Aperfeiçoamento de Pessoal de Nível Superior (CAPES)
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Pós-graduação em Geografia - IGCE
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The Riot Grrrl movement started in mid-90s and it consists of girls who use rock as a tool of feminist political struggle. Besides using music as a central element of political identity, this movement is also characterized by the formation of an alternative public sphere (formed by fanzines, blogs and e-zines) that functions both as a way to spread their music and as identification trigger mechanism in relation to their political causes. The aim of this article is to study the instruments that these feminists bands - that deviate from the traditional feminist political movements - use to create identification with their audience, especially from an empirical research of e-zines published by these bands and from the communicative action of their leaders in social networks. It is possible to note that, despite other identification mechanisms, testimonies works as a socialization link which marks the alternative public sphere composed by publications made by Riot Grrrls. The testimony serves as a powerful arranger of collective identities, since it is presupposed in the recognition of a world in common, allocating identity as performative action.
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O trabalho que ora se apresenta, insere-se na unidade curricular Prática Pedagógica e foi realizado no âmbito do estágio profissionalizante concretizado em escolas públicas da Região Autónoma da Madeira, no ano letivo 2014/2015, através de protocolos celebrados entre a Escola Básica do 1º Ciclo com Pré-escolar Cruz de Carvalho e a Escola Básica do 2º e 3º Ciclo dos Louros com a Escola Superior de Educação do Instituto Politécnico de Coimbra. Encontra-se organizado em duas partes. A primeira versa sobre a temática "Música em Movimento", numa perspetiva dialogante entre música e movimento, artistas e pedagogos ativos durante as primeiras décadas do século XX, ou com eles relacionados, que inovaram o ensino da música ao realizarem atividades para promover a perceção e a aprendizagem musical. Na segunda parte é feita a caracterização da comunidade educativa e posto em evidência o processo desenvolvido no âmbito do estágio, com o relato detalhado da Prática de Ensino Supervisionada.
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This paper discusses a method, Generation in Context, for interrogating theories of music analysis and music perception. Given an analytic theory, the method consists of creating a generative process that implements the theory in reverse. Instead of using the theory to create analyses from scores, the theory is used to generate scores from analyses. Subjective evaluation of the quality of the musical output provides a mechanism for testing the theory in a contextually robust fashion. The method is exploratory, meaning that in addition to testing extant theories it provides a general mechanism for generating new theoretical insights. We outline our initial explorations in the use of generative processes for music research, and we discuss how generative processes provide evidence as to the veracity of theories about how music is experienced, with insights into how these theories may be improved and, concurrently, provide new techniques for music creation. We conclude that Generation in Context will help reveal new perspectives on our understanding of music.
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This paper explores a method of comparative analysis and classification of data through perceived design affordances. Included is discussion about the musical potential of data forms that are derived through eco-structural analysis of musical features inherent in audio recordings of natural sounds. A system of classification of these forms is proposed based on their structural contours. The classifications include four primitive types; steady, iterative, unstable and impulse. The classification extends previous taxonomies used to describe the gestural morphology of sound. The methods presented are used to provide compositional support for eco-structuralism.
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When communicating emotion in music, composers and performers encode their expressive intentions through the control of basic musical features such as: pitch, loudness, timbre, mode, and articulation. The extent to which emotion can be controlled through the systematic manipulation of these features has not been fully examined. In this paper we present CMERS, a Computational Music Emotion Rule System for the control of perceived musical emotion that modifies features at the levels of score and performance in real-time. CMERS performance was evaluated in two rounds of perceptual testing. In experiment I, 20 participants continuously rated the perceived emotion of 15 music samples generated by CMERS. Three music works, each with five emotional variations were used (normal, happy, sad, angry, and tender). The intended emotion by CMERS was correctly identified 78% of the time, with significant shifts in valence and arousal also recorded, regardless of the works’ original emotion.
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The attention paid by the British music press in 1976 to the release of The Saints first single “I’m Stranded” was the trigger for a commercial and academic interest in the Brisbane music scene which still has significant energy. In 2007, Brisbane was identifed by Billboard Magazine as a “hot spot” of independent music. A place to watch. Someone turned a torch on this town, had a quick look, moved on. But this town has always had music in it. Some of it made by me. So, I’m taking this connection of mine, and working it into a contextual historical analysis of the creative lives of Brisbane musicians. I will be interviewing a number of Brisbane musicians. These interviews have begun, and will continue to be be conducted in 2011/2012. I will ask questions and pursue memories that will encompass family, teenage years, siblings, the suburbs, the city, venues, television and radio; but then widen to welcome the river, the hills and mountains, foes and friends, beliefs and death. The wider research will be a contextual historical analysis of the creative lives of Brisbane musicians. It will explore the changing nature of their work practices over time and will consider the notion, among other factors, of ‘place’ in both their creative practice and their creative output. It will also examine how the presence of the practitioners and their work is seen to contribute to the cultural life of the city and the creative lives of its citizens into the future. This paper offers an analysis of this last notion: how does this city see its music-makers? In addition to the interviews, over 300 Brisbane musicians were surveyed in September 2009 as part of a QUT-initiated recorded music event (BIGJAM). Their responses will inform the production of this paper.
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Drawn from a larger mixed methods study, this case study provides an account of aspects of the music education programme that occurred with one teacher and a kindergarten class of children aged three and four years. Contrary to transmission approaches that are often used in Hong Kong, the case depicts how musical creativity was encouraged by the teacher in response to children’s participation during the time for musical free play. It shows how the teacher scaffolded the attempts of George, a child aged 3.6 years to use musical notation. The findings are instructive for kindergarten teachers in Hong Kong and suggest ways in which teachers might begin to incorporate more creative approaches to musical education. They are also applicable to other kindergarten settings where transmission approaches tend to dominate and teachers want to encourage children’s musical creativity.