694 resultados para Compositores mexicanos
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"Antología general de poetas mexicanos."
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"Text translated from Constitución política de los Estados Unidos Mexicanos, décima edición, 1959, Editorial Porrúa, S. A., México, D. F. Subsequent amendments to June 1, 1961, from Diario oficial."
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Half-title: Biblioteca de autores mexicanos. Novelistas [69]; series title also at head of title-page.
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At head of title: Estados Unidos Mexicanos. Secretaría de Fomento. Sección 4a.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Otros títs.: Gaceta imperial de México; Gaceta del Gobierno Imperial de México (2 oct. 1821-29 marzo 1823); Gaceta del Gobierno Supremo de la Federación Mexicana (13 marzo 1824-31 mayo 1825 ; 1826-1827); Gaceta diaria de México (1 jun. 1825-30 abr. 1826); Registro oficial del Gobierno de los Estados Unidos Mexicanos (22 en. 1830-dic. 1832); El Telégrafo (11 en. 1833-9 feb. 1835)
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Mode of access: Internet.
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"Vida y escritos de don Francisco Pimentel" by Francisco Sosa: v. 1, p.[v]-cx.
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Neste artigo, proponho discutir as inovações de algumas capas de discos de um conjunto de artistas experimentais da MPB nos anos 1970, lançados pela gravadora Continental, sediada em São Paulo. Esses álbuns, cujo design tentou traduzir para o campo visual os projetos estéticos de compositores e músicos, foram inspirados na contracultura, na tentativa de criar novas formas de expressão durante a ditadura militar. Discos de quatro artistas serão analisados: Walter Franco, Tom Zé, Secos & Molhados e Novos Baianos. A capa de disco será pensada não apenas como embalagem comercial, mas como elemento de mediação estética, de gosto e de consumo, dentro do campo midiático da canção.
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This dissertation presents an investigation of the evolutionary process of extended oboe techniques, through literary analysis and practical research. The objective of this work is to provide assistance to oboists interested in learning these techniques. Additionally, this work encourages the student, through the process of experimentation, to explore the questions that may arise around the aesthetics of sound, the concept of gesture as an additional visual and aural element in music, and the collaboration and “real-time” creation processes. Discussed within the work, are the relationship between the instrument (the oboe) and extended techniques, and two possible definitions of extended techniques, provided by Luk Vaes (2009) and Gardner Read (1993). Also explored are the how and why some composers have utilized extended techniques in their compositions, including brief discussions relating to extended techniques in real-time composition (improvisation), extended techniques and technological resources, theatrical gesture as an extended technique, and suggestions of how musicians might approach theatrical gestures in performance. Four works were visited: “I Know This Room So Well” – Lisa Bielawa (2007-9); “Four Pieces for Oboe and Piano” – Ernst Krenek (1966); “In Freundschaft” – Karlheinz Stockhausen (1978); “Atem” – Mauricio Kagel (1969-70); and an exploration of the difficulties and solutions associated with each extended technique found within these pieces, was carried out. The following founding works on extended oboe techniques were used, as a basis for research: books - Heinz Holliger’s Pro Musica Nova (1972); Gardner Read’s Compendium of Modern Instrumental Techniques (1993); Peter Veale & Claus-Steffen Mahnkopf’s The Techniques of Oboe Playing (1994); and Libby Van Cleve’s Oboe Unbound: Contemporary Techniques (2004); and articles - Nora Post’s “Monophonic sound resources for the oboe: Part I – Timbre” (1984), “Part II- Pitch and other techniques” (1984), and “Multiphonics for the oboe” (1982).
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This dissertation deals with the use of extended techniques for the saxophone in the piece Minus (for solo saxophone in Bb), composed through a composer-performer collaboration between Agamenon de Morais and the saxophonist Kleber Dessoles. The text is organized in the following manner: the first part brings the historical background of the concert music written for the saxophone since the beginning of the 20th-century, exploring the use of extended tehcniques and the main characters and historical facts of this period, with data obtained through a literature review; the second part deals with the issue of the composer-performer collaboration, since cases documented in the 18th and 19th centuries until nowadays, exploring in which different ways collaborations may happen and the motivations behind them; the third and final part is about the specific work, followed by a detailed description of the collaboration between the composer and the interpreter, as well as detailed explanations about the extended techniques present in the work (multiphonics and flatterzunge), through bibliographic and documental research, as well as descriptions of the meetings between composer and interpreter. At the end of the collaborative process, one may say that the final result was created from a sum of the composer's knowledge with the interpreter's, almost as if the composition had double authorship. The document describing this process may help composers and interpreters in composing for the saxophone, as well as guide future collaborative experiences.
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Coordenação de Aperfeiçoamento de Pessoal de Nível Superior (CAPES)
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This study suggests sonorous ambiences from the propose of images configured according to the description in “A Visagem da Moça Caetana” by Ariano Suassuna in order to create individual sonorous possibilities that may help musicians to play the piece. The cycle, composed in 1996 (for voice, viola, cello, bass clarinet/clarinet), is formed by three untitled songs. Its text is an excerpt from the “Folheto XLIV”, from the Romance d’A Pedra do Reino e o príncipe do sangue do vai-e-volta, and describes a sentence of death illustrated by symbols of the Armorial imagery, with neologisms and the peculiar accent from the Sertão in northeast Brazil. In addition to the analysis of technical difficulties to play, this study informs interpreters of the sonorous timbre and texture used by Nelson Almeida to describe tradition through contemporary musical language. The metaphors and transgressions of reason in Suassuna’s book were explored to create three image compositions so that they may lead interpreters to the sonorous description of the inanimate objects and the affections to which the poetry refers, expanding any technical-interpretative indications limited by musical notation. This research used the Visagem scores, the literature on the theme, discussions with the musicians that played the piece, interviews with Almeida, and composers’ reports. To illustrate the theory, the three images are available, printed as woodcut in cordel literature.