79 resultados para Pianist
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Signatur des Originals: S 36/F05895
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El presente trabajo forma parte de una investigación en curso sobre "La escuela pianística argentina", proyecto aprobado y subsidiado por la Agencia Nacional de Investigaciones Científi cas y Técnicas (Proyecto Picto Artes 00043-2007) y la Secretaría de Ciencia, Técnica y Posgrado de la UNCuyo. En él pretendemos aproximarnos en nuestro camino hacia la demostración de la existencia de una escuela pianística argentina, partiendo de la teoría expuesta por Piero Rattalino en su libro de 1983 Le grandi scuole pianistiche, en la que elabora un árbol genealógico-pianístico que engloba, a partir de Mozart, Clementi y Beethoven la evolución de la técnica pianística desde los comienzos del pianoforte hasta llegar a los grandes pianistas-pedagogos del SXX.
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El siguiente proyecto versa sobre la programación en lenguaje java del algoritmo de humanización MIDI desarrollado por Jorge Grundman en su tesis La Humanización de la Interpretación Virtual: Tres ejemplos significativos de la obra de Chopin. Este algoritmo, denominado Zig-Zag tiene como finalidad lograr que una partitura interpretada por un ordenador tenga unas características similares a la lectura a primera vista de la misma por un pianista. Para ello, basa su funcionamiento en una aleatorización del tempo en base a una serie de parámetros, a una modificación de la dinámica acorde a la modificación de tempo y a una segunda aleatorización para cada figura de la partitura. Este algoritmo tiene un gran campo de aplicación como complemento a los diversos secuenciadores y editores de partituras que existen en la actualidad, proporcionando nuevas características a los mismos. La programación del algoritmo se ha llevado a cabo empleando el Java SDK (Standard Developement Kit) 7 y las herramientas que proporciona esta plataforma para el manejo y modificación de los mensajes MIDI. ABSTRACT. The next project is about the programming in Java language of the MIDI humanization algorithm developed by Jorge Grundman in his thesis La Humanización de la Interpretación Virtual: Tres ejemplos significativos de la obra de Chopin. This algorithm, called Zig-Zag aims to have similar characteristics in a score performed by a computer than in the sight reading by a pianist. To this end, it bases its process in a randomization of the tempo from several parameters, a modification of the dynamic according to the change of tempo and a second randomization for each figure in the score. This algorithm has a big scope of application as complement for the different sequencers and score editors that already exist, providing new features to them. The algorithm has been programmed using the Java SDK (Standard Development Kit) 7 and the tools that this platform provides to handle and modify MIDI messages.
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"Philharmonic edition."
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Vol. [8]-[10] have binder's title: Modern music and musicians. Encyclopedic. I-III.
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Autobiography of the composer and pianist, also author of Practical Hints for students of singing
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"Grand opera ... libretto and parlor pianist"--Cover.
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Note attached: In background are members of the orchestra, and in the foreground are some of those who had individual parts in the performance. Jefferson B. Webb, station manager, is in the center, with Reta Alcock, child actress, seated on his knee. Others seated from left to right, are Wynn Wright, actor in the sketch "The Night Express"; Ole Foersch, director of the orchestra; Miss Alcock, Mr. Webb. Mr. Webb and Marion Martin, pianist. Standing directly back of them are Frances Harris, soprano; B.D. Welling, actor in the sketch; Kathryn Young, Soprano soloist; Ty Tyson, announcer; Helen Kennedy Snyder, contralto; Rex White, station dramatist; Arnold Tieman, announcer; Wilfred Engelman, Baritone soloist. Among these in center background are Herschell Hart, announcer, and C.C. Bradner, who gave News Bulletins founded on Page One events of twelve years ago. 12th Anniversary: Aug. 20, 1932
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Thesis (D.M.A.)--University of Washington, 2016-06
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The Church of Our Blessed Redeemer Who Walked Upon the Waters is a collection of short stories about Elwyn Parker, a devout pianist who becomes a worldly car salesman. "Thirty Fingers," "My Father's Business," and "Apostate" introduce Elwyn, a saint at church and a trouble-making evangelist at school, who nevertheless finds himself in a love affair with an older woman, Sister Morrisohn. In "Captivity," Elwyn, a college freshman, experiences worldliness, then grows to resent and ultimately reject Sister Morrisohn. In "The Leap," Elwyn is back at the piano, but unemployed and unhappily married. He finds comfort only in his decade-old affair. In "The Lord of Travel," Elwyn, a car salesman, appears bereft of his former morals until he hoodwinks Ida, who reminds him of the now deceased Sister Morrisohn. Elwyn repairs Ida's car, redeeming himself in the process.
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Few works within the realm of the piano repertoire have amassed a reputation as formidable as Gaspard de la Nuit. These three pieces, each unique in character and pianistic requirements, arguably represent a pinnacle of early 20th-century French piano music. This paper seeks to illuminate points for consideration for the pianist who wishes to embark upon studying the work for performance, and for the musicologist.
I shall first consider the three character poems of Aloysius Bertrand that inspired the suite, as an understanding of these Diabolic creations is essential to understanding the piece analytically and programmatically. I shall then explore the subtitle of Bertrand’s Gaspard de la Nuit: ‘Fantaisies À La Manière De Rembrandt Et De Callot’, as an acknowledgement of these artists helps us better to engage with Bertrand’s poetry, and provides us with a direct link to the visual stimuli for Ravel’s compositions.
Finally, using Ondine as a case study, I shall explore how the composer unifies his inspirations to paint a musical portrait of both the character and the content of Bertrand’s poem. I shall focus on three particular aspects of Ravel’s style: the refined textures that create washes of watery colour, subtle rhythmic variations that imply the ‘deep, rolling currents of the sleeping lake’, and the simple melodic lines sung by the water nymph in the manner of a French air. Each element plays its part in the thematic development that illustrates Ondine’s seductive powers.
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Cette thèse porte sur la recherche-création ayant menée à l’apprentissage et l’exécution publique de Diário, œuvre pour piano du compositeur brésilien Heber Schuenemann (né en 1971). Dans ce cycle, qui comprend 23 courtes pièces, le compositeur explore la notion de « hasard », propre à la musique aléatoire. Il utilise également des techniques de composition s’apparentant au sérialisme et au minimalisme. Après avoir présenté les principales caractéristiques des courants musicaux propres à l’œuvre, la chercheuse-pianiste procède à une analyse de l’œuvre, décrivant la structure et les techniques de composition de chaque pièce. Par la suite, elle décrit sa propre démarche d’interprète – du déchiffrage de l’œuvre à sa prestation publique et à son enregistrement en studio – et elle commente son expérience à la lumière de la littérature pertinente. Sont abordées, notamment, les difficultés inhérentes au déchiffrage d’une œuvre atonale et les diverses étapes menant à l’identification de ses éléments structuraux; les difficultés relatives à la technique pianistique; l’importance du regroupement d’unités et de l’acquisition d’automatismes corporels; la définition de l’image artistique. Des pistes pédagogiques favorisant l’enseignement et l’apprentissage de l’œuvre sont également présentées.
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Over a period of 50 years—between 1962 and 2012—three preeminent American piano competitions, the Van Cliburn International Piano Competition, the University of Maryland International Piano Competition/William Kapell International Piano Competition and the San Antonio International Piano Competition, commissioned for inclusion on their required performance lists 26 piano works, almost all by American composers. These compositions, works of sufficient artistic depth and technical sophistication to serve as rigorous benchmarks for competition finalists, constitute a unique segment of the contemporary American piano repertoire. Although a limited number of these pieces have found their way into the performance repertoire of concert artists, too many have not been performed since their premières in the final rounds of the competitions for which they were designed. Such should not be the case. Some of the composers in question are innovative titans of 20th-century American music—Samuel Barber, Aaron Copland, Leonard Bernstein, John Cage, John Corigliano, William Schuman, Joan Tower and Ned Rorem, to name just a few—and many of the pieces themselves, as historical touchstones, deserve careful examination. This study includes, in addition to an introductory overview of the three competitions, a survey of all 26 compositions and an analysis of their expressive characteristics, from the point of view of the performing pianist. Numerous musical examples support the analysis. Biographical information about the composers, along with descriptions of their overall musical styles, place these pieces in historical context. Analytical and technical comprehension of this distinctive and rarely performed corner of the modern classical piano world could be of inestimable value to professional pianists, piano pedagogues and music educators alike.
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The nineteenth-century Romantic era saw the development and expansion of many vocal and instrumental forms that had originated in the Classical era. In particular, the German lied and French mélodie matured as art forms, and they found a kind of equilibrium between piano and vocal lines. Similarly, the nineteenth-century piano quartet came into its own as a form of true chamber music in which all instruments participated equally in the texture. Composers such as Robert Schumann, Johannes Brahms, and Gabriel Fauré offer particularly successful examples of both art song and piano quartets that represent these genres at their highest level of artistic complexity. Their works have become the cornerstones of the modern collaborative pianist’s repertoire. My dissertation explored both the art songs and the piano quartets of these three composers and studied the different skills needed by a pianist performing both types of works. This project included the following art song cycles: Robert Schumann’s Dichterliebe, Gabriel Fauré’s Poème d’un Jour, and Johannes Brahms’ Zigeunerlieder. I also performed Schumann’s Piano Quartet in E-flat Major, Op. 47, Fauré’s Piano Quartet in C minor, Op. 15, and Brahms’ Piano Quartet in G minor, Op. 25. My collaborators included: Zachariah Matteson, violin and viola; Kristin Bakkegard, violin; Molly Jones, cello; Geoffrey Manyin, cello; Karl Mitze, viola; Emily Riggs, soprano, and Matthew Hill, tenor. This repertoire was presented over the course of three recitals on February 13, 2015, December 11, 2015, March 25, 2016 at the University of Maryland’s Gildenhorn Recital Hall. These recitals can be found in the Digital Repository at the University of Maryland (DRUM).