The Influence of Music on Image Making: An Exploration of Intermediality Between Music Interpretation and Figurative Representation

Author(s):  
Pinaki Gayen ◽  
Junmoni Borgohain ◽  
Priyadarshi Patnaik
Keyword(s):  
Author(s):  
Michael Droettboom ◽  
Ichiro Fujinaga ◽  
Karl MacMillan
Keyword(s):  

New Sound ◽  
2018 ◽  
pp. 83-120
Author(s):  
Geraldine Finn

This paper has been written as both a celebration of the music of Harrison Birtwistle-"the most forceful and uncompromisingly original British composer of his generation" according to the New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians - and as a response, at once playful and polemic, to the critics and commentators who struggle to name, claim, frame and contain it within the familiar categories and tropes of contemporary music interpretation. My particular focus is Panic which is exemplary in this respect and what Birtwistle cognoscendi have a habit of referring to as 'his background to 'explain' the idiosyncratic difficulty and difference of his work, as in the quotation cited as my subtitle.


Author(s):  
Harald Jers

Every solo or choral singer has experienced differences between various performance venues that strongly depend on the acoustics of the spaces themselves. This has a direct influence both on the musical performance on stage and its perception by the audience. Singers often report that the interactions between performing musicians and their ability to hear each other change when they move from the rehearsal room to the concert venue. The acoustic influence of the room might provide inspiration for changing details of the music interpretation; but it might also damage the communication between musicians during the performance. This chapter focuses on the acoustic impact of being in a room on the singing voice during a rehearsal or concert.


2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
João Monnazzi ◽  
Regis Faria

Thinking on the congruencies between music and sports, we propose with this art installation some novel paths and connections for music production in a little explored field, in the interdisciplinarity with sports. Some similarities in the acting of musicians and athletes, such as the need of technical domain through discipline and practice. A musician who wants to develop her/his technical skills needs to follow a hard routine of practical studies, focusing in improving motor abilities with the proposing to play the piece in the better way possible. This process has a close proximity with the athlete’s during their preparation. Hours of intense practice to improve some motor skills that can enable them to improve their performance. The disciplines can be interpolated in a way that we can argue: there is always something physical on a music interpretation, as well as there is always something artistic in a sport competition. In the inner area between art/music and sports some modalities are easier to verify this symbiosis, as in the choreographic sports. These modalities are evaluated by both physical and artistic parameters. Our work focus in a particular sport modality that has a part of scoring which is evaluated through a choreographic routine: The Bodybuilding.


2013 ◽  
Vol 4 (1) ◽  
pp. 16-27
Author(s):  
Paula Salosaari

Abstract In this article I discuss movement imagery and perceptual strategies as tools in enhancing performative acts of playing music and composing performance material combining music and dance. In my earlier research I have introduced the concept of multiple embodiment in classical ballet and developed co-authored choreography with dancers. The concept of multiple embodiment in ballet suggests treating the fixed vocabulary as qualitatively open and therefore a basis for interpretation, improvisation and composition of new dance material. Directing the dancer’s experience in an open-ended way with movement imagery and perceptual strategies gave the performer new, sometimes surprising information about performance possibilities and thereby enhanced interpretation of dance material. (Salosaari 2001) Movement imagery has helped creating open-ended tasks in dance and thus enabled co-authoring in dance making projects. (Salosaari 2007; Salosaari 2009). Not only dance, but other art forms as well, are embodied. In playing a musical instrument, the sound is made using body movements. In workshops with a musician and a dancer, reported in this article, I ask whether the tools created for dance creation would work also in music making. I ask whether movement imagery and perceptual strategies can initiate music interpretation and improvisation?


2008 ◽  
Vol 20 (1) ◽  
pp. 53-78
Author(s):  
CHARLES MUNDYE

ABSTRACTThe article explores an interdisciplinary conjunction of music, literature and modernism. I examine the relationship between aspects of early music scholarship and modernism, with specific reference to Ezra Pound’s critical and editorial work on medieval song, and to the composition, in the 1920s, of his modernist opera Le Testament. This analysis places Pound’s work as editor and composer not only in the context of recent critical reflections on the idea of authenticity, but also in relation to the histories and methodologies of medieval music interpretation. First, in drawing attention to Pound’s much–neglected collaborative edition of medieval songs entitled Hesternae Rosae, I contextualise his experiments in rhythmic reconstruction with reference to early and late twentieth-century musicologists working in this field. I make particular reference to the work of Pierre Aubry and rhythmic mode theory, and the later perspectives of Hendrik van der Werf. Secondly, I proceed to analyse Pound’s monophonic and dance song compositions in Le Testament, exploring the way in which serious medieval musicological scholarship prepared for, and is allied to, the development of a rhythmically and dramatically complex musical style.


2020 ◽  
Vol 2 (14) ◽  
pp. 9-28
Author(s):  
Marta Gabryelczak-Paprocka

In the article entitled The Image of a Solo Instrument Player as a Media Celebrity in the 21st Century, the author analyses the profiles of three musicians promoted by the contemporary media. These artists are: Lola Astanova, Stjepan Hauser and David Garrett. All of them, apart from the fact they are technically skilful performers, are also media personalities. They combine classical playing style with pop-culture image and visual setting of their performances. The author attempts to uncover the sources of their popularity and explain the mechanisms how the demand for the artistic activity of instrumentalists creating art (both music interpretation and the widely understood setting of a performance) synthetising tradition and innovativeness is generated. The described phenomena include the topics related to: the specificity of the images of celebrity instrument players and their function in the society, the homogenous culture of the 21st century, the widely-understood media coverage, consumerism, etc. The article has two parts. The first part is theoretical and it is based on the analysis and description of academic literature connected with the chosen subject matter referring to sociological topics and modern tendencies connected with culture. Another point in this section of the article is the presentation of the profiles of the selected artists. The second part is the report from the academic study conducted by the author of the article. It is a description of interviews with responders who wanted to share their opinions about the recordings of Astanova, Hauser and Garrett which were presented to them. The interviews were conducted by means of the social media and phone. The studies showed how different the impressions related to the same recordings might be even in a small group of respondents. These conclusions might serve as an inspiration for the development of research studying the influence of transformations taking place in modern culture on the tastes of audiences and the actual demand for artists who are well-adjusted to the requirements of modern audiences in terms of their image.


1989 ◽  
Vol 6 (3) ◽  
pp. 277-288
Author(s):  
George Hadjinikos

Music can communicate between human beings across barriers of time and space because it emanates from the very origins of human existence. It expresses the totality of all aspects of human life. Hence music education should be of primary concern and availability to everyone, not simply the ‘musical’. Increasing specialisation and fragmentation has reduced music to either utilitarian service or mere entertainment (muzak), whilst music education habitually misses the faculty of communication. This is happening at a time when, amidst the mounting alienation of society, people hunger for communication. The exclusive pursuit of brilliance, itself alienating, has eclipsed the real purpose of music education – the recognition and cultivation of the human soul.


2021 ◽  
Vol 5 (S4) ◽  
Author(s):  
Olga B. Solomonova ◽  
Galyna F. Zavgorodnia ◽  
Olha V. Muravska ◽  
Alla D. Chernoivanenko ◽  
Oksana O. Aleksandrova

The terminology of music semiology, which is an academic discipline with a significant educational resonance and a necessary component of music and educational practice at its higher educational and qualification levels, lies at the intersection of the main aspects of musicology such as the history of music, the theory and analysis of musical forms, music aesthetics and the theory of music interpretation, and others. Music semiology covers the transitional methodological abilities due to its subject reference points and the wide range of the material involved in the cognitive field. Music semiology can be considered a necessary basic discipline for the professional training of musicologists and practicing musicians of any programme. There is no doubt about the importance of mastering the language system, which is fundamental in the chosen field of communication. As an academic discipline, music semiology can be presented according to the way its terminology is built, it includes three main themes among which each of the following continues the meaning of the previous one by deepening and enlarging, detailing in an analytical way. Scientific novelty is determined by the fact that unlike music semiotics and the theory of music semantics.


2017 ◽  
Author(s):  
Michael Droettboom

This thesis describes three interrelated projects that cut across the author’s interests in musical information representation and retrieval, programming language theory, machine learning and human/computerinteraction.I. Optical music recognition. This first part introduces an optical music interpretation (OMI) system that derives musical information from the symbols on sheet music.The first chapter is an introduction to OMI’s parent field of optical music recognition (OMR), and to the present implementation as created for the Levy project. It is important that OMI has a representation standard in which to create its output. Therefore, the second chapter is a somewhat tangential but necessary study of computer-based musical representation languages, with particular emphasis on GUIDO and Mudela. The third and core chapter describes the processes involved in the present optical music interpretation system. While there are some details related to its implementation in the Python programming language, most of the material involves issues surrounding music notation rather thancomputer programming. The fourth chapter demonstrates how the logical musical data generated by the OMI system can be used as part of a musical search engine.II. Tempo extraction. The second part presents a system to automatically obtain the tempo and rubato curves from recorded performances, by aligning them to strict-tempo MIDI renderings of the same piece of music. The usefulness of such a system in the context of current musicological research is explored.III. Realtime digital signal processing programming environment. Lastly, a portable and flexible system for realtime digital signal processing (DSP) is presented. This system is both easy-to-use and powerful, in large part because it takes advantage of existing mature technologies. This framework provides the foundation for easier experimentation in new directions in audio and video processing, including physical modeling and motion tracking.


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