James Wood's ‘Stoicheia’ and ‘Oreion’

Tempo ◽  
1990 ◽  
pp. 20-25
Author(s):  
John Warnaby

Although James Wood has been in the forefront of contemporary music as both choral conductor and percussionist, directing the New London Chamber Choir in many new works, and organizing the Darmstadt Summer School Percussion Course for several years, his own compositions have little in common with the mainstream of postwar European music. It might be assumed that his interest in ancient Greek rhythms, together with their Indian and Chinese equivalents, stems from his association with the music of Xenakis; but he has never shown any inclination to use complex mathematical formulae, and has probably been less concerned than almost any other contemporary composer with the organization of pitch.

1976 ◽  
Vol 23 (2) ◽  
pp. 140-141 ◽  
Author(s):  
P. V. Jones

The Project is working to produce a new course in Ancient Greek, directed at maturer students, and lasting one or two years. Its aim is to promote the fluent and intelligent reading of fifth- and fourth-century Greek, and Homer. The team, supported by a Steering Committee and Advisory Panel drawn from scholars and teachers in Great Britain, the United States, Australia and New Zealand, and Europe, started work in September 1974. The first half of the course has been produced and is being tested in some 35 schools and universities in Britain, Australia, New Zealand, and the United States; the second half is currently being produced and will be used for the first time in the J.A.C.T. Summer School 1976, and after that in the testing institutions. The Project is due to end in August 1977, but it is hoped to finance a fourth year. We hope that, when published, the course will be available in the American and Australian/New Zealand markets: discussions with publishers over the cheapest possible methods of publication are currently being held.


Author(s):  
Anna Utina

The methodology of interval hearing development, proposed by the teacher of The Konstantinovka School of Arts V. M. Sytnikova, and ways of its modern improvement is considered in the article. The methodology is based on the principles of associative thinking, which is based on the ability to find similar elements in different objects and to build relationships between them. It activates the creative abilities of children, stimulates their imagination and acts as a generator of creative activity. A talented musician, choral conductor and solfeggio teacher, V. M. Sytnikova began her research in 1993 with an experiment whereby students at the age of 5-6 who had different musical abilities were recruited to the preparatory group without prior selection. Since children cannot yet operate with abstract concepts at that age, V. M. Sytnikova encouraged them to create musical images and worked on their further fixation in memory. Thus, an associative interval table that summarized students' feelings and images emerged. Being one of the first to study this method, the author of the article, is convinced of its effectiveness. She has continued developing her teacher’s ideas. Objectives – to characterize the method of development of interval hearing based on associative thinking, proposed by V. M. Sytnikova, and to demonstrate ways of its improvement, found by the author of this article in the process of her own pedagogical activity. Methods. The methodology of the study is based on theoretical developments and practical work of domestic solfegists, aimed at the development of interval hearing. The most important component is the method of auditory determination of intervals based on associative thinking, developed by V. M. Sytnikova. Results. The expediency of using halftone as a building cell of intervals is substantiated: firstly, because of the students' better perception of the uniformity of measure units, and secondly, because halftone is the main component of many sound structures in the music of the twentieth century, in particular, symmetrical modes. The associative table of intervals formed during the pedagogical activity of V. M. Sytnikova is considered, the use of the initial intonations of known songs is noted. The necessity of reorientation in the formation of the "interval is the initial intonation of the song" association from Russian songs and Soviet cartoons to Ukrainian songs and methods of sound inheritance are pointed out. The ways of gradual departure from the "stencils" in the process of further work on the auditory determination of intervals are described – through listening and analysis of numerous samples of music, comparison of different intonational "versions" of intervals, selection of short intonations to each of them. It is emphasized that reliance on associative thinking, in addition to the practical purpose of determining hearing intervals, should promote the perception of music in unity with other arts. Synthetic communication can involve any pair of human senses, but most often there are connections between sight, touch and hearing. The principle of combination of visual and auditory impressions is used by G. Doman in the study of English. The musical analogue of the cards he created can be used at the lessons with young students studying the intervals. The use of cards introduces an element of game into the lesson, which is an effective didactic tool at work with children. The importance of integration of English to solfeggio learning process is emphasized. Today, English is the language of international communication, and its study should prepare modern students for adulthood, giving them new opportunities. The use of English elements in the course of solfeggio in first grade concerned mainly terminology – the names of sounds and octaves, in the second grade English can be associated with the study of intervals. However, singing Ukrainian songs in English, the direct link between the word and the corresponding musical intonation disappears, so the emphasis should be on soundtracking. The differences between sound inheritance in English and Ukrainian are indicated, due to local traditions and the choice of imitation of one or another facet of sound. It is suggested to add to the English version of the associative interval table, in addition to the verbal text, also images that will help children to orient themselves and memorize words unfamiliar to them more quickly, bypassing the translation stage. The conclusion was made about the effectiveness of V. M. Sytnikova's methodology, which was tested by several generations of her students, including the author of the article. This technique allows you not only to recognize confidently the musical intervals in their melodic and harmonious types, but also to further navigate the extrasensory structures of contemporary music. Conclusions. Relying on associative thinking indicating intervals while hearing, except tactical goals – to teach students to differentiate these the most important "building bricks" of music due to phonic coloration, has strategic ones, connected with the wish to show the connection between music as an art and world that can be seen in the art works through the sound combining. Achievement of the tactical goal becomes an important stage in the development of musical hearing as a necessary foundation of any musical activity. As for strategic goals, understanding of art and universe unity, sense of sound, lines and color connections instilled during childhood will become deeper and get new dimensions during all the life, that will unchangeably bring lot of joy and excitement. The perspectives of the farthest giveaways are connected with harnessing the potential of associative thinking according to studying other elements of music language – accords as well as searching new, more concrete and modern parallels between sound verbal and graphic folders of associative tables which are created for using at the "Solfeggio & English" integrated course.


2021 ◽  
Vol 23 (23) ◽  
pp. 125-143
Author(s):  
Nataliia Bielik-Zolotariova

Problem statement. One of the most important directions of modern choral studies is the research on the life and creative path of outstanding choirmasters, while understanding their performing experience, pedagogical approaches and taking into account their aesthetic and artistic beliefs. One of the most honorable places among artists is occupied by Viacheslav Palkin (1935–2008), who contributed greatly to the development and prosperity of both, the choral culture of Slobozhanshchyna and Ukraine. The relevance of topic lies in the necessity to study the creative experience of the remarkable choral conductor V. S. Palkin, to understand the contribution of the luminary of the Kharkiv conducting and choral school to the development of national art. Theoretical background includes the articles of O. Batovska (2005), H. Parfonova (2008) and the thesis of H. Savelieva (2012), N. Bielik(2007), which examines Palkin’s pedagogical approaches, his achievements as the head of the Choral Conducting Department of the Kharkiv I. P. Kotlyarevsky Institute of Arts, as well as the performing style of the Сhamber Сhoir led by him as an artistic director and choirmaster. Other sources of study embody the materials of the national conference, methodological works and articles by V. S. Palkin collected and published in I. Palkin’s book “Viacheslav Palkin. By the roads of choral art” (2011). The objective of the work is to define a periodization of Palkin’s life and career to identify the stages of his professional growth to the crowning achievements at the height of his creative career. The research methodology lies in the application of the principles of historicism, phenomenological and acmeocentric approaches, biographical method and the method of typological analysis. The periodization of the life and career of the distinguished choral conductor, teacher and educator V. S. Palkin is presented for the first time in art studies. Conclusions. The analysis of V. Palkin’s life and career resulted in the periodization. The following criteria were taken into account: biographical, geographical, evolutionary-performing and age-specific. The first period (1935–1951) covers childhood, the second one (1951–1960) represents his years of education. This period is characterized by his desire to comprehend and embrace all the subtleties of choir conducting. The third stage (1960–1978) is the accumulation of choirmaster, pedagogical, and life experience. The fourth one (1978–2008) is the culmination of the master’s life and career, his finest hour and acme phase, when he created a chamber choir, which reached the highest level of choral art under his leadership. It was established that choirs led by V. Palkin reflect changes in his artistic career path. The four stages reflect the evolution of the artist as a conductorinterpreter, organizer and leader of numerous choral groups, teacher and educator.


Author(s):  
Marysol Quevedo

Juan Orrego-Salas was a Chilean composer and musicologist. Born in Santiago, Chile on January 1919, he began his music education in Santiago, while also pursuing a career in architecture, obtaining a diploma in architecture in 1943. He studied composition with Humberto Allende and Domingo Santa Cruz, while also teaching music courses at the Universidad de Chile and Universidad Católica de Chile. By 1949 he dedicated himself fully to music composition, abandoning his career as an architect. Under a grant from the Rockefeller Foundation and a fellowship from the Guggenheim Foundation, he studied music composition with Aaron Copland in Tanglewood and with Randall Thompson at the University of Virginia and University of Princeton. Orrego-Salas also studied musicology with Paul Henry Lang and Georg Herzog at Columbia University. He returned to Chile in 1947 joining the faculty of the Universidad de Chile as full professor, and as choral conductor at the Universidad Católica de Chile. During 1949 he traveled through Europe, conducting the world premiere of his Canciones castellanas, Op. 20, selected for the XXIII Festival of the International Society of Contemporary Music (ISCM) in Palermo and Taormina, Sicily. Upon returning to Chile he assumed the editorship of the Revista Musical Chilena. These years were followed by a prolific compositional career, completing commissions for new works for a variety of ensembles including orchestras and chamber groups.


Tempo ◽  
2017 ◽  
Vol 71 (281) ◽  
pp. 96-98
Author(s):  
Lauri Supponen

As the audience's rustling quietens along with the memories of everyday pulses, ethereal sounds appear. We are at Helsinki's iconic Rock Church, on the eighth night of the biennial Musica nova festival for contemporary music. The Helsinki Chamber Choir sound the first, lingering lines of György Ligeti's Lux Aeterna from the balcony, behind the audience. The peculiar acoustics give the illusion that the choir is hidden in between the crevasses and cracks of the stone wall in front. The listener is surrounded. Marvellously kept together by Nils Schweckendiek, the singers transform the colour of their voices into sine-tones and oboes in a strangely soothing way. This rendition now somewhat more present than the night before, when the choir echoed the same micropolyphonic lines across the aula of the Kiasma art museum. There the cool distance of the work really spoke in a mesmerising way, with an unreachable caress.


Tempo ◽  
1993 ◽  
pp. 21-25 ◽  
Author(s):  
Christopher Fox

The new music summer school in Darmstadt is perhaps the most important gathering of and performers of contemporary music in Europe. Launched in 1946 in the then American Zone of occupied Germany, as part of the postwar process of internationalization (and, therefore, de-Nazification) of German culture, the Darmstadt Ferienkurse quickly gained a reputation as a forum for the promulgation of a radically abstract musical aesthetic, based on reductive analyses of the serial works of Webern in particular. While some composers saw this new aesthetic as a ‘mechanistic heresy’, the music of what came to be known as the Darmstadt School – Boulez, Maderna, Nono, Stockhausen – soon attracted official support since, like Abstract Expressionist painting, ‘a seemingly abstract art could readily be elevated as an emblem of “terrible freedom”’. This ‘terrible freedom’, the freedom to be unpopular, was a potent symbol of Western individualism in the symbolic battle that characterized the European theatre of the Cold War during the 1950s.


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