scholarly journals Stringed Instruments of the Hallstatt Culture – from Iconographic Representation to Experimental Reproduction

2020 ◽  
Vol LXVIII (Suppl. 1) ◽  
pp. 471-482
Author(s):  
Beate Maria Pomberger
Author(s):  
Frank S. Levin

Chapter 7 illustrates the results obtained by applying the Schrödinger equation to a simple pedagogical quantum system, the particle in a one-dimensional box. The wave functions are seen to be sine waves; their wavelengths are evaluated and used to calculate the quantized energies via the de Broglie relation. An energy-level diagram of some of the energies is constructed; on it are illustrations of the corresponding wave functions and probability distributions. The wave functions are seen to be either symmetric or antisymmetric about the midpoint of the line representing the box, thereby providing a lead-in to the later exploration of certain symmetry properties of multi-electron atoms. It is next pointed out that the Schrödinger equation for this system is identical to Newton’s equation describing the vibrations of a stretched musical string. The different meaning of the two solutions is discussed, as is the concept and structure of linear superpositions of them.


2005 ◽  
Vol 20 (2) ◽  
pp. 66-69
Author(s):  
William J Dawson

The playing of many musical instruments is performed principally by the small intrinsic muscles of the hands. Practice records were reviewed to investigate the epidemiology, etiology, and risk factors for intrinsic muscle strain. Fifty-one instrumentalists were found, out of 129 having strains of all hand and forearm muscles. These 51 comprised 15.5% of all 329 musicians seen for overuse-related conditions. The patient ages ranged from 10 to 72 years; 20 were male. Forty-one of the 51 played keyboard or stringed instruments; 11 of the 19 stringed instruments were bowed. Twenty-one patients were professionals or university/conservatory music students. Sixty percent of strains were caused by playing music, with slightly more than half being in the professional/collegiate cohort. Pianists were more likely to experience right hand involvement. Seven patients had bilateral intrinsic strains. Thirteen experienced concomitant strains of the extrinsic forearm muscles, either on the same side or bilaterally with bilateral intrinsic strains. Treatment followed standard principles, with hand rest prescribed in 12, musical practice changes in 19, activity modification in 30, and formal exercises/hand therapy in 23. Nonsteroidal medication was prescribed in 17 cases. The data suggest that intrinsic muscle strains related to overuse follow the same etiologic and anatomic patterns as other upper extremity muscle strain and pain syndromes and have the same risk factors. Health care providers should be aware of the role of the hand intrinsic muscles in playing musical instruments and their propensity for overuse-related strain syndromes from both musical and nonmusical activities.


1933 ◽  
Vol 186 (4) ◽  
pp. 548-556 ◽  
Author(s):  
BY. ARTHUR C. CURTIS ◽  
JOHN M. SHELDON ◽  
HENRY C. ECKSTEIN

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
◽  
Megan Ward

<p>Writers on 18th-century musical ornamentation have traditionally focused on the execution of notated ornaments, and on certain disputes arising from ambiguous and contradictory primary sources. Less attention has been given to the addition of ornaments where not prescribed by the composer. Such ornaments can be short, defined, patterns such as trills, turns, and mordents, or larger measured or unmeasured additions known as diminutions, divisions, or passaggi.  Additions of this nature are only in the rarest of cases compulsory. However, the practice of more or less spontaneous embellishment by the performer was so integral to pre-19th-century musical culture that this must have had a significant effect on composition.  The scope of this thesis is loosely defined by its titular composers, covering the period between Georg Muffat‟s later publications in the last years of the 17th century and G.P. Telemann‟s death in 1767. Both lived and worked in the German states, a region which had traditionally looked to Italian models of composition and performance. This period saw a flowering of German composition into its own unique and diverse genre which integrated aspects of various styles, most prominently Italian and French music.  This thesis centres on stringed instruments, but is directly relevant to woodwind players. Many aspects are also transferrable to the keyboard and to vocal music; however, these musicians will find a large volume of more targeted research elsewhere.</p>


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