Roll Over Rock: A Study of Music in Contemporary CultureStainer & Bell, 1981 - 175 Seiten |
Im Buch
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Seite 68
... fact the composers of these minstrel shows had only the ghost of a notion of what the black music of the South was really about ; even Stephen Foster , the man who captured the fragile sentiments and susceptibilities of the North in his ...
... fact the composers of these minstrel shows had only the ghost of a notion of what the black music of the South was really about ; even Stephen Foster , the man who captured the fragile sentiments and susceptibilities of the North in his ...
Seite 129
... fact Webern who created the totally new language , by eliminating conventional rhythmic impulses and pointing individual notes of a line across different instruments . By these means he achieved a unified shape and enormous clarity ( to ...
... fact Webern who created the totally new language , by eliminating conventional rhythmic impulses and pointing individual notes of a line across different instruments . By these means he achieved a unified shape and enormous clarity ( to ...
Seite 146
... fact been anticipated , from a different and very much more complex standpoint , by the Greek composer , Iannis Xenakis . The development of integral serialism , for all its restrictive determinacy , was historically within the western ...
... fact been anticipated , from a different and very much more complex standpoint , by the Greek composer , Iannis Xenakis . The development of integral serialism , for all its restrictive determinacy , was historically within the western ...
Inhalt
2100351 | 7 |
The Path to Elitism | 21 |
2 | 32 |
Urheberrecht | |
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Roll Over Rock: A Study of Music in Contemporary Culture Peter Fletcher Keine Leseprobe verfügbar - 1981 |
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
19th century achieved appear art music artistic audience aware Bach ballads Baroque basic Beatles became become Beethoven black music Blues ceremony chord Church civilisation classical music composers concept contemporary music contrast created culture dance Debussy early effect electronic elements élite emotional entertainment essentially European expression folk music function genius harmony human improvisation individual influence instruments integral serialism jazz John Cage listener London magic Marshall McLuhan melody Messiaen middle classes Miles Davis Mozart musicians nature negro notion opera orchestra ornament parameters performed pitch popular music possible primitive Quentin Fiore record companies Renaissance Renaissance musical rhythm rhythmic ritual Rock Schoenberg's Scratch Music Scratch Orchestra Second Viennese School sense sensory sentiment sing singers social society songs sophisticated sound spirit Stockhausen Stravinsky structure style symphonic synthesis taste texture texture music theatre theatrical thing timbre tonal tribal tunes unity Varèse Wagner Webern western music Xenakis