-
Examine the key choreographic developments of Richard Alston from 1966-1987.
... dance, juxtaposing ideas to make college of different meanings and engaging the intellect of spectators. Alston's interest in Cunningham links to these approaches. At LCDS students mixed with mature artists and were encouraged to make work for regular workshop programmes. ...
-
Explain how Handel achieves a sense of majesty in his setting of The King Shall Rejoice.
... Shall Rejoice is an Italian influence on the piece. Italian opera was renown for being dramatic and Handel incorporates this device successfully into his music.
The dotted quaver and semi quaver rhythmic motif that keeps appearing all the way through ...
-
Explain the Emergence of Punk in the 70’s
... but it did not have harmony. This lack of basic melody meant that a lot of people disliked punk music, however it was also this lack of melody that attracted so many people to the music - because it was ...
-
Explore the dramatic affects of 'the dance' half way through act 1.
... dance' is something that they don't actually want to do. 'The dance' is more like a kind of ritual and the heavy traditional Irish music emphasises this.
This sudden release of energy sends the audience into confusion. 'The dance' changes from ...
-
Expressive Arts Dance
... shape.
2. We also use crosses and other unusual moves. These are the moving motifs and the moves make us lose humanity as the moves are inhuman. Some of these moves are:
* Side steps when we untwist out of the knee ...
-
Film Music - Different Types of Atmosphere.
... bit more sad and serious than happier music. The dynamics in scary music are often very similar. They use a lot of crescendos and diminuendos and accelerandos and rallentandos, as this variation in the music helps to build up the ...
-
Fine Romance
... passed smiling her white sparkling teeth, his heart would stop beating. He went to Julie's to discuss the matter.
"Julie, what am I going to do? I can't even talk to her let alone to tell her that I love her. ...
-
For my first performance piece I performed the fourth movement from Sonata Number 8 called Allegro by Giovanni Battista Pescetti
... left hand mainly playing quavers to balance them.
There are a number of perfect cadences in the piece, these give the impression that the piece has ended. The first of these can be found just fourteen bars into the piece. ...
-
For this assignment we had to take samples from our CD collection and choose at least three instruments including vocals to create our own groove.
... dragging the desired track onto the desktop then we removed the CD from the machine. Before we were able to import the files to logic we had to change their preference settings to read/write.
We then listened to each track a ...
-
French Flute Music between 1935 and 1955: Varèse, Messiaen and Jolivet
... Edgard Varèse (1883-1965) and Andrè Jolivet (1905-1974). I imagined that the studies already done on these composers would provide me with an analytical and historical view of their works and lives. Early in my study it became apparent that very ...
-
From your reading of 'Captain Corelli's Mandolin' how appropriate is the musical reference in the title?
... I know who that someone is and that's enough for me to know that that person is with me." It becomes a voice for the people that cannot be hushed.
With Captain Corelli's Mandolin the reader is instantaneously made aware ...
-
Genre
... five sci-fi films are men in black one and men in black two, war games, the Truman show and E.T the extra terrestrial. The sci-fi conventions are computers, technology gone wrong, robots
Romance five romance films are titanic, Wimbledon, Romeo ...
-
Give a brief account of the First Movement, the Introduzione, paying particular attention to the structure and melodic invention.
... bass parts are based on the principle of the perfect fourth and major second. This theme is in diminution and is picked up by the violas two bars later. In bar 39 the trumpets take over the flute idea from ...
-
Gladiator
... muddy war. He is able to close his eyes while at war and travel back home. While he does that the music has such melody that portraits the quietness and peacefulness of his home.
Also when they are fighting in ...
-
Gripped.
... school found out, found out that I dance, I think maliciously. I looked up at the somber clouds in the sky which threatened to explode.
They had sniggered when Ms Bichel called out to me and said, "Billy are you ready ...
-
Ground bass
... or more notes of different pitch, at the same time. There are two types of harmonies. A concord is a "nice" sounding chord, since the notes fit together and sound well when played. A discord is a "horrible" sounding chord, ...
-
Historical Periods of Music.
... time, where there wasn't a melody and accompaniment, but two equally important lines of music.
Baroque ~
(1600 - 1750)
Vivaldi, Antonio Lucio was a composer of many famous concertos during the Baroque period. But he wrote music in all forms, which ...
-
History Elvis Presley Sources
... best at that time, being on the label was an attribute in itself, but being described as the "Hottest" artist on the biggest American label proves his popularity. Elvis is also described as the "amazing country warbler".
The article goes on ...
-
History of Chamber Music What is chamber music?It is ensemble instrumental music for up to about ten performers with typically one performer to a part.
... retained in the arrangements later became a striking feature.
The Chanson
The chanson travelled to Italy about 1525, became known as canzona, and was transcribed for organ. The earliest transcriptions differed from the French arrangements in treating the original chanson with greater ...
-
History of Drum and Bass.
... this new great sound.
There was an abundance of new tracks being played all over the Chicago clubs. The new sound of house then started to crawl it's way to other cities in America and in 1986 took it's way to ...
-
House Music
... campaign. In one bizarrely extreme incident, people attending a baseball game in Chicago's Komishi Park were invited to bring all their unwanted disco records and after the game they were tossed onto a massive bonfire. Disco eventually collapsed under a ...
-
How did Mozart's orchestral music take the classical age to its peak?
... so instead of the eight bar consequent ending at bar sixteen Mozart repeats those two bars using added decoration and starts the next phrase at bar eighteen.
For the link section leading from the first section to the second he has ...
-
How did Western polophony develop during its earliest stages of evolution, and what were the characteristics of the most important polyphonic genres of the ninth through thirteenth centuries
... conductus was that the tenor was newly composed and not based on a chant melody. The main technical advancements of these years were the defining of the modal rhythmic system and teh invention of a new kind of notation for ...
-
How does Jacques Loussiers interpretation of Toccata and Fugue in D Minor differ from its original arrangement for organ?
... as written. Furthermore, those that do so tend to focus on Baroque pieces by Bach. So why is Bach's music so open to interpretation in so many different styles?
In order to narrow down the scope of such a research ...
-
HOW HAS THE CONTEXT OF FALSETTOLAND INFLUENCED THE CONTENT AND WRITING OF THE PIECE AND HOW DOES THE CONTEXT RELATE TO A MODER
... of Judaism in Europe. Although perhaps some beliefs and moral standings were reflected across the Atlantic, for the purposes of this argument this will be negligible.
When analysing the musical content of Falsettoland it is important that one does not ...