Academic literature on the topic 'Ravelry'

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Journal articles on the topic "Ravelry"

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Fillerup, Jessie. "Ravel and Robert-Houdin, Magicians." 19th-Century Music 37, no. 2 (2013): 130–58. http://dx.doi.org/10.1525/ncm.2013.37.2.130.

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Abstract When Claude Debussy called Ravel an “enchanting fakir” in 1907, he anticipated a critical approach typified by Vladimir Jankélévitch's 1939 Ravel biography. In it, Jankélévitch evoked the rich language of theatrical magic, comparing Ravel to a sorcerer, conjurer, and illusionist. Contemporary critics used similar terms to describe the composer's music as early as 1909, around the same time that a parallel narrative emerged: Ravel as a master of mechanism and artifice. A contextual study of theatrical magic, which has yet to be applied to Ravel criticism, provides a substantive connection between these narratives of mechanism, enchantment, and artifice. I begin with the French illusionist Robert-Houdin (1805–71), whose enduring legacy furnishes a forgotten background for Ravel criticism. Robert-Houdin claimed that he was not a mere juggler but “an actor playing the part of a magician,” which resonates with accounts of Ravel's Baudelairean artifice in life and work. For magicians, “illusion” was interchangeable with “effect.” The word “effect” recurs in both Ravel's writings and “The Philosophy of Composition,” a theoretical-didactic essay by Edgar Allan Poe, whom Ravel cited as one of his most important artistic influences. Ravel's appreciation of Poe has a much richer grain than has been imagined, extending beyond compositional artisanship to include literary and theatrical stratagems. Robert-Houdin, who started his career as a clockmaker, featured automata at his Soiréé fantastiques—but sometimes, like von Kempelen's Turk, these automata were illusions themselves. Ravel's fascinations with enchantment and mechanism converge in the presence of these trick machines. In the opera L'Enfant et les sortilèges (1925), Ravel uses techniques known to both magicians and cognitive neuroscientists, exploiting the aural equivalent of an afterimage and manipulating the spectator's attentional frames.
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PURI, MICHAEL J. "The Passion of the Passacaille: Ravel, Wagner, Parsifal." Cambridge Opera Journal 25, no. 3 (2013): 285–318. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s095458671300013x.

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AbstractLong considered to lie ‘light years’ apart, Ravel and Wagner actually have multiple points of contact. Several appear in the comments Ravel made about the German composer in his articles, interviews and correspondence. Another is a previously unrecognised allusion to Parsifal in the Passacaille of Ravel's Trio (1914), which he composed shortly after writing a review of the opera's premiere in Paris. Additional Wagnerisms can be located in Daphnis et Chloé (1909–12) and L'Enfant et les sortilèges (1920–5). More broadly, Wagner plays a central role in the ‘decadent dialectics’ of Ravel's style.
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Astahov, V. A. "STRING QUARTET BY MAURICE RAVEL IN THE CONTEXT OF CREATIVITY AND OUTLOOK OF THE COMPOSER." EurasianUnionScientists 6, no. 7(76) (2020): 4–6. http://dx.doi.org/10.31618/esu.2413-9335.2020.6.76.933.

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In the article, the author reveals the specifics of the artistic and aesthetic views of the outstanding French composer based on the study of the musical text of M. Ravel's chamber-instrumental composition and musicological literature. The authors substantiate the idea of the significance of literary sources for the formation of Ravel's compositional style. Using the analytical method, the author identifies the compositional, dramatic, melodic, textural and Lado-harmonic features of the Ravel string Quartet (1903). The use of the comparative analysis method allowed us to determine the similarity and difference of the approaches Of M. Ravel and C. Debussy in the interpretation of the string Quartet genre. Consideration of the string Quartet in the context Of M. Ravel's work allowed the author to clarify certain aspects of the composer's creative method, to Supplement the ideas about his aesthetic and ideological principles.
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HUEBNER, STEVEN. "Ravel's Tzigane: Artful Mask or Kitsch?" Twentieth-Century Music 17, no. 1 (2019): 63–86. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1478572219000367.

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Like all of Maurice Ravel's compositions, the virtuosic violin piece Tzigane, styled rapsodie de concert by the composer, rapidly became a mainstay of the concert repertory following its premiere with piano by the Hungarian violinist Jelly d'Aranyi in April 1924 in London (her premiere of the orchestral version occurred in Paris on 30 November 1924 with Gabriel Pierné conducting the Colonne Orchestra). Yet, despite its popularity, no critic has included it among Ravel's major works. Reflections on Tzigane in the secondary musicological literature are very few indeed, which is somewhat surprising in the context of a new explosion of interest in Ravel. In his recent biography, Roger Nichols avers that ‘probably no one has ever suggested that Tzigane is great music’. Robert Orledge noted in 2000 that it ‘has never been among Ravel's most successful works’, a remark surely meant as a critique of the composition rather than a statement about its popularity with performers, which has been considerable. Alexis Roland-Manuel, a close friend of the composer, did not even discuss the piece in his biography of 1938. The violinist Hélène Jourdan-Morhange, another close friend and consultant about the virtuoso figuration in Tzigane, confessed almost apologetically in her book on Ravel that ‘this rhapsodic piece is perhaps the only one in Ravel's oeuvre where I cannot locate – hidden in the intricacies of its tours de force – Ravel's characteristic flavour: in it, music has surrendered too much place to instrumental acrobatics’. In other words, she appears to suggest that Tzigane is a mere showpiece where Ravel's personal style has been eclipsed by fireworks, with an implicit criticism of pandering to market. The Hungarian violinist Joseph Szigeti spoke of the ‘resistance I always felt towards this brilliant and (to my mind) synthetically produced pastiche of Ravel's’. At the time of the premiere, the young Henri Sauguet told Francis Poulenc that ‘the aesthetic informing these pages is so antiquated that I am astonished anyone can still believe in it’.
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Vitturi, Bruno Kusznir, and Wilson Luiz Sanvito. "Maurice Ravel's dementia: the silence of a genius." Arquivos de Neuro-Psiquiatria 77, no. 2 (2019): 136–38. http://dx.doi.org/10.1590/0004-282x20180134.

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ABSTRACT Maurice Ravel is one of the most important French musicians. In the last years of his life, Ravel was victim of a dementia of uncertain etiology that caused aphasia, apraxia, agraphia and amusia. The artistic brain of the author of eternal musical compositions was progressively silenced due to his neurodegenerative disease. On the 90th anniversary of Boléro, this historical note revisits Ravel's case and discusses the relationship of his dementia to his artistic production. It illustrates the intimacy that can exist between art, music, creativity, and neurology.
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PURI, MICHAEL J. "Dandy, Interrupted: Sublimation, Repression, and Self-Portraiture in Maurice Ravel's Daphnis et Chloé (1909–1912)." Journal of the American Musicological Society 60, no. 2 (2007): 317–72. http://dx.doi.org/10.1525/jams.2007.60.2.317.

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Whether understood as the elevation of material to a higher state of aesthetic being or the redirection of the libido toward socially seemly ends, the concept of sublimation has played a central but underappreciated role in accounts of Ravel and his music over the past century. Similarly, Ravel's identity as a dandy —who, according to Baudelaire, aspires to be “sublime without interruption” —has been mentioned consistently in biographical appraisals, but never deeply investigated. Incorporating a representation of the dandy's genesis from the sublimation of desire, Ravel's Daphnis et Chloé (1909–1912) offers the analyst an excellent opportunity to examine both entities in depth while also broaching a variety of related topics: repression, queer sexuality, camp aesthetics, contemporary musical politics (dandyism versus d'Indyism), and theories of autobiography.
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De Surmont, Noël. "Béla Bartók et Maurice Ravel: Question d'une influence Bartók a-t-il été inspiré par Daphnis et Chloé de Ravel dans son ballet le Prince de bois?" Studia Musicologica 48, no. 1-2 (2007): 133–45. http://dx.doi.org/10.1556/smus.48.2007.1-2.8.

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Abstract Maurice Ravel uses a lot of musical elements in his ballet Daphnis et Chloé that appear in Bartók's Ballet The Wooden Prince. So are the instrumentation and especially the orchestration (particularly at the beginning of these two works: the wake-up of the nature that is almost the same, and the “grotesque” moments). The themes of the different episodes that build the ballet seem to be the same in their conception, and we can add that the main themes (love in Daphnis and the prince in The Wooden Prince) are twin. Their roots are the same, so the idea that Ravel influenced Bartók looks likely. Even if there is no real proof, like e.g. a letter by Bartók about Daphnis et Chloé. A comparison of the two works seems to suggest that Ravel's work really had an influence on Bartók's Wooden Prince.
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Zharkova, Valeriya. "Music by Claude Debussy and Maurice Ravel: a Modern View of the Problem of Style Identification." Scientific herald of Tchaikovsky National Music Academy of Ukraine, no. 130 (March 18, 2021): 24–51. http://dx.doi.org/10.31318/2522-4190.2021.130.231181.

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The relevance of the article is determined by the appeal to the debatable issues of stylistic differentiation of the works by Claude Debussy and Maurice Ravel as the French musical culture leading representatives of the late 19th and the first third of the 20th centuries. The research reflections about the connections betwen Debussy and Ravel on the principle “for / against” have not subsided for more than a hundred years. This testifies to the special urgency of this problem and the need to search for modern approaches to understanding the artistic identity of two brilliant contemporaries.Scientific novelty. For the first time, the multidirectionality of the composing strategies by Debussy and Ravel is indicated through the the concept of style in its interdisciplinary philosophicalcategorical status and the explanationof its functions of identification and communication in the general cultural understanding (O. Ustyugova). For the first time the difference between the cultural phenomena processes integration in the era of modernism into the new artistic wholes, with unique properties, which is appropriate to define as “Debussy’s style” and “Ravel’s style”, is revealed.The purpose of the article is to reveal the multidirectionality of the composing strategies of Debussy and Ravel through an appeal to the main stylistic functions of identification and communication in general cultural understanding (O. Ustyugova); to designate the non-coincidence of channels of integration of cultural phenomena in the era of modernism into new artistic wholes, which have unique properties such as “Debussy’s style” and “Ravel’s style”.The research methodology includes the use of historical, stylistic, comparative methods.Main results and conclusions. The existing musicological literature emphasizes the influence of romanticism, post-romanticism, impressionism, symbolism, neoclassicism, Art Nouveau, moderne style on the formation of the individual style of Debussy and Ravel. Each of these directions had a certain reflection in the work of composers. However, let us try to highlight in the conceptual space of the many-sided “isms” of the cultural context of the era of modernism the hidden sources of the deployment of the creative intentions of the both brilliant contemporaries. We will choose the fundamental work of E. Ustyugova “Style and Culture: Experience of Building a General Theory of Style” (2003) as a methodological basis for this. E. Ustyugova proposes to go beyond the understanding style as a “migratory structure” (term by J. Rebane) and a convenient “classification tool” (J. Burnham) in structural and typological studies of art and move on to a comprehensive study of the essence of this phenomenon. For this, according to the researcher, it is necessary to carry out two analytical procedures. The first is based on the awareness of the experience of the mismatch between the object and the subject. The second involves considering the style in the aspect of intersubjective communication.With this view on the problem of identifying the patterns of formation and development of cultural phenomena, it is not the nominative parameters and the “herbarization” of genrelinguistic units that come to the fore, but the comprehension of the multilevel subject-object relations that formed these phenomena; “live reproduction” of the matrix of the world perception as channels of communication between the “I” and everything that appears as “not-I”.The creative paths of Debussy and Ravel represent diferent creative strategies. The “pure meaning”, unspeakable by words and free from all earthly, to which Debussy aspired, creates parallels with the texts of symbolist poets and destroy the boundaries between “I” and “not-I”.
 In the fundamental monographs of French researchers dedicated to the composer an idea has long been entrenched: the composer’s creative laboratory was poetry, and Debussy’s address to the poetic word throughout all his creative decades constantly expanding the semantic horizons of his “artistic realities”.Debussy’s spiritual intentions merged into a single sound-glow in the indivisible space of being. The word in all its dimensions (from literal to metaphysical) indicated the stages of the process of dissolving the personal “I” and going beyond (au-délà) the established forms of artistic expression. Therefore, various kinds of the names (or “afterwords”, as in the Preludes), epigraphs, numerous super-detailed directions remained an integral part of an integral sound structure. His musical language, destroying the connections in time between the past and the future (rejection of the system of functional gravities that should be “stretched” in musical memory), created a certain correspondence (“here and now”) with the phenomenon of being.Hence the following characteristics of the composer’s musical works: 1) the impeccable construction of the whole, which is “thought out to the smallest detail” (E. Denisov), subtle multilevel “correspondences” and symmetries; 2) total thematization of texture (K. Zenkin); 3) selfsufficient semantic expressiveness of the “pure sound forms” (K. Zenkin), which became the embodiment of “an agonizing thirst for undeniably pure” (S. Velikovsky).These properties of Debussy’s style open up the possibility to get into the spiritual dimensions filled with pure beauty, which so attracted the followers of Baudelaire. Using the typology of teh subject-object relations proposed by E. Ustyugova, Debussy’s style can be attributed throughout the paradigm of hidden subjectivity. Debussy was well aware of his “non-romantic” position.The artistic aspirations of Maurice Ravel more clearly resonate with the creative attitudes of Art Nouveau artists, who were looking for new forms of plastic expressiveness mainly in spatial forms of art. It seems that it is with this direction that a special feeling of the plasticity of the musical material and the entire musical composition as a unique phenomenon is associated, which determines the composer’s creative credo.The concept of “plasticity” indicates such a connection between coordinated phenomena, which appears through the reincarnation (transformation) of a certain material substance, when we keep in memory its output characteristics. Ballet works and the reliance on dance genres (and more broadly, various types of plasticity of gesture and movement) reveal the hidden basis of the composer’s thinking. This approach allows one to re-evaluate Ravel’s connections with the ancient heritage (it is symptomatic that the composer called his first “adult” work, devoted to the press, “Antique Minuet”) and to understand the meanings of constant antique reminiscences with which he filled his life.Like a real dandy who lets the vibrations of the world pass through himself, Ravel is sensitive to them and “cuts off” random, “ugly”, “unnecessary” ones. Hence — the special beauty of the artistic structures created by the composer. They are built not in a “filtered” ideal-beautiful dimension, but in the space of shimmering opposites (the corporeal — free from the corporeal, the familiar — the unknown). Ravel’s inherent tendency towards the graphic relief of the melodic line creates parallels with the “famous lines of Art Nouveau” (Fahr-Becker Gabriele) and is especially distinct, characterizes the composer’s later works.The non-everyday register of semantic reverberations of what is happening in the process of metamorphosis in the composer’s music (his plastic questioning about the existential nature of the source material) demanded a special listener’s responsiveness. Mistifications, hiding behind a mask, playing with the listener are Ravel’s usual communication strategies. Therefore, according to the typology of the subject-object relations proposed by E. Ustyugova, we can speak here of the paradigm of “open subjectivity”, which is characterized by the direct orientation of the subject towards himself. Hence — the principle of auto-citation characteristic of Ravel. The quintessence of its use are the composer’s later works — the opera Child and Magic, as well as the Piano Concerto in G major — the Dandy summa summarum of the composer’s previous career.The game of “correspondences” (Baudelaire) was manifested by composers in various ways and conditioned various channels of communication. Debussy makes the semantics of sound education a semantic unit, appeals to the listener with the expressiveness of the structure itself. Therefore he always emphasizes, appeals to the elite listener. Ravel, on the other hand, hides behind masks and theatrical illusions. He needs a listener who has a culture of distance (who owns wide meaning contextual fields). The contextual layers associated with musical texts express that “degree of distance” from the object of attention, which the composer himself chooses and whose parameters are constantly changing. Therefore, Ravel never turns twice in the genre, style or stylistic model he has already used.So, if the works by Debussy can be perceived “from scratch” because of their structural completeness and semantic tightness, then the works by Ravel require the listener to know the musical context and readiness to lay it out “fold by fold” (J. Deleuze) in new semantic projections.At the turn of the 19th and 20th centuries, French culture was looking for a means of creating a “state of resonance” (G. Bachelard) as an extraordinary impression, “awakening”, without which a person cannot take place. Debussy and Ravel moved in this direction. Therefore, only through the identification of all the “correspondences” of the era of a total change of creative guidelines and a departure from unambiguous stylistic “avatars” can one feel its essential discoveries. The study of the lines of intersection of the Debussy music and the Ravel music with various artistic phenomena of the past and the present illuminates certain reflections of the “style of the era”. However understanding the deep patterns of the creative manner of the two contemporaries requires differentiating the definitions of “Debussy’s style” and “Ravel’s style” and their further studying.
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Kieffer, Alexandra. "Bells and the Problem of Realism in Ravel’s Early Piano Music." Journal of Musicology 34, no. 3 (2017): 432–72. http://dx.doi.org/10.1525/jm.2017.34.3.432.

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Early in his career Maurice Ravel composed two pieces that take bells as their subject: “Entre Cloches” from Sites auriculaires, composed in 1897, and “La vallée des cloches,” the final movement of the 1905 work Miroirs. Although these pieces can be contextualized within a nineteenth-century lineage of French piano pieces that depict bell peals, they also set themselves apart by virtue of their heightened attention to the particularities of bell sonorities. Relying heavily on repetitive ostinato patterns, quartal harmonies, and intense dissonances, these pieces play in the nebulous space between transcription and composition. Ravel’s experimentation with bell sonorities in his piano music can be understood in relation to a broader discourse surrounding the sound of bells in nineteenth-century France. A complex sonic object, bell resonance lent itself to different modes of listening: the harmoniousness of bell peals was a common refrain among romantic poets, Catholic clergy, and campanarian historians, but toward the end of the century it became increasingly common for physicists and popular-science publications to complain that bells were inherently discordant. In this context Ravel’s depictions of bells in “Entre cloches” and “La vallée des cloches” suggest a shift in the place of musical listening in nineteenth- and early twentieth-century cultures of aurality. Ravel’s musical listening entailed heightened attentiveness to the empirical qualities of non-musical sound; his pieces negotiate in new ways the boundary between musical composition and the protean sonic world outside of music. This reorientation of musical listening participates in a broader questioning by early twentieth-century modernists of the nature of music and its sonic material.
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BHOGAL, GURMINDER KAUR. "Debussy’s Arabesque and Ravel’s Daphnis et Chloé (1912)." Twentieth-Century Music 3, no. 2 (2006): 171–99. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1478572207000448.

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AbstractJust as arabesque carries a range of visual and literary associations, this ornament assumes a diverse presence in music scholarship, where it characterizes a wide repertoire and assortment of techniques. Despite its conceptual breadth, this essay shows that arabesque upheld a specific musical identity for Debussy and Ravel. This is reflected in their simulation of art nouveau’s intricate and fluid designs through melodic gestures that emphasize irregular rhythms and dissonant metres. Also in keeping with art nouveau is the tendency of these composers to privilege musical arabesque’s structural appearance and expressive capacity. These observations are explored with reference to Ravel’s Daphnis et Chloé, a ballet that critics admired for its arabesque qualities. An analysis of four dances will reveal how the distinct rhythmic and metric profiles of arabesque melodies portray characters and their narratives. In challenging preconceptions of ornament as marginal and meaningless, this essay shows how arabesque became endowed with structural and expressive significance at the début du siècle.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Ravelry"

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Thome, Hannah R. "Ravelry.com: Augmenting Fiber Craft Communities and Social Making with Web 2.0." Ohio University / OhioLINK, 2018. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=ohiou1524488670252085.

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Winnecke, Elisabeth. "Ravel und die Modelle : kulturhistorische Untersuchungen zum Gebrauch von Modellen und Beiträge zu einer Ästhetik Maurice Ravels /." Frankfurt am Main ; Bern ; Bruxelles : P. Lang, 2001. http://catalogue.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/cb37716332n.

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Ellis, Diana Lea. "A Performer's Analysis of Maurice Ravel's Chansons madécasses: A Lecture Recital, Together with Three Recitals of Selected Works of B. Britten, R. Schumann, S. Barber, T. Pasatieri, F. Poulenc, G. Verdi, T. Arne, and Others." Thesis, University of North Texas, 2004. https://digital.library.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metadc4522/.

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In his song cycle, Chansons madécasses (1926), a chamber work for voice, piano, flute, and cello, Maurice Ravel combines twentieth-century musical experimentation and exoticism with the late nineteenth-century style characteristics present in the vocal elements and instrumentation. Because early twentieth-century music appears to be closely connected to modern concerns, performers may tend to dismiss the style and technique of the early twentieth century as simply "old-fashioned" rather than examine and consider those elements as resources and valuable tools for interpreting and presenting authentic performances. The focus of this research includes a discussion of the historical, social, and textual implications of the music and poetry; a formal musical analysis of the work, including comparisons of an early twentieth-century, mid-century, and late twentieth-century recordings with regard to the use of vibrato and portamento in the voice, cello, and flute; and an examination of Chansons madécasses for elements of authentic Malagasy music and poetry. The paper also suggests methodologies for performance practice which reflect the results of these analyses. The beginnings of the rejection of traditional form - harmonic, rhythmic, and melodic structures - found in the early part of the century began to free composers and performers to explore musical presentations that gain their power not only from startling and unexpected elements of exoticism and interpretation but also from their romantic roots, which spurred the desire for a raw, even melodramatic, emotionalism. Ravel, without sacrificing the integrity of his native language, is able to blend his text with his accompaniment in a way that uses both the poem and the music to advance the "plot" and emotion of the narration, producing what might be described as a near perfect union of form and theme, structure and idea.
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Tobin, Shannon. ""Aspects of Ravel's piano trio" /." St. Lucia, Qld, 2001. http://www.library.uq.edu.au/pdfserve.php?image=thesisabs/absthe16407.pdf.

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Deruchie, Andrew. "Ravel's Sheherazade and Fin-de-siecle orientalism." Thesis, McGill University, 2000. http://digitool.Library.McGill.CA:80/R/?func=dbin-jump-full&object_id=30791.

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Sheherazade (Trois poems de Tristan Klingsor), composed in 1903, represents both Ravel's first major vocal work and his earliest major orchestral composition. Despite the work's important position in the composer's oeuvre, it has received little academic attention. No monograph, dissertation, or article on Sheherazade has yet appeared. The primary objective of this study is to make this much needed contribution to Ravel scholarship. Of the piece's salient features, the most immediately striking is its exoticism; every phrase is given an Oriental tint. Using the work of cultural critic Edward Said as a theoretical framework, I contextualize Sheherazade's exoticism by situating the piece within the broad set of interrelated cultural practices Said calls Orientalism. I show that the work is affiliated, structurally and rhetorically, with particular Orientalist texts (both musical and non-musical), textual genres, traditions, and practices. By locating the piece historically among these texts and practices, and by using them as a referential network to read it hermeneutically, I demonstrate that rich cultural, political, and, for Ravel, personal meaning can be read into Sheherazade .
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Lane, Matthew Richard. "Speculative structures : musical meanings in Ravel's Miroirs." Thesis, Royal Holloway, University of London, 2009. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.538305.

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Clifton, Keith Edward. "Maurice Ravel's L'heure espagnole : genesis, sources, analysis /." Ann Arbor : UMI, 2001. http://catalogue.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/cb37659538n.

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PEREIRA, LAIS FONTENELLE. "FASHION WORN BY CLUBBERS AND RAVERS." PONTIFÍCIA UNIVERSIDADE CATÓLICA DO RIO DE JANEIRO, 2003. http://www.maxwell.vrac.puc-rio.br/Busca_etds.php?strSecao=resultado&nrSeq=4747@1.

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COORDENAÇÃO DE APERFEIÇOAMENTO DO PESSOAL DE ENSINO SUPERIOR<br>A moda entrou na moda na contemporaneidade. Ela saiu dos armários e vitrines e veio parar no papel, ou melhor neste papel. O presente trabalho consiste em um estudo da moda dos Clubbers e Ravers como uma forma de expressão e comunicação na cultura atual, em que o verbo foi substituído por imagens e as palavras por roupas e acessórios. A primeira parte apresenta um histórico, desde o nascimento da moda até os dias de hoje, enfocando a moda como uma produção cultural que envolve aspectos sociais, políticos, econômicos e até ideológicos. A segunda parte trata do trabalho de campo, isto é das 11 entrevistas realizadas com sujeitos entre 17 e 34 anos, residentes no Rio de Janeiro e São Paulo e que se vestem com a moda Clubber ou Raver. O objetivo deste trabalho era portanto de tentar entender a moda como fenômeno situado no limite entre o público e o privado além de descrever como se dá a socialização de sujeitos vivendo numa cultura dominada por sensações e habitada por imagens.<br>Fashion is fashionable in present days. Fashion left the wardrobes and showcases and landed on paper, or better still on this paper. The present paper consists of a study on the fashion worn by Clubbers and Ravers as a means of expression and communication of the current culture, where the verb has been replaced by images and the words by clothes and accessories. The first part is a historical study, since the birth of fashion up to the present time, highlighting fashion as a cultural production entailing social, political, economical and ideological aspects. The second part deals with field work: 11 interviews were undertaken wtih people ranging from 17 to 34 years old, residents of Rio de Janeiro and São Paulo, who wear Clubber and Raver fashion. The objective of this paper is therefore, to try to understand fashion as a phenomena on the boundary between public and private, besides describing how people socialise in a culture dominated by sensations and inhabited by images.
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Vlasáková, Hana. "Klavírní koncert G dur Maurice Ravela." Master's thesis, Akademie múzických umění v Praze.Hudební a taneční fakulta. Knihovna, 2013. http://www.nusl.cz/ntk/nusl-177879.

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Abstract This thesis deals with Maurice Ravel's Concerto for piano and Orchestra in G major. At first, it makes readers acquainted with important matters in author?s life and then it presents a genesis of the work and its first reception. Overview of the main inspiration sources, which are reflected in Concerto in G major follows. On basis of the analysis of harmony, musical form, piano stylization and comments of the first interpreter of the work, Marguerite Long, are formulated conclusions, important for acquirement of appropriate viewpoints for the proper interpretation. These attitudes are confronted with top performances of this composition, first by Marguerite Long and than by renowned pianists from different countries (Leonard Bernstein, Boris Krajný and Hél&#232;ne Grimaud). Supplement of this thesis is a CD, which documents a few examples of the basque music, which was one of the main inspiration sources of the Concerto in G major and contents recordings of this piece of all above-mentioned pianists.
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Helbing, Volker. "Choreographie und Distanz : Studien zur Ravel-Analyse /." Hildesheim : G. Olms, 2008. http://catalogue.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/cb41425898p.

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Books on the topic "Ravelry"

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Vega, De Martini, Pignataro Luciano giornalista, Romano Luciano, and Di Maggio Gino, eds. Ravello. F.M. Ricci, 1991.

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1948-, Paladino Mimmo, ed. Paladino / Ravello. Arte'm, 2013.

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Hélène, Jourdan-Morhange. Ravel d'après Ravel. Alinéa, 1989.

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Balaban, A. Snovidennyĭ praktikum Ravenny. Vesʹ, 2006.

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Ricordi di Ravello. Elea press, 2000.

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Perlemuter, Vlado. Ravel according to Ravel. Kahn & Averill, 1988.

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Ravel, Maurice. Ravel according to Ravel. Kahn & Averill, 1988.

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Perlemuter, Vlado. Ravel according to Ravel. Kahn & Averill, 1990.

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Jankélévitch, Vladimir. Ravel. Seuil, 1995.

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James, Burnett. Ravel. Omnibus Press, 1987.

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Book chapters on the topic "Ravelry"

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Saygili, Okcan Yasin. "Ravello." In Oracle IaaS. Apress, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4842-2832-6_4.

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Gooch, Jan W. "Ravel." In Encyclopedic Dictionary of Polymers. Springer New York, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4419-6247-8_9777.

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Prawdin, Michael. "In the Ravelin." In The Unmentionable Nechaev. Routledge, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003244851-9.

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Emmer, Michele. "Ravello: An Escherian Place." In M.C. Escher’s Legacy. Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2003. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/3-540-28849-x_3.

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Flothuis, Marius. "Maurice Ravel." In Kammermusikführer. J.B. Metzler, 1998. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-476-03514-1_97.

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Wild, Gerhard. "Echenoz, Jean: Ravel." In Kindlers Literatur Lexikon (KLL). J.B. Metzler, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-476-05728-0_3490-1.

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Cahn, Peter. "Ravel, (Joseph-)Maurice." In Komponisten. J.B. Metzler, 2004. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-476-02947-8_39.

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Cahn, Peter. "Ravel, (Joseph-)Maurice." In Komponisten Lexikon. J.B. Metzler, 2003. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-476-05274-2_242.

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Cahn, Peter. "Ravel, (Joseph-) Maurice." In Metzler Komponisten Lexikon. J.B. Metzler, 1992. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-476-03421-2_238.

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Macleod, Joseph. "Ravel: Vaughan Williams: Szymanowsky." In The Sisters d' Aranyi. Routledge, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003228684-14.

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Conference papers on the topic "Ravelry"

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Riliskis, Laurynas, James Hong, and Philip Levis. "Ravel." In SenSys '15: The 13th ACM Conference on Embedded Network Sensor Systems. ACM, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/2820975.2820977.

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Wang, Anduo, Xueyuan Mei, Jason Croft, Matthew Caesar, and Brighten Godfrey. "Ravel." In SOSR '16: Symposium on SDN Research. ACM, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/2890955.2890970.

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Shriver and Sakallah. "Ravel: assinged-delay compiled-code logic simulation." In IEEE/ACM International Conference on Computer-Aided Design. IEEE Comput. Soc. Press, 1992. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/iccad.1992.279346.

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Riliskis, Laurynas, and Philip Levis. "Ravel a framework for embedded-gateway-cloud applications." In SenSys '14: The 12th ACM Conference on Embedded Network Sensor Systems. ACM, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/2668332.2668356.

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Yuan, Bo-Xiao. "Appreciation of the Piano Work Sonatine by Maurice Ravel." In 2016 5th International Conference on Social Science, Education and Humanities Research. Atlantis Press, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.2991/ssehr-16.2016.324.

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Zharkova, Valeriya. "The “Author's Word” in the Maurice Ravel’s Lyric Fantasy The Child and the Spells." In Proceedings of the 2nd International Conference on Art Studies: Science, Experience, Education (ICASSEE 2018). Atlantis Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.2991/icassee-18.2018.99.

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Shamet, Ryan M., Adam Perez, and Boo Hyun Nam. "Sinkhole Risk Evaluation: Detection of Raveled Soils in Central Florida’s Karst Geology Using CPT." In Geo-Risk 2017. American Society of Civil Engineers, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1061/9780784480717.024.

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Wafer, Mia, Paul Alessio, Kristin Morell, and Thomas Dunne. "VOLUMETRIC CONTRIBUTION OF DRY RAVEL TO LARGE-SCALE DEBRIS FLOWS." In GSA 2020 Connects Online. Geological Society of America, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1130/abs/2020am-356452.

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Almagro Gorbea, Antonio. "La forma original del Cubete del Alcázar Real de Carmona." In FORTMED2020 - Defensive Architecture of the Mediterranean. Universitat Politàcnica de València, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.4995/fortmed2020.2020.11487.

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Abstract:
The original shape of the Cubete of the Alcazar of CarmonaAmong the works of the so-called “transitional” military architecture from the last quarter of the fifteenth century, one of the most unique cases erected in the Iberian Peninsula is the Cubete of Carmona (Seville). This bastion built in the times of the Catholic Monarchs follows the new poliorcetic standards, but with forms, which are quite innovative and could be considered breakthrough. Conceived as a bastion external to the Alcázar Real, it has a moat in part connected with the moat of the main fortress. The bastion is open in the rear, and could be consider a ravelin, although its location is in an angle of the outer enclosure of the Alcazar, which preludes the subsequent pentagonal bastions. Its anomalous plan is a horseshoe shape that has been discussed by various authors, but so far, there has never been a fully detailed survey with elevations and sections, nor, above all, an attempt to address their hypothetical reconstruction. This paper presents new plans, sections, elevations and images that proves this work is unusual and truly revolutionary for its time.
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DiBiase, Roman A., Michael P. Lamb, and Michael P. Lamb. "DRY RAVEL LOADING OF STEEP HEADWATER VALLEY NETWORKS FUELS POST-WILDFIRE SEDIMENTATION HAZARDS IN SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA." In GSA Annual Meeting in Phoenix, Arizona, USA - 2019. Geological Society of America, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1130/abs/2019am-338904.

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Reports on the topic "Ravelry"

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Martin, Mark A. Supplement Analysis for the Transmission System Vegetation Management Program FEIS (DOE/EIS-0285/SA-138 Raver-Echo Lake #1). Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI), 2003. http://dx.doi.org/10.2172/824216.

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Martin, Mark A. Supplement Analysis for the Transmission System Vegetation Management Program FEIS (DOE/EIS-0285/SA-23) - Schultz - Raver and Olympia – Grand Coulee. Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI), 2001. http://dx.doi.org/10.2172/824079.

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Tippetts, Greg. Supplement Analysis for the Transmission System Vegetation Management Program FEIS (DOE/EIS-0285/SA-59) - Chehalis Covington/ Raver Paul / Paul Alston. Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI), 2002. http://dx.doi.org/10.2172/824128.

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