Academic literature on the topic 'Trios (Flute, percussion, computer)'

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Journal articles on the topic "Trios (Flute, percussion, computer)"

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Feller, Ross. "Tornado Project: Trios for Flute, Clarinet, and Computer." Computer Music Journal 40, no. 2 (June 2016): 84–88. http://dx.doi.org/10.1162/comj_r_00360.

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Schenker, Boris, Wesley Fuller, and Thomas DeLio. "20th Century American Music for Piano, Violin, Flute, Percussion, and Computer." Computer Music Journal 21, no. 3 (1997): 104. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/3681024.

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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Trios (Flute, percussion, computer)"

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Gedosh, David. "Augeries, for Flute, Clarinet, Percussion and Tape: Aesthetic Discussion and Theoretical Analysis." Thesis, University of North Texas, 2009. https://digital.library.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metadc9851/.

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Augeries is a multi-channel electro-acoustic composition for flute, clarinet, percussion, and tape. It is intended to be diffused through an 8-channnel playback system. Inspired by the first four lines of William Blake's Augeries of Innocence, Augeries captures the qualitative aspects of Blake's poetry by presenting the listener with an equally aperspectival aesthetic experience. The small-scale structure reflected on the large-scale form - the infusion of vastness and expansiveness into the fragile and minute. Augeries incorporates techniques of expansion and contraction, metonymic relationships, dilation and infolding of time, and structured improvisation to create an experience that is designed to explore the notion of musical time, and to bring to the listener the sense of time freedom. The critical analysis suggests that the increase in the notions of musical time, the aesthetics with which they conform, and the new time forms created, encapsulate communicative significance. This significance exists within a horizon of meaning. Semiotics illuminates an understanding of the structuring techniques used to render time as an area of artistic play. Understanding the aesthetics and mechanisms through which these techniques can be used constitutes a shared horizon of meaning. The concepts of cultural phenomenologist Jean Gebser, as explicated in The Ever-Present Origin, are used to contextualize these notions, through a description of the various consciousness structures with specific attention to the space-time relationships. Of specific concern are the aperspectival manifestations in music in the twentieth century and beyond. Special emphasis is given to the area of electro-acoustic music, particularly spectral music. The theoretical analysis explores how the various techniques are used to create an aperspectival experience, and includes specific descriptions of the technique of refraction as metonymy, and pitch set analysis of the technique of expansion and contraction.
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Welch, Chapman. "Three Pieces for Musicians and Computer: Rameaux, Nature Morte, Moiré." Thesis, University of North Texas, 2008. https://digital.library.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metadc9723/.

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Three Pieces for Musicians and Computer implements a modular formal structure that allows the performers to experiment with the order and number of movements to arrive at their ideal combination. The piece is a collection of three solo works: Rameaux, Nature Morte, and Moiré for bass flute with b-foot, metal percussion (vibraphone, glockenspiel, and crotales), and clarinet (A and B-flat instruments) respectively. In addition to the original versions, an alternate version of each piece is included. The alternate versions add new performance elements to the original works: live electronics in Rameaux and Nature Morte and an acoustic quintet (flute, viola, percussion, piano and harp) in Moiré. These additions reframe the original works by introducing new harmonic, timbral, and formal connections and possibilities. The compositional process of Three Pieces relies on the notion of Germinal Elements, which are defined as the set of limited, distinct, and indivisible materials used in the creation of the work. Though Germinal Elements are indivisible, they undergo a type of developmental process through expansion and contraction, which is an increase or a decrease in the range or scope of any musical parameter (time, pitch, density, dynamic, duration, etc.) or set of parameters. Analysis of this cycle of works reveals a variety of recombinations of four GE's as well as processes of expansion and contraction applied to multiple parameters of each GE to generate formal relationships within and between works. Two electronics systems, the delay/harmonizer instrument and the live performance system are described both in technical and musical terms with specific examples given to show how the electronics influence and expand both the surface material and the formal structure of the work.
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Harris, Joshua Kimball. "“Sunken Monadnock”: a Composition for Flute, Clarinet, Bassoon, Violin, Violoncello, Electric Guitar, Piano, Percussion, Three Female Vocalists, and Computer." Thesis, University of North Texas, 2013. https://digital.library.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metadc407859/.

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Sunken Monadnock is a scripted combination of three modular musical surfaces. The word “surface” is borrowed from Morton Feldman, who compared the aural surface of music to the canvases of the action painters of the American Abstract Expressionists, and contrasted it with the work’s subject, or organizational structure. Composers’ transition toward a focus on surface through indeterminate compositional techniques, according to Feldman, parallels the development of modernist abstract art. “Sunken Monadnock: Composing with Visual Metaphors” is a companion critical essay that takes the surface/subject metaphor as a starting point for analyzing Sunken Monadnock.Other visual metaphors that inspired Sunken Monadnock, and are discussed in the essay, include Shakir Hassan Al Said’s mystical semiotics, Jasper Johns’s crosshatch prints, and Wassily Kandinsky’s theory of abstraction. The circle and spiral, especially, play influential roles in Sunken Monadnock as reflected by musical applications of repetition, rotation, compression/rarefaction, and endlessness. The void in the circle’s center also comes into play. The nature of the work’s formal counterpoint requires an innovative approach to the score, which consists of five sections, each of which reflects a different approach to the aural surface (i.e., to the traversal of time). The two outer sections are traditionally scored, but the three sections in the middle—labeled “Surfaces” are played simultaneously by three subsets of the ensemble. The piece is approximately 22 minutes long.
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Welch, Chapman. "Three pieces for musicians and computer Rameaux, Nature morte, Moiré /." connect to online resource, 2008. http://digital.library.unt.edu/permalink/meta-dc-9723.

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First part for bass flute with b-foot, and computer; 2nd part for metal percussion (vibraphone, glockenspiel, crotales) and computer; 3rd part for clarinet (in A and B-flat) and computer. Includes specifications for computer. System requirements: Adobe Acrobat Reader. Includes bibliographical references (p. 48-50).
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May, Andrew Emerson Ralph Waldo. "Vanishing : a composition for ensemble and computer /." Diss., Connect to a 24 p. preview or request complete full text in PDF format. Access restricted to UC campuses, 2000. http://wwwlib.umi.com/cr/ucsd/fullcit?p9984809.

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Thesis (Ph. D.--Music)--University of California, San Diego.
Vita. For flute (piccolo), piano, percussion (1 performer), 2 violas, 2 violoncellos, and computer. Includes technical notes and instructions for performance preceding score.
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Crutchley, Ian Joseph. "A recital of compositions." Thesis, 1993. http://hdl.handle.net/2429/1321.

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Each composition in the following document has resulted from my desire to explore problems and possibilities that are to be found in the various ensembles and/or techniques chosen. For each new composition a particular issue or set of issues was established at the outset and dealt with from different angles at all stages of the works' creation. [1] Chansons Precieux: In these three songs I was interested in reducing my material choices to a minimum and also in creating a small fragment for the text which could be exploded into syllabic utterances. These were, over the course of the three songs, utilized in small groups. Only in the final song is the entire text revealed. [2] Across The Gorge Is The Bridge: Synthesized and concrete sounds constitute the palette of this tape piece. In processing the sounds I selected evolutionary characteristics with the intention of exploiting these characteristics in a particular manner - the notes in the piece are of extremely long duration (c. 12') and so the evolution takes place at a very slow pace. In a sense time is slowed down in the work, almost to the point of absolute stasis. [3] Triangle: Here I examined the concept of an imagined triangular pathway in which each intersection of two lines consisted of the same object viewed in a different way. The lines themselves are manipulations of the object. The original inspiration for this piece came from reading about Stonehenge and other such prehistoric laboratories designed as viewing points for the sun and moon and their risings and settings at key times of the year. [4] Anya Manas: A small item, in this case a chord, is never presented literally, but begins its life in this piece by already having been bent, altered, linearized and otherwise mutilated. Eventually the chord has completely lost its own sense of its own reality. "Anya Manas" is a Sanskrit saying that refers to a state of mind in which confusion of identity prevails. [5] Wo Weilest Du?: This work involved the desire to eliminate such traditional concepts as motivic development, regular phrasing and clear form. Sound objects appear, vanish and may or may not return later. There is no formal goal or climax. The piece simply begins and ends where it does. The title is German and means where are you waiting? It comes from Wagner's Tristan und lsolde.
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Goodner, Robert Lynn. "Chamber music featuring trumpet in three different settings with voice, with woodwinds, with strings." 2007. http://hdl.handle.net/1903/9729.

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Bolden, Benjamin. "Opus 25." Thesis, 1997. http://hdl.handle.net/2429/5905.

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Opus 25 is a collection of compositions which I created between September 1995 and April 1997. Instrumentation varies; there are works for choirs, chamber ensembles, solo voice, solo harp, solo piano, and orchestra. All the works included in this collection have been performed at some point during this same period, and recordings of these performances can be found on the accompanying cassette.
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"A portfolio of four original music compositions." 1998. http://library.cuhk.edu.hk/record=b5889514.

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Trombone concerto (first movement) -- Post-Zero -- Trio for flute, violin and cello, no. 2.
submitted by Tang Pan-hang Benny.
Thesis submitted in: December 1997.
Thesis (M.Mus.)--Chinese University of Hong Kong, 1998.
Abstract also in Chinese.
Abstract --- p.i
摘要 --- p.ii
Acknowledgment --- p.iii
Declaration --- p.iv
Introduction --- p.1
Trombone Concerto (first movement) --- p.2
Programme notes --- p.3
Remarks --- p.5
Instrumentation --- p.6
Seating Plan --- p.7
Scores --- p.8
Post-Zero 零後 --- p.56
Introduction --- p.57
Programme notes --- p.57
Performance direction --- p.61
Instrumentation --- p.62
Seating plan --- p.62
Scores --- p.63
"Trio for Flute, Violin and Cello No.2" --- p.144
Programme notes --- p.145
Performance direction --- p.145
Scores --- p.146
Biography --- p.159
Music Works List --- p.160
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Books on the topic "Trios (Flute, percussion, computer)"

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Filho, Florivaldo Menezes. Atualidade estética da música eletroacústica. [São Paulo]: Editora UNESP Fundação, 1999.

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Bernstein, Leonard. Ḥalil: Nocturne for flute, percussion, and piano. [United States]: Jalni Publications, 1987.

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Williams, Amy. Cineshape & duos. 2017.

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