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1

Nikolenko, R. V. "M.-A. Hamelin’s composing and performing style in the context of postmodern aesthetics." Aspects of Historical Musicology 14, no. 14 (September 15, 2018): 168–80. http://dx.doi.org/10.34064/khnum2-14.12.

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Background. The peculiarities of the worldview and philosophy of modern contradictory era put forward before the art new requirements and benchmarks, which the Postmodern aesthetics embodies. The phenomenon of «Postmodernism» covers different levels of contemporary life. In philosophy, this concept was first introduced by J.-F. Lyotard in his report «The status of postmodernism». The French philosopher revealed the essence of Postmodernism consisting in «awareness of diversity and pluralism of forms of rationality, activity of life, as well as the recognition of this diversity as a natural positive state» [2], and defined Postmodernism as «the general direction of modern European culture, formed in 1970–80-es» [2]. Now there is no single definition of «postmodern», probably, due to the incompleteness, continuity of formation of this phenomenon. Some philosophers, in particular, J. Habermas, D. Bell and Z. Bauman, consider postmodernism as the result of politics and ideology of neo-conservatism, which is characterized by aesthetic eclecticism [3]. Italian philosopher and writer U. Eco understands postmodernism as a process of changing one cultural era to another, perceiving it as «... the answer to modernism: since the past cannot be destroyed, because its destruction leads to dumbness, it needs to be rethought, ironically, without naivety» [5: 77]. This approach most accurately reveals the essence of postmodern art. In the field of aesthetics, the work of F. Jameson, «Postmodernism or The cultural logic of late capitalism», where postmodernism is represented as a «cultural dominant» is quite indicative. The philosopher defines such typical phenomenon of postmodern culture as a simulacrum, weakening of affects, the consequence of which is «the replacement of alienation of the subject by its fragmentation» [1: 105], the disappearance of the individual subject and the emergence on this basis of the practice of pastiche [1: 108], the loss of historicity. In musicology, the question of the essence of postmodernism has not yet received a sufficient scientific basis. From the latest works of Ukrainian researchers, in our opinion, it is disclosed most complete in the D. Ruzhinsky’s article “Specificity of the manifestation of postmodernism in musical creativity” [4]. The object of presented research is the specificity of postmodernism manifestations in an art; the subject of research are the postmodern landmarks in the individual style of outstanding Canadian pianist and composer M.-A Hamelin. The purpose of the article is to reveal the interrelation of the composer’ and performing style by M.-A. Hamelin with the aesthetic paradigms of Postmodernism. The methodological basis of the research consists of the concepts of postmodern philosophy and aesthetics presented in the works of J. Habermas, D. Bell, Z. Bauman. U. Eco, F. Jameson. For more full understanding of specificity of the postmodern traits implementation in M.-A. Hamelin’s activity, the “creative portrait” genre as well as analyses of some fragments of his music was used. Presenting the main material. The art of postmodernism reflects a fundamentally new attitude to the process of creativity, which includes of such typical features as 1) quoting or using famous plots, which are the realities of the culture of previous eras; 2) intertextuality; 3) the prevalence of the audience interpretation over the composer’s idea, when the author’s position is not decisive (according to M. Foucault, “the death of the author”); 4) syncretism; 5) the irony and the parody-game designing of works. The creativity of Marc-André Hamelin (b.1961) – the world-renowned Canadian virtuoso pianist and composer – is one of the brightest personifications of these principles, as well as their individual understanding. In 1985, he won the First prize at the competition at Carnegie hall, with which he began his ascent to the musical Olympus as a performer. To date, M.-A. Hamelin, an outstanding pianist and soloist, performs with many leading world orchestras, and his discography total more than 60 albums, including both his own works and the works of many composers of different genres and eras. In addition to intensive performance and interpretation activities, the Canadian artist is also engaged in composition, and his artistic search is concentrated mainly within the framework of piano music, which is quite natural. Among the works for piano solo the transcriptions can be identified, such as the “Etude-fantasy ‘Flight of the bumblebee’” by Rimsky-Korsakov (1987), “Waltz-minute, in seconds” (transcription of Chopin’s waltz). Another group of works ‒ miniatures are, for example, the “Little Nocturne” (2007), “Preamble to the imaginary piano Symphony” (1989), “My impressions about chocolate” (2014); the cycles of miniatures – “Con intimissimo sentimento” (1986–2000); the larger-scale pieces – “Barcarolle” (2013), “Chaconne” (2013). The composer wrote the three cycles of variations and the cadenzas for piano concertos by Mozart (K453 and 491), for the Fourth piano Concerto by Beethoven, the Third and Fourth Concertos by Haydn and The second Hungarian Rhapsody by Liszt. In addition to the solo piano music, the composer turned to the chamber genre (“Fanfare” for three trumpets, “Passacaglia”» for piano quintet, «Four perspectives» for cello and piano). His style is characterized by the frequent using of thematic material from the works by other composers of different eras. From the very beginning, Hamelin rethinks this material, not introducing it in its original form, but transforming it. For example, in the “Variations on The theme of Paganini” the theme of the Twenty-fourth Caprice is already “modernized”: maintaining the harmonic basis of it, the author adds the non-chords sounds and the remark to tempo, which notes that the theme should be played “with a groove”, as it is typical for salsa, rock and fusion style. Interpretations of the quoted material are not in the original, but in its creative processing can see although in the Seventh variation with the theme of the Third variation of Sonata No. 30 by Beethoven. Another typical feature of postmodernism of the Canadian artist’s work is manifested in a certain game with the listener, because to catch all the allusions, to understand the quotes and styles of different eras, he must be intellectually well prepared. Some of the noted features of the composer’s creation find their direct projection in the performing pianistic style of M.-A. Hamelin. For example, virtuosity, which is present in his works in both explicit and veiled form, fully manifests itself in the interpretation of the works of other composers. Another characteristic feature of the performing style of M.-A. Hamelin is his aspiring to end-to-end development and cyclicity. In his discography, there are many different cycles, sometimes quite voluminous, performed by him as a whole. In practice of composition this is manifested at the level of the musical form (cycles, parts of which often follow directly one after another, and sometimes even the final harmony of one of the parts becomes the beginning of the next part). Conclusion. The results of the research confirm the idea of the relationship of Hamelin’s individual creative style with the basic ideas of postmodernism aesthetics. Quite typical for the manner of writing of the Canadian artist is the attraction to the throughness of development, to the creation of micro-cycles (as well as to the performing of cyclic works of other composers); the combination of ironic rethinking of thematic material with virtuosity; the playing with the listener on the basis of the introduction of quotation material and work with it; the combination of different styles within one work. Such manner requires a prepared, meaningful perception, that is, to paraphrase U. Eco, the «ideal listener».
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2

Dunnick, Kim. "Sonata for Horn and Piano, and: Sonata for Trombone and Piano, and: Sonata for Trumpet and Piano (review)." Notes 61, no. 3 (2005): 874–77. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/not.2005.0008.

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3

Conway, Paul. "James MacMillan premieres in Edinburgh, Glasgow and London." Tempo 68, no. 269 (June 16, 2014): 70–72. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0040298214000114.

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The concerto form is well represented in James MacMillan's output. So far, he has written three for piano, two for percussion and one each for violin, viola, cello, trumpet, oboe and clarinet. There is also threaded through his output a series of concertante works, such as A Deep but Dazzling Darkness, for violin, ensemble and tape (2003), A Scotch Bestiary, for organ and orchestra (2004) and the concertino Seraph, for trumpet and strings (2010). All share a common concern to realise fully the soloist's expressive potential.
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4

Gudmundsdottir, Helga R. "Discrimination of Simultaneous Melodies." Journal of Research in Music Education 47, no. 2 (July 1999): 101–10. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/3345716.

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This study examined first-, third-, and fifth-graders' ( n = 73) ability to hear two simultaneous melodies. Two familiar melodies and one unfamiliar melody were used as the stimuli. The pairs of simultaneous melodies were presented in different register and timbre combinations. The children were asked to press specially labeled keys on a computer keyboard to indicate which song(s) they heard. Responses were recorded by a computer. The older children identified two simultaneous melodies faster and more accurately than the younger ones did. While 70% of the first graders reported hearing two melodies and identified them with 75 % accuracy, more than 95% of the fifth graders reported hearing two melodies and identified them with 97%) accuracy. Children who were able to correctly identify two simultaneous melodies identified the melody in the upper register first significantly more often than the one in the lower register. However, when the melodies were played with contrasting timbres (trumpet and piano), they tended to identify the trumpet melody before they identified the piano melody regardless of register. Children who were only able to identify one melody tended to focus on the upper melody when the timbre was the same in both registers, but when the melodies were played with contrasting timbres, they attended to the trumpet melody regardless of register.
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5

Hannigan, Barry, and John McCabe. "Haydn Variations for Piano (1983)." Notes 46, no. 2 (December 1989): 510. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/941100.

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6

Burk, James M., Elliott Carter, Ursula Oppens, Michael Gielen, and David Schiff. "Piano Concerto; Variations for Orchestra." American Music 6, no. 1 (1988): 114. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/3448359.

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7

Geringer, John M., Rebecca B. MacLeod, and Justine K. Sasanfar. "In Tune or Out of Tune." Journal of Research in Music Education 63, no. 1 (March 23, 2015): 89–101. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0022429415572025.

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We studied music majors’ perception of intonation in accompanied solo performances of trumpet, violin, and voice. We were interested in whether listeners would judge pitch deviations of equal magnitude in the three solo performances as equivalent in intonation. Participants were 150 graduate and undergraduate music majors drawn from two large music schools and included 50 students representing each of the following areas of applied music study: voice, wind instruments, and string instruments. Listeners heard solo trumpet, violin, and soprano performances of Ave Maria (Bach/Gounod) accompanied by piano. Pitch performances of the soloists were altered in four sections of the excerpt and deviated in either the sharp or flat direction within a section by 0, 10, 20, and 30 cents relative to the accompaniment. Listeners judged pitch deviations in the flat direction as more out of tune for the trumpet than equivalent alterations of violin and voice, especially for magnitudes of 20 and 30 cents. In sharp direction changes, violin and trumpet were heard similarly and as more out of tune than the vocal soloist. Additionally, differences in pitch judgments were found between listener groups representing different areas of applied study.
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8

Anderson, Julian. "MESSIAEN AND THE NOTION OF INFLUENCE." Tempo 63, no. 247 (January 2009): 2–18. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0040298209000011.

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In 1989, I bought a CD in Paris of the early piano music of André Jolivet. Like many non-French musicians, I had read the name of Jolivet but heard little of his music. Jolivet's reputation as Varèse's leading pupil and the extreme avant-gardist of the pre-World War II group La Jeune France seemed completely at odds with his conventional post-War music occasionally broadcast on Radio 3, such as the Concertos for Trumpet, Piano or Ondes Martenot–music which suggested not fully assimilated influences of Honegger or Hindemith, with little obviously adventurous about it in its rhythmically conservative phrasing and standard formal shapes.
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9

Springer, D. Gregory, and Brian A. Silvey. "The Role of Accompaniment Quality in the Evaluation of Solo Instrumental Performance." Journal of Research in Music Education 66, no. 1 (February 21, 2018): 92–110. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0022429418761044.

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The purpose of this study was to examine the effect of accompaniment quality on the evaluation of solo instrumental performance. Undergraduate instrumental music education majors ( N = 71) listened to and evaluated the accuracy and expressivity of six excerpts of Haydn’s Concerto for Trumpet in E-Flat Major, which we created by synchronizing recordings of good and bad performances of a trumpet soloist with good and bad performances of a piano accompaniment (as well as a no-accompaniment condition). Participants also chose one “best aspect of the performance” and one “aspect needing most improvement” for each excerpt. Significant main effects for accompaniment condition (good, bad, or none) and solo condition (good or bad) were found, in addition to interaction effects. Results of a Solo × Accompaniment interaction signified that participants’ ratings were not independent of accompaniment condition, and this effect was moderated by the performance quality of the trumpet soloist. Additionally, participants noted different “best aspects” and “aspects needing most improvement” based on both solo performance quality and accompaniment condition.
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10

Hannigan, Barry, and Ralph Shapey. "Variations on a Cantus for Piano." Notes 46, no. 2 (December 1989): 509. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/941099.

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11

Silvey, Brian A., and D. Gregory Springer. "The Role of Accompaniment Quality in Band Directors’ Evaluations of Solo Instrumental Performance." Journal of Research in Music Education 67, no. 4 (October 9, 2019): 481–93. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0022429419878148.

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The purpose of this replication study was to examine the effects of accompaniment on evaluations of solo instrumental performances. Although previous findings have indicated that instrumental music education majors’ evaluations of soloists were not independent of accompaniment, it is unknown whether more experienced evaluators are similarly affected by accompaniment. In addition to using a new population (in-service band directors), we also extended the previous study by asking participants whether they believed their evaluations of a soloist were influenced by the accompaniment provided. Participants ( N = 58) listened to six excerpts of Haydn’s Concerto for Trumpet, which we created by pairing different recordings of solo trumpet performance (good or bad) with piano accompaniment (good, bad, or none). Participants evaluated the accuracy and expressivity of the soloist in each excerpt. Similar to the previous study, results indicated that participants discriminated between good and bad solo performances successfully, but a significant three-way interaction among solo, accompaniment, and order indicated that these differences were further influenced by the quality/presence of accompaniment and order. Most participants (72.4%) believed that their evaluations of the soloist were not influenced by the piano accompaniment, primarily because they were able to focus on the soloist or because they followed the instructions provided.
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MacDonald, Calum. "British Piano Music." Tempo 60, no. 235 (January 2006): 44–49. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0040298206310042.

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KENNETH LEIGHTON: Sonatinas Nos. 1 and 2, op.1; Sonata No.1 op.2; Sonata No.2 op.17; Five Studies op.22; Fantasia Contrappuntistica (Homage to Bach) op.24; Variations op.30; Nine Variations op.36; Pieces for Angela op.47; Conflicts (Fantasy on Two Themes) op.51; Six Studies (Study-Variations) op.56; Sonata (1972) op.64; Household Pets op.86; Four Romantic Pieces op.95; Jack-in-the-Box; Study; Lazy-bones. Angela Brownridge (pno). Delphian DCD 34301-3 (3-CD set).PATRICK PIGGOTT: Fantasia quasi una Sonata; 8 Preludes and a Postlude (Third Set). Second Piano Sonata. Malcolm Binns (pno). British Music Society BMS 430CD.SORABJI: Fantasia ispanica. Jonathan Powell (pno). Altarus AIR-CD-9084.ROWLEY: Concerto for piano, strings and percussion, op.49. DARNTON: Concertino for piano and string orchestra. GERHARD: Concerto for piano and strings. FERGUSON: Concerto for piano and string orchestra, op.12. Peter Donohoe (pno and c.), Northern Sinfonia. Naxos 8.557290.Severnside Composers’ Alliance Inaugural Piano Recital. GEOFFREY SELF: Sonatina 1. IVOR GURNEY:Preludes, Sets 1, 2 and 3. JOLYON LAYCOCK: L’Abri Pataud. RICHARD BERNARD: On Erin Shore. STEVEN KINGS: Fingers Pointing to the Moon. SUSAN COPPARD: Round and Around. JOHN PITTS: Aire 1; Fantasies 1, 5. JAMES PATTEN: Nocturnes 3, 4. SULYEN CARADON: Dorian Dirge. RAYMOND WARREN: Monody; Chaconne. Peter Jacobs (pno). Live recording, 23 February 2005. Dunelm DRD0238.Severnside Composers’ Alliance – A Recital by two pianists. MARTINŮ: Three Czech Dances. BEDFORD: Hoquetus David. JOHN PITTS: Changes. HOLLOWAY: Gilded Goldbergs Suite. JOLYON LAYCOCK: Die! A1 Sparrow. POULENC: Élégie. LUTOSLAWSKI: Paganini Variations. Steven Kings, Christopher Northam (pnos). Live recording, 14 May 2005. Dunelm DRD0243.‘Transcendent Journey’. FOULDS: Gandharva-Music, op.49; April-England, op.48 no.1. CORIGLIANO: Fantasia on an Ostinato. PROKOFIEV: Toccata, op.11. With works by BACH-CHUQUISENGO, HANDEL, BEETHOVENLISZT, BACH-BUSONI, SCHUMANN. Juan José Chuquisengo (pno). Sony SK 93829.
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Deng, Liang. "Piano Performance Technical Analysis of The People United Will Never Be Defeated by Rzewski." European Journal of Social Science Education and Research 5, no. 3 (December 1, 2018): 161–71. http://dx.doi.org/10.2478/ejser-2018-0067.

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Abstract The piano variations The People United will Never be Defeated by Rzewski contains many modern piano performance techniques and skills. The difficulties of these techniques and skills in these enormous variations are far beyond the boundaries of traditional piano performance techniques and skills. This analysis will give a specific classification for these modern piano performance techniques and skills in order to provide a more comprehensive guide for the piano performers.
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Schwartz, Elliott, Earle Brown, and Morton Feldman. "Centering; For Solo Violin, Flute, Clarinet, Bassoon, Horn, Trumpet, Trombone, Piano, Violin, Viola, Cello." Notes 44, no. 3 (March 1988): 596. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/941563.

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15

Franklin, Peter, Viktor Ullmann, Konrad Richter, Staatsphilharmonie Bruun, and Israel Yinon. "Piano Concerto, Variations Op.5, Second Symphony." Musical Times 134, no. 1806 (August 1993): 468. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/1003039.

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Pearsall, Edward. "George Crumb piano music." Tempo 58, no. 230 (October 2004): 78–79. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0040298204240335.

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GEORGE CRUMB: The Complete Piano Music. Makrokosmos 1; Makrokosmos 2; Five Pieces for Piano; Gnomic Variations; Processional; A Little Suite for Christmas Philip Mead (pno). Metier MSV CD92067 (2-CD Set).
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17

Lv, Fangrui, Donglin Zou, Na Ta, and Zhu-Shi Rao. "Improvement of lubrication performance of water lubricated polymer bearing via enlarged axial end bearing diameter." Industrial Lubrication and Tribology 71, no. 4 (May 7, 2019): 564–72. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/ilt-09-2018-0332.

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Purpose The purpose of this paper is to improve the lubrication performance of a water-lubricated polymer bearing with axial grooves, especially enlarge the minimum film thickness. Design/methodology/approach The bearing diameter is enlarged near the axial ends of the journal, with axial openings of a trumpet shape. A numerical model is developed which considers the proposed trumpet-shaped openings, bush deformation and grooves. The generatrix of the trumpet-shaped opening is assumed to be a paraboloid. Three different variations are covered, and the influences of the trumpet-shaped openings’ parameters on the bearing performance are analyzed. Findings The appropriate trumpet-shaped openings at the axial ends effectively increase the minimum film thickness, and the impact of trumpet-shaped openings on load carrying capacity is very small or even negligible. For the water-lubricated polymer bearing with axial grooves analyzed in this paper, the appropriate trumpet-shaped openings increase the minimum film thickness from 0.53 to 11.14 µm and decrease the load carrying capacity by 2.48 per cent. Practical implications The results of this study can be applied to marine propeller shaft systems and other systems with polymer bearings. Originality/value This paper has presented an approach for significantly increasing the minimum film thickness of a water-lubricated polymer bearing. A study on the performance improvement of water-lubricated polymer bearings with axial grooves is of significant interest to the research community.
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Cook, Nicholas. "Inventing Tradition: Webern's Piano Variations in Early Recordings." Music Analysis 36, no. 2 (June 15, 2017): 163–215. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/musa.12094.

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Rickards, Guy. "Skalkottas." Tempo 58, no. 229 (July 2004): 55–56. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s004029820432022x.

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SKALKOTTAS: Piano Trio; Eight Variations on a Greek Folk Tune for piano trio. Works for cello and piano – Largo; Bolero; Serenata; Sonatina; Tender Melody. Maria Kitsopoulos (vlc), Maria Asteriadou (pno), Georgios Demertzis (vln). BIS CD-1224.
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Greer, Amy. "Wrestling the Goldbergs: Piano Variations as a Spiritual Practice." Spiritus: A Journal of Christian Spirituality 18, no. 2 (2018): 176–89. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/scs.2018.0023.

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Купіна, Д. Д., and Г. О. Гребенюк. "Genre of variations for piano in the context of stylish plurality of F. Mendelssohn-Bartholdy's creativity." Музикознавча думка Дніпропетровщини, no. 16 (December 19, 2019): 73–85. http://dx.doi.org/10.33287/221924.

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The purpose of the article is to determine the genre and stylefeatures of the piano cycle „Serious Variations” by F. Mendelssohn-Bartholdy. The round of specific methods is due to the use of empiricalscientific approaches of observation and generalization. The methodsidentified form a pronounced practical component of the proposedscientific intelligence. The structural and analytical approach allows you toform a sequence of presentation of scientific material, and draw theappropriate conclusions on the features of „Serious Variations”. Using thehistorical-typological approach, the sequence of the development processof the variation genre as a whole is revealed. The novelty of the proposedtopic is determined by the fact that the first analysis of the piano cycle„Serious Variations” by F. Mendelssohn was carried out in the context ofthe historical development of the genre of variations and its stylisticdetermination. Conclusions. Variations for piano occupy a rather modestplace in Mendelssohn’s music compared to the work of other composers.The piano series „Serious Variations” was created by Mendelssohn inaccordance with romantic trends in contemporary composer in a dialoguewith the stylistic features of the Baroque and classical era. The styleguidelines for creating the cycle was the work of L. Beethoven andI.S. Bach. The texture of the work is very “pianistic”, although itinfluences both the orchestral writing and Mendelssohn’s organ music.The dramaturgy of „Serious Variations” is organized in such a way that itclearly senses the movement from Baroque to classical stylistics,manifesting the essence of style modulation within the cycle. The mainfeature of „Serious Variations” on the implementation of which thepianist’s efforts should be aimed at working on this cycle is the stylemultiplicity, which is the main characteristic of musical material and theways of its presentation.
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Woody, Robert H. "The Relationship between Explicit Planning and Expressive Performance of Dynamic Variations in an Aural Modeling Task." Journal of Research in Music Education 47, no. 4 (December 1999): 331–42. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/3345488.

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The present study is an examination of the performance of expressive dynamic variations by advanced pianists in an aural modeling (imitative) performance task. Twenty-four university musicians listened to expressive performances of short piano excerpts played for them via MIDI on a Yamaha Disklavier acoustic piano. These expressive models contained idiomatic features (musically appropriate) and nonidiomatic features (musically inappropriate). After hearing each model, subjects reported their thoughts regarding dynamic variations they had heard and then attempted to imitate the model in their own performance on the piano. Results indicated that expressive performance of dynamic variations is influenced by the performer's explicit identification of dynamic features and their incorporation into a specific goal performance plan. Analyses of individual dynamic features revealed that subjects who identified features consistently performed the features differently than did the subjects who did not identify them. Subjects who identified features played nonidiomatic features more accurately and played idiomatic features at more pronounced overall levels.
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Cui, W. Q., Y. Y. Won, M. H. Baek, K. K. Kim, and J. H. Cho. "Variations of the ‘grand-piano sign’ during total knee replacement." Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery. British volume 88-B, no. 11 (November 2006): 1441–47. http://dx.doi.org/10.1302/0301-620x.88b11.17648.

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Hétu, Jacques, and Réjean Beaucage. "Variations et variantes." Circuit 15, no. 1 (February 9, 2010): 19–26. http://dx.doi.org/10.7202/902338ar.

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Le compositeur Jacques Hétu revient sur l’expérience qualifiée de « choc » violent qu’a représenté pour lui l’enregistrement de ses Variations pour piano par Glenn Gould en 1967. Il rappelle, dans un premier temps, que ce musicien qui s’est exprimé essentiellement à travers l’interprétation rêvait aussi d’être compositeur. Il s’interroge sur la façon dont il « s’emparait parfois de la musique des autres et la transformait, parfois en la défigurant, parfois en la transfigurant ». Il cible, à travers des exemples tirés de chacune des variations, les écarts de tempi, d’articulations, de dynamiques de même que les changements dans les jeux de pédale que s’est autorisé un Gould qui s’éloignait de plus en plus de la partition au fur et à mesure que l’oeuvre se déroulait. Admettant que cette interprétation possède sa propre logique, Jacques Hétu salue en Gould un authentique créateur qui « nous communiquait impérieusement son propre univers de musicien ».
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Macías, Claudia, Itzalá Rabadán, and Ilhuicamina Servín. "Analysis of the variations in frequency for a trumpet B‐flat to use “mute”." Journal of the Acoustical Society of America 128, no. 4 (October 2010): 2282. http://dx.doi.org/10.1121/1.3507994.

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Maksimov, Evgenii Ivanovich. "FRANZ SCHUBERT’S PIANO VARIATIONS THROUGH THE LENSES OF THE GENRE DEVELOPMENT." Manuscript, no. 11 (November 2019): 282–88. http://dx.doi.org/10.30853/manuscript.2019.11.53.

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Conway, Paul. "John McCabe CD round-up." Tempo 58, no. 229 (July 2004): 53–54. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0040298204290222.

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JOHN McCABE: Concerto for Piano and Wind Quintet; Musica Notturna; Fauvel's Rondeaux; Postcards for wind quintet. The Fibonacci Sequence. Dutton CDLX 7125.‘Old City New Image’. McCABE: String Trio; String Quartet No. 2. DAVID ELLIS: Trio for violin, viola and cello; String Quartet No. 1. Camerata Ensemble. Campion Cameo 2027.McCABE: Piano Concerto No. 2; Concertante Variations on a theme of Nicholas Maw; Six-Minute Symphony; Sonata on a Motet. Tamami Honma (pno), St Christopher Chamber Orchestra c. Donatas Katkus. Dutton CDLX 7133.‘Tenebrae’. McCABE: Variations; Intermezzi; Sostenuto (Study No. 2); Capriccio (Study No. 1); Aubade (Study No. 4); Tenebrae; Scrunch (Study No. 8); Evening Harmonies (Study No. 7). Tamami Honma (pno). Metier MSV CD92071.
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Schubert, Emery. "Which Nonvocal Musical Instrument Sounds Like the Human Voice? An Empirical Investigation." Empirical Studies of the Arts 37, no. 1 (March 28, 2018): 92–103. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0276237418763657.

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Nonvocal musical instruments like the oboe, cello, and violin, have been described as resembling the human voice. However, much of the evidence is based on historical reports and hearsay. In this study, 174 participants rated instruments according to how much they sounded like the human voice. Analysis revealed that no nonvocal instrument was rated as being voicelike, with moderate mean ratings for the clarinet, oboe, violin, and cello. The violin was rated as statistically more voicelike than the trumpet. Voicelikeness was statistically higher for the instrument which the individual played or an instrument which the individual valued. Monophonic instruments such as the clarinet were also rated as overall more voicelike than those which typically could sound several parts at the same time such as the piano. Referring to an instrument as voicelike may be better thought of as a defacto for the instrument’s (and player’s) expressive capabilities.
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Skurko, Evgeniya R. "Sergei Rachmaninoff’s Variations for Piano: Concerning the Question of Interpreting the Genre." Music Scholarship / Problemy Muzykal'noj Nauki, no. 2 (June 2016): 50–56. http://dx.doi.org/10.17674/1997-0854.2016.2.050-056.

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Gotlieb, Heidi, and Vladimir J. Konečni. "The Effects of Instrumentation, Playing Style, and Structure in the Goldberg Variations by Johann Sebastian Bach." Music Perception 3, no. 1 (1985): 87–101. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/40285323.

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Different recordings and arrangements of the Goldberg Variations by Johann Sebastian Bach were evaluated on cognitive, emotional, and perceptual dimensions. In Study 1, eight different renditions of the piece were classified as Classical or Romantic interpretations. Both harpsichord and piano versions of each style were included. Only minimal differences were found in subjects' appreciation for the harpsichord versus the piano recordings. Comparisons between the Classical and Romantic styles also revealed only slight differences in subjects' ratings. In addition, no differences were found in subjects' enjoyment of different recordings made by a single artist at different points in his career. In Study 2, the structure of the piece was modified by rearranging the order of the variations. A preference for the original version over the modified arrangements was indicated on only 1 of the 15 dimensions measured. In Study 3, specific triplets of variations were played to subjects in their original order and in a random sequence. No differences were found in subjects' appreciation for the original versus the modified versions.
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Stetsiuk, Bohdan. "The origins and major trends in development of jazz piano stylistics." Aspects of Historical Musicology 19, no. 19 (February 7, 2020): 411–28. http://dx.doi.org/10.34064/khnum2-19.24.

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This article characterizes development trends in jazz piano from its origins in the “third-layer” (Konen, V., 1984) of music (ragtime and other “pre-jazz” forms) to the present time (avant-garde and retro styles of the late 20th – early 21st centuries). Main attention was devoted to the stylistic sphere, which represents an entirety of techniques and methods of jazz piano improvisation and combines genre and style parameters. In this context, the currently available information about jazz pianism and its sources (Kinus,Y., 2008; Stoliar, R., 2017) was reviewed, and sociocultural determinants, which contributed to the advent and changes of jazz piano styles were highlighted. Standing out among them at the first (traditional) stage are the schools and individual creative techniques known under generic name “stride piano” and based on the ragtime technique. At the second (contemporary) stage beginning from bebop, jazz piano stylistics gradually diverge from standardized textural formulas of homophonicharmonic type and attain fundamental diversity depending on creative attitudes of leading jazz pianists. The question of jazz piano stylistics is one of the least studied in jazz theory. The existing works devoted to this subject address mostly the sequence of the advent and changes of jazz piano styles along with the general characteristics of their representatives. Beginning from approximately the 1920s, jazz piano styles appeared and changed so fast that they left no time for their comprehension and perception (Kinus, Y., 2008). Only in the newest stylistics of the period after bebop, which divided the art of jazz into traditional and contemporary stages, did these styles attain a certain shape in new modifications and become the components of a phenomenon defined by the generic notion “jazz pianism”. It was stated that the genesis of this phenomenon is usually seen in the art of ragtime, carried in the United States of the late 19th – early 20th centuries by itinerant pianists. This variety of “third-layer” piano music playing produced a significant impact on the art of jazz in general, which is proved by its reproduction in the Dixieland and New Orleans styles as some of the first examples of jazz improvisation. The stylistics of ragtime influenced the entire first stage of jazz piano, which traces its origins back to approximately the 1910s. It combined mental features and esthetics of two traditions: European and Afro-American, which in the entirety produced the following picture: 1) popular and concert area of music playing; 2) gravitation toward demonstration of virtuosic play; 3) domination of comic esthetics; 4) objectivity of expression; 5) tendency toward the completeness of form; 6) inclination toward stage representation. In technological (texturalpianistic) aspect, ragtime, reproduced in the jazz stylistics of stride piano, demonstrated the tendency toward universalization of piano, which combined in the person of one performer the functions of solo and accompaniment, derived from the practice of minstrel banjoists related to the percussion-accented rhythmics of dance accompaniment (Konen, V., 1984). It was stated that ragtime as the transitional bridge to jazz piano existed simultaneously with other forms of “third-layer” music playing found in the Afro-American environment (unlike ragtime itself, which was an art of white musicians). These were semi-folklore styles known as “barrel house” and “honky-tonk(y) piano” cultivated in Wild West saloons. The subsequent development of jazz piano stylistic went along the lines of more vocal and specific directions related mostly to peculiarities of playing technique. Among the more global origins equal in significance to ragtime and stride pianists derivative, blues piano stylistics is worth noting. It represents an instrumental adaptation of vocal blues, which had the decisive influence over the melodics and rhythmics of the right hand party of jazz pianists (ragtime and stride piano highlighted and consolidated the typical texture of accompaniment, i.e., the left hand party). Blues piano style is a multicomponent phenomenon that shaped up as a result of efforts taken by a whole number of jazz pianists. It was developed, and continues to exist until presently, in two variants: a) as a solo piano variant, b) as a duet variant (piano and vocal). Along with blues piano, a style known as “boogie-woogie” was cultivated in jazz piano stylistics of the period before bebop as the new reminiscence of the pre-jazz era (with rock-n-roll becoming a consequence of its actualization in the 1950–1960s). A stylistic genre known as “Harlem piano style” (its prominent representatives include Luckey Roberts, James P. Johnson, Willie “the Lion” Smith, and Thomas “Fats” Waller) became a sort of compendium that combined genetic components of traditional jazz piano. This school has finally defined jazz piano as a form of solo concert music playing, which also determined the subsequent stylistic varieties of this art, the most noteworthy of which are “trumpet piano style”, “swing piano style” and “locked hands style”. Their general feature was interpretation of the instrument as a “small orchestra”, which meant rebirth at the new volute of a historical-stylistic spiral of the “image” of universal piano capable of reproducing the “sounds” of other instruments, voices and their ensembles. Outstanding pianists of various generations have been, and are, the carriers (and often “inventors”) of jazz piano styles. It should suffice to mention the names of such “legends” of jazz as Art Tatum, Oscar Peterson, Thelonious Monk, Bud Powell, Bill Evans, and also Herbie Hancock, Chick Corea, Keith Jarrett (older generation), Gonzalo Rubalcaba, Brad Mehldau, Vadim Neselovskyi, Robert Glasper (middle generation), Eldar Djangirov, Tigran Hamasyan, Cory Henry (younger generation). Conclusions. The description of the stages of development of jazz piano pianism made in this article proves that its polystylistic nature is preserved, and the main representative of certain stylistic inclinations were and remain the texture. Textured formulas serve as the main objects of stylistic interpretations for jazz pianists of different generations. These readings are represented by two vectors – retrospective (revival of jazz traditions) and exploratory, experimental (rapprochement with the academic avant-garde). Of great importance are the styles of personalities, in which polystylistic tendencies are combined with the individual playing manners and improvisation, which, in general, is the most characteristic feature of the current stage of development of jazz piano art.
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Bozanic, Mina. "Musical space organisation exemplified by variations for piano op. 27 by Anton Webern." Zbornik Akademije umetnosti, no. 4 (2016): 110–21. http://dx.doi.org/10.5937/zbakum1604110b.

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Crisp, Deborah. "Liszt’s monument to Bach: The variations onWeinen, Klagen, Sorgen, Zagen, for Solo Piano." Musicology Australia 21, no. 1 (January 1998): 37–49. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/08145857.1998.10415952.

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Terefenko, Dariusz. "Valentine: For Piano = Für Klavier, and: Three Character Studies: For Piano Solo, and: Saloon Songs: For Solo Piano, and: 24 Variations on a Bach Chorale: Piano Solo (review)." Notes 68, no. 3 (2012): 670–73. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/not.2012.0026.

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35

Prendergast, M. D. "The Wedza–Mimosa platinum deposit, Great Dyke, Zimbabwe: layering and stratiform PGE mineralization in a narrow mafic magma chamber." Geological Magazine 128, no. 3 (May 1991): 235–49. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0016756800022081.

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AbstractThe Wedza–Mimosa platinum deposit is a loosely stratiform PGE-rich sulphide zone (MSZ) set within a complexly layered, shallow synclinal sequence of pyroxenites and gabbros. Both the MSZ and its host rocks display systematic stratigraphic, lithological and compositional variations between the margins and the axis of the deposit. A well preserved marginal facies is characterized by discordant layering, stratigraphic complexity, evidence of non-equilibrium crystallization, magmatic erosion and extensive pegmatoids, as well as by irregular MSZ development and metal contents. The principal transverse variations and marginal phenomena are interpreted in terms of the high transverse heat flux and heat gradient caused by the narrow trumpet-like cross-sectional structure of the original magma chamber, the magma replenishment process, the angular relationship between the chamber floor and the stratified magma, and the increase in magma density caused by the onset of plagioclase crystallization.
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36

Heneghan, Áine. "The Theme of Webern's Variationen für Klavier, Op. 27, Third Movement." Music Theory and Analysis (MTA) 6, no. 1 (April 30, 2019): 129–38. http://dx.doi.org/10.11116/mta.6.1.4.

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Webern's lectures on form (1934) offer insights into the composer's thinking on musical organization, yet they are rarely invoked to illuminate his own music. Inspired by his analyses of Beethoven, the author provides a reading of the theme from the final movement of Webern's Variations for Piano, Op. 27.
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Busse, Walter Gerard. "Toward Objective Measurement and Evaluation of Jazz Piano Performance Via MIDI-Based Groove Quantize Templates." Music Perception 19, no. 3 (2002): 443–61. http://dx.doi.org/10.1525/mp.2002.19.3.443.

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The purpose of this study was to (a) objectively measure and analyze performance deviations from mechanical regularity for three jazz pianists via MIDI-based "groove quantize" procedures and (b) measure how experts rate musical examples incorporating these deviations as being representative of the swing style. The "groove quantize" software procedure was used to measure performance deviations from mechanical regularity for (a) note placements (timings), (b) note durations (articulations), and (c) note velocities (dynamics) contained in 281 measures from 33 performances by three professional jazz pianists. Differences among the performers and for relationships between the performance variables and tempi were measured. Performance models or "grooves" were developed representative of each performer's style and a general swing style. For comparison, "mechanical" models were constructed on the basis of mathematical ratios. Forty-two judges rated the "swing representativeness" of an unaltered melody from each pianist and seven variations of each, four based on the derived performance models and three based on the mechanical model. Analysis revealed that four derived performance model variations were rated significantly more representative of the swing style than were the mechanical variations. Swing ratings did not differ significantly between an unaltered melody and variations based on individual performance models for two of the performers, suggesting that they were representative grooves.
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Șoitu, Cristina-Nicoleta. "The Variational Principle in Dinu Lipatti’s Sonatina for Violin and Piano." Artes. Journal of Musicology 19, no. 1 (March 1, 2019): 62–78. http://dx.doi.org/10.2478/ajm-2019-0003.

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Abstract This study aims to analyze the variational principle, as it is applied in Dinu Lipatti’s Sonatina for Violin and Piano, from a theoretical-analytical perspective, but also from the standpoint of the interpretative implications. The variational processes, in close connection with the specificity of the neoclassical language of the work, determine an atypical classification of the form of variations in the gender structure, which implies a resizing of the interpretative means by which the musical dramaturgy of the piece can be achieved. The comparison with the classic model of variations as a component of the sonata genre dedicated to the violin-piano duo, as it appears in the works of composers such as Mozart or Beethoven, as a method of analytical research, highlights the language aspects that condition the performer’s vision in the case of Lipatti’s Sonatina, such as character, tempo, metrics, the type of writing, elements of virtuosity or timbre, whose valences are distinct from those determined by a music discourse from the classical era. Understanding the correlation between the succession of movements and the composition of the variational plan constitutes a priority in approaching this work and shaping the desired artistic message; this is why the study attempts to highlight the necessary connection between the structural elements of the composition and those implicitly generated by them, namely the technical and expressive elements required by the interpretative act.
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Thomson, Andrew, Janet Hilton, Raphael Wallfisch, and Peter Wallfisch. "Kenneth Leighton: Fantasy on an American Hymn Tune; Alleluia Pascha nostrum; Piano Sonata; Variations." Musical Times 134, no. 1804 (June 1993): 350. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/1003077.

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40

Carruthers, Glen. "Scriabin: The Complete Piano Sonatas. Marc-André Hamelin, piano. Hyperion CDA 67131/2 [DDD], produced by Andrew Keener Beethoven: Diabelli Variations. William Kinderman, piano. Hyperion CDA 66763 [DDD], produced by Marc Seiffge." Canadian University Music Review 17, no. 2 (1997): 129. http://dx.doi.org/10.7202/1014798ar.

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41

Perry, Jeffrey. "The Wanderer's Many Returns: Schubert's Variations Reconsidered." Journal of Musicology 19, no. 2 (2002): 374–416. http://dx.doi.org/10.1525/jm.2002.19.2.374.

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Franz Schubert composed four instrumental movements that form a distinct repertoire: the "Trout" Quintet D. 667/iv; the Octet D. 803/ iv; Piano Sonata in A minor, D. 845/ii; and the Impromptu in B-flat, D. 935/iii. Each of them comprises a set of variations on a major-key theme. Each includes (not unexpectedly) one variation in the parallel minor and (more remarkably) a variation in VI followed by a retransition leading to a dominant interruption that prepares the final tonickey variation. Examination of these movements reveals the intimate relationship and common derivation of variation set, sonata form, character piece, Lied, and aria in Schubert. Schubert's formal integrations are made in the service of a Romantic sensibility of distance, loss, memory, and regret. He joins musical aspects of distance (from the theme, from a home key, from a home register) to distance in its poetic aspects: from the past, from home, from old loves and places. Schubert not only continues the 18th-century tradition of musical depictions of distance, he transforms and expands them in unprecedented ways. The result is a poignant intersection of formal innovation and musical poetics.
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Rickards, Guy. "Berlin: Hindemith's ‘Klaviermusik mit orchester’." Tempo 59, no. 233 (June 21, 2005): 55–56. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0040298205260230.

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Paul Wittgenstein's commissioning of concertos for piano left-hand is as enviable a legacy as any performer could wish to have, centred as it is on concertos by Korngold, Franz Schmidt (who also penned for Wittgenstein a set of Concertante Variations on a theme of Beethoven with orchestra and three piano quintets), Richard Strauss, Prokofiev, Britten (his op. 21 Diversions) and Ravel. Yet the maimed pianist's quixotic attitude to the works he received is almost as remarkable. Ravel he offended by the liberties he took with the solo part, while Prokofiev's Concerto No. 4 languished unplayed for a quarter of a century, until three years after the composer's death. Yet these cases pale into insignificance compared to the treatment meted out to the concerto that Paul Hindemith wrote for Wittgensein in 1923.
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MacDonald, Claudia. "Schumann's Piano Practice: Technical Mastery and Artistic Ideal." Journal of Musicology 19, no. 4 (2002): 527–63. http://dx.doi.org/10.1525/jm.2002.19.4.527.

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From the summer of 1830 through the fall of 1831, Schumann worked diligently at the piano with the intention of becoming a professional performer. Beginning in May 1831 he regularly recorded his progress in his diary, describing his repertory, hand position, his aesthetic and technical goals, his frustrations and triumphs. Repeatedly he wrote of the clash between a cherished ideal, nurtured in him as an amateur, of music as an expression from the heart, and what he deemed the routine music making of professionalism——a clash played out in his piano practice until it reached an impasse he was unable to resolve in his performance. The conflict Schumann experienced was related to a larger one in the world of European concert music, namely the demand for ever more dazzling exploits just as music was elevated to the highest position among the arts. This essay presents the nearest possible look into a young artist's mind as he grappled with a dilemma basic to his generation: how to embrace the newest athletic developments while still claiming music as an expressive language reaching into inner depths that are supposedly immune to its power to dazzle. As one example it shows Schumann's progress toward a finished, ideal performance of Chopin's Variations, opus 2, as this is documented in a series of exercises recorded in his practice diary. These deal little with any mechanical problems in the set but instead give a glimpse of how Schumann hoped to realize physically his imagined, ideal sound world.
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44

Kendall, Roger A., and Edward C. Carterette. "The Communication of Musical Expression." Music Perception 8, no. 2 (1990): 129–63. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/40285493.

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This study focuses on the performer-listener link of the chain of musical communication. Using different perceptual methods (categorization, matching, and rating), as well as acoustical analyses of timing and amplitude, we found that both musicians and nonmusicians could discern among the levels of expressive intent of violin, trumpet, clarinet, oboe, and piano performers. Time-contour profiles showed distinct signatures between instruments and across expressive levels, which affords a basis for perceptual discrimination. For example, for "appropriate" expressive performances, a gradual lengthening of successive durations leads to the cadence. Although synthesized versions based on performance timings led to less response accuracy than did the complete natural performance, evidence suggests that timing may be more salient as a perceptual cue than amplitude. We outline a metabolic communication theory of musical expression that is based on a system of sequences of states, and changes of state, which fill gaps of inexorable time. We assume that musical states have a flexible, topologically deformable nature. Our conception allows for hierarchies and structure in active music processing that static generative grammars do not. This theory is supported by the data, in which patterns of timings and amplitudes differed among and between instruments and levels of expression.
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45

Johnson, Bret. "Ernst Toch’s symphonies." Tempo 60, no. 235 (January 2006): 43–44. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0040298206300046.

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TOCH: Complete Symphonies. Rundfunk-Sinfonieorchester Berlin c. Alun Francis. Three CDs, available separately: Nos. 1 and 4: cpo 999 774-2; Nos. 2 and 3: cpo 999 705-2; Nos. 5, 6 and 7: cpo 999 389-2.TOCH: Piano Concerto No. 1, op. 38; Peter Pan, op. 76; Pinnochio Overture; ‘Big Ben’ Variations, op. 62. Todd Crow (pno), NDR Hamburg Symphony Orchestra c. Leon Botstein. New World Records 80609-2.
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46

LAZAR, Zsombor, and Ignac-Csaba FILIP. "Georg Ruzitska: Introduction et Variations brillantes sur un thème hongrois, op. 14." BULLETIN OF THE TRANSYLVANIA UNIVERSITY OF BRASOV SERIES VIII - PERFORMING ARTS 13 (62), SI (January 20, 2021): 167–74. http://dx.doi.org/10.31926/but.pa.2020.13.62.3.18.

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In 2019 we celebrated the 150th anniversary of the death of Transylvanian composer, Georg Ruzitska. Living a long 83 years, he experienced the transition from the Classial to Romantic eras. This period’s myriad historic and artistic developments influenced Ruzitska’s music, inspiring the migrant composer’s composition of the Introduction et variations brillantes sur un tême hongrois op. 14. The work is one of Ruzitska's four unedited, unpublished cello pieces that lay in the form manuscript on the shelves of the Széchenyi Library in Budapest. This interesting musical piece is written for cello and piano in the form of theme and variations and represents many elements of the “verbunkos” style, the contemporary national Hungarian musical idiom. This paper seeks to provide a detailed description of the work, with an emphasis on highlighting the above-mentioned stylistic elements.
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Stout, Scott A., Gregory S. Douglas, and Allen D. Uhler. "Assessing Temporal and Spatial Variations of Gasoline-Impacted Groundwater Using Relative Mole Fractions and PIANO Fingerprinting." Environmental Forensics 11, no. 4 (November 30, 2010): 328–41. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/15275922.2010.526517.

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48

Buana, Utari Arsy. "BENTUK PENYAJIAN LAGU OEMAR BAKRIE DI MARCHING BAND SWATAMI PADA GEBYAR PENDIDIKAN NASIONAL KABUPATEN LABUHANBATU UTARA." Grenek Music Journal 7, no. 1 (January 3, 2018): 92. http://dx.doi.org/10.24114/grenek.v7i1.8790.

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The results showed that one form of emotional expression that is channeledthrough the music and therefore, the group marching band Swatami onarranemen songs Oemar Bakrie brought by Marching band Swatami using threecategories of instrument, namely: instrument Percussion in tone (Glockenspiel,vibraphone, Xylophone, Marimba), brass instruments (trumpet, Mellophone,Baritone, Tuba), and percussion (Senar drum, tenor drum, bass drum, cymbals).Choosing songs Omar bakrie for in the arrangements with the shape Marchingband. Bakrie Oemar tempo songs using 163 has 51 bars and has two variations ofthe melody, the melody forms A and B. Form benuk melodic presentation of thesong sung by Oemar Bakrie Swatami Marching band is a form of selfappreciation for issuing arts talent. Using costumes and makeup of their pridethat seemed interesting and luxurious for a show. Using display / position playersmake this show the higher thevalue of his art.
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McBurney, Gerard. "Brian Elias's recent music." Tempo, no. 174 (September 1990): 12–18. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0040298200019392.

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In the past ten years a remarkable change has come over Brian Elias. He has turned from being a miniaturist to being a composer on a symphonic scale and with symphonic aspirations. Not that he has written any work with so self-conscious a title as ‘symphony’ – at least, not yet. But in these few years he has given us two extended cycles for voice and symphony orchestra, a large-scale single-movement orchestral work that must certainly be called symphonic, a set of 49 Variations for piano inspired by Beethoven's set of 32 in C minor, and now an orchestral ballet in progress for Kenneth Macmillan and the Royal Ballet. All these, and some impressive chamber works too, have come from a composer whose earlier reputation was based on a tiny scattering of compositions including a rarified solo soprano piece (based on a particularly obscure bit of Browning), a piece for solo violin, and the microscopic Five Piano Pieces for right hand alone.
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Spiller, William T. "Piano Sonata no. 1, op. 1 (1977), and: Concerto no. 1 for Piano and Orchestra, op. 12, and: Four Apparitions for Piano, op. 17, and: Nocturne No. 2 for Piano, op. 31 (1991), and: Nocturne No. 5 for Piano, op. 55 (1996), and: Nocturne No. 6 for Piano, op. 62, and: Nocturne No. 7 for Piano, op. 65, and: Three Impromptus for Piano, op. 68, and: Variations on a Theme by Mozart for Two Pianos, op. 42 (review)." Notes 60, no. 4 (2004): 1034–49. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/not.2004.0075.

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