Polyphonic music uses two or more independent melodies; whereas monophonic music has only one independent melody.…
In the history of Existentialism literature there were many major authors. One of them was Fyodor Dostoyevsky which wrote from 1821 through 1881. A few of Dostoyevsky famous existentialism literature is Notes from The Underground and Crime and Punishment. A second major author is Samuel Beckett, 1906 through 1989, wrote Waiting for Godot. A third major author is Simone de Beauvoir, 1908 through 1986, wrote The Mandarins and Tousles Hommes Sont Moriels (All Men are Mortal). Lastly Albert Camus, 1913 through 1960, wrote The Fall.…
In George Bilgere’s 2006 poem, Once Again I Forget to Read an Important Novel, he describes a day in the park with a novel left unread. Bilgere personifies the book, uses imagery, and breaks up the same idea over multiple lines — all with the intent of entertaining his readers.…
All texts present distinctive voices, no matter what form of text or who the composer is. Distinctive voices, when studied, can assist with understanding society’s values and beliefs which are being presented within texts.…
Composers use elements and characteristics of language to create voice in their texts to shape meaning and affect interpretation of the audience. This is demonstrated by the composers of the following texts; “The life and Crimes of Harry Lavender” composed by Marele Day, the 2010 film “never Let Me Go” directed by Richard Eyre and the novel “Wuthering Heights” composed by Emily Bronte…
The investigation of Prélude a l'après midi d'un Faune and Salome reveals the surface similarities in which Strauss and Debussy treat extended tonality. However, on a fundamental level, the use of non-functional tonality is very different in both works. Debussy’s impressionistic style of using harmonies for colouristic purposes counteracts the Strauss’ use of consonance to contrast the dissonances within his work. These…
Polyphonic Music uses two or more independent melodies. It differs from monophic music because monophic music was dominated in early middle ages.…
An important part of Kandinsky’s life was spent in Odessa a cosmopolitan city populated by mainly Western Europeans and other ethnic groups. At an early age, he expressed an uncommon sensitivity towards sound, word and colors – in other words, the arts. His father encouraged what he perceived as a gift and pushed him into drawing and music lessons.…
Modernism is regarded as a phenomenon of the late eighteenth and early nineteenth century that is supposedly pioneered in a sense by the likes of Claude Debussy. The roots of the Russian Avant Garde scene began with a group of artists who dubbed themselves ‘The Wanderers’, they used native Russian materials, focusing mainly on Scythian civilisation, medieval icons and national peasant art and costume. This formed the ‘private opera’ in Moscow reflecting the taste of the Wanderers. This is evident in works such as Rimsky Korsakov’s (1844-1907) The Snow Maiden (Watkins, 1988, p.196). It lacks the boundaries once adhered to by composers of the strict eras gone by. A typical characteristic is displayed by the fact it does not have to rely on key, as diatonic tonality is used much more freely (Griffiths, Modern Music, p.7). The main idea behind Modernism is to delineate a strong sense of rejection towards the ‘outdated’ music of the past and bring in a new ‘contemporary’ approach to musical expression. Stravinsky was well aware that the term ‘neo-classical’, a form of modernism, is used in a rather naive sense and applied freely to many composers of the twentieth century…
Prokofiev: mostly diatonic melodies and harmonies make music accessible, occasional dissonance and unexpected turns make it engaging and distinctive; modal melodies and orchestration convey a Russian sound. This widely appealing style brought him more popularity than his modernist period.…
Rachmaninoff stated, “Music is enough for a lifetime, but a lifetime is not enough for music.” Essential to all nationalities, generations, and people, music can make your soul soar, put you to sleep, or bring you to your knees in tears. All din and clamor goes silent. Every eye is riveted on the conductor. The baton lifts. Suddenly, in a myriad of melodies, harmonies, timbre, and texture, a whole new realm is unraveled. The extraordinary feeling of unwinding and renewing your mind by listening to the flow of music is inexpressible. Nothing compares.…
Being blind and unaware of where he is at and of their intentions there’s a great amount of tension and anticipation in finding out thier purpose. Motifs are musical phrases who are constantly repeated, and the constant repetition as well as the connotation of them music being dramatic is representation of the conflict the narrator feels as he is contrained to whims of the doctors. Its constant pounding is seen to depict a person’s struggle. Though classical music shouldn’t be seen as expressive as the blues to a race’s voice, it leads new imagery of tension and the roots of music, with internal struggle, for example the Fifth being inspired by the pain of loosing hearing and trying to escape the devil’s bearing. The cadences of Beethoven’s Fifth is long encumbered, associated and charged with force and energy! There the history of the music is naturally represented in his head playing at moments where he is at fear for how and why…
Music. Fascinating both by it's diverse individual styles and the inevitable fusion of different genres which in turn have created other completely new and unique styles of music. Classical music is a perfect example. The earliest forms of classical music were composed in the eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries and displayed a very complicated and sophisticated form of writing incorporating a wide range of instruments and used the principle of multi instrumentation which achieved a very full symphonic sound which in turn led to the creation of specially designed halls to facilitate the sound. The origins of the music were also diverse, many compositions having been written for the stage, composers such as Peter Ilyich Tchaikovsky' who…
As I listened to Brittan’s composition, I could hear the dynamics raise and lower as each instrument presented a solo sound. Hearing the variations of the theme paved a clear path for me, as a listener, to walk my mind through each variation, and hear the distinctions between…
It begins with a child, a little girl with stars in her eyes and flowers in her hair, stubbed toes and scraped knees, all excitement and energy and love and optimism. The little girl has a heart made of bright, shining lights.…