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  • Recording, musical


  • Authors: Scott Jarrett (2021)

  • Whatever your musical ambitions-composing a dark requiem in a beautiful Viennese apartment or producing the next great Star Wars-like movie theme in LA-the fully updated Music Composition For Dummies hits all the right notes to help you become confident in the theory and practice of composition.

  • Recording, musical


  • Authors: Richard Mark French (2007)

  • This book is for experienced luthiers and guitar designers in the industry, novice builders wishing to improve their designs, and guitar owners interested in knowing more about their instruments. It includes the most important technical information gathered from many sources, including the academic literature and the author's own work, presented here in a clear, actionable form with a minimum of mathematics

  • Recording, musical


  • Authors: Paul Middleton (2008)

  • This practical music technology workbook enables students and teachers to get the best possible results with the available equipment. The workbook provides step-by-step activities for classroom-based and independent project work, covering the skills and techniques used in modern music production.

  • Recording, musical


  • Authors: Christopher Fisher (2010)

  • Teaching Piano in Groups provides a one-stop compendium of information related to all aspects of group piano teaching. Motivated by an ever-growing interest in this instructional method and its widespread mandatory inclusion in piano pedagogy curricula, Christopher Fisher highlights the proven viability and success of group piano teaching, and arms front-line group piano instructors with the necessary tools for practical implementation of a system of instruction in their own teaching.

  • Recording, musical


  • Authors: Simon Faulkner (2016)

  • Incorporating the latest research on how rhythmic music impacts the brain, this book features over 100 different exercises spanning five key developmental areas: social and emotional learning; identity and culture; strengths and virtues; health and wellbeing; and families, teams and communities. It offers a safe entry to cognitive reflection through fun, experiential rhythmic exercises and is useful for working in settings such as school, child and adolescent counselling settings, mental health and drug and alcohol interventions, trauma counselling and relational counselling. Important sections on the use of metaphor and analogy show how to reinforce experiential outcomes.

  • Recording, musical


  • Authors: Nicholas Cook (2000)

  • The world teems with different kinds of music-traditional, folk, classical, jazz, rock, pop-and each type of music tends to come with its own way of thinking. Drawing on a wealth of accessible examples ranging from Beethoven to Chinese zither music, Nicholas Cook attempts to provide a framework for thinking about all music. By examining the personal, social, and cultural values that music embodies, the book reveals the shortcomings of traditional conceptions of music, and sketches a more.

  • Recording, musical


  • Authors: Barton Press (2020)

  • 21-day course: Discover a comprehensive guide conceptually divided into three weeks and twenty-one days. Graspable concepts: Learn through a conceptual guide where each week focuses on an overall topic, and each day focuses on a subject to analyze and practice. Step-by-step exercises: Discover daily exercises included in the guide so you can apply and practice knowledge as you gain it.

  • Recording, musical


  • Authors: David Temperley (2007)

  • Music and Probability--the first full-length book to explore the application of probabilistic techniques to musical issues--includes a concise survey of probability theory, with simple examples and a discussion of its application in other domains.

  • Recording, musical


  • Authors: David Pattie (2007)

  • In this new study, David Pattie examines the apparent contradiction between authenticity and theatricality in the live performance of rock music, and looks at the way in which various performers have dealt with this paradox from rock music's early development in the 1960s up to the present day.