Browsing by Subject Music

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  • TVS.003178_Classic funk and R & B grooves for bass_2000_1.pdf.jpg
  • Recording, musical


  • Authors: Josquin Des Pres (2000)

  • Classic Funk and R&B Grooves for Bass is an overview of stylistic examples that capture the essence of R&B recordings from Memphis, Muscle Shoals, Motown, and New York. All the music examples (98 total!) are written in standard notation and tablature, and all the examples are demonstrated on the enclosed recording (live, not sequenced).

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  • Authors: Cook, Nicholas (2018)

  • Not long ago, ideas of creativity in music revolved around composers in garrets and the idea of genius. In the last decade there has been a sea change in thinking: musical creativity is seen in terms of collaboration and real-time performance. 'Music as Creative Practice' attempts to synthesise both perspectives

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  • Authors: - (2002)

  • From performance history to the essentials of practice and memorisation, from performance anxiety to the art of listening and criticism, this accessible guide for students, teachers and performers at all levels unravels the complexities of musical performance, focusing on key aspects of learning, playing and responding to music

  • TVS.002868_Opportunities in music careers_1.pdf.jpg
  • Recording, musical


  • Authors: Robert Gerardi (2002)

  • With more than 100 titles in the series, "Opportunities in..." is the most comprehensive career books series in the world. This is a new title in the series. Each book in this series presents expert advice and the most up-to-date information available for training, resources, salary statistics, and opportunities in a specific, narrowly defined field.

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  • Sách/Book


  • Authors: Svard, Lois (2023)

  • For centuries, poets and philosophers have written about the power of music, often suggesting that music is the essence of life itself, that music lives within us, that we are music. Scientists have dismissed these writings as flights of poetic fancy, or perhaps metaphor or artistic license. They have considered music to be a product of culture, and that's the way musicians have studied music as well. But have poets and philosophers perhaps had a better sense of the true nature of music? Have they been right all along in suggesting that music is life itself?

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  • Sách/Book


  • Authors: - (1995)

  • The 12 essays in this volume represent the most important trends in the study of musical performance. Three areas are investigated: the psychology of performance, the semantics of performance, and the relation between performance and analysis. The first section broaches fundamental issues such as text, expression, musical motion and the role of practice in the acquisition of expertise. The next four chapters address the shaping of structure and the projection of meaning in performance, while the last four consider performance as analytical paradigm, as dramatic narrative, as act of criticism, as temporal process.

  • TVS.002668_What To Listen For In Music_2011_1.pdf.jpg
  • Recording, musical


  • Authors: Aaron Copland (2011)

  • With his provocative suggestions, Aaron Copland guides readers through a deeper appreciation of the most rewarding of all art forms.