The Sound of Silence: Exploring Minimalism in Music

The Sound of Silence: Exploring Minimalism in Music

Author: Harry Tekell

Publisher: Richards Education

Published:

Total Pages: 155

ISBN-13:

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The Sound of Silence: Exploring Minimalism in Music delves deep into the captivating world of minimalist music, a genre that emphasizes simplicity, repetition, and gradual change. This comprehensive guide explores the origins, evolution, and key figures of minimalism, uncovering the techniques and structures that define this influential movement. From the pioneering works of La Monte Young and Terry Riley to the contemporary innovations of modern minimalists, this book provides a thorough understanding of how minimalism has shaped and continues to influence the music landscape. Each chapter examines different aspects of minimalist music, from its application in instrumental and vocal compositions to its impact on popular and electronic music. The book also explores the global reach of minimalism, its intersections with other art forms, and its ongoing evolution in the digital age. Through personal reflections, interviews, and case studies, The Sound of Silence offers both an academic and intimate look at the minimalist approach to music, making it an essential read for music enthusiasts, scholars, and anyone intrigued by the power of simplicity in sound.


John Adams

John Adams

Author: Alexander Sanchez-Behar

Publisher: Routledge

Published: 2020-04-21

Total Pages: 249

ISBN-13: 1351677934

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Winner of the 2022 Vincent H. Duckles Award, Music Library Association John Adams: A Research and Information Guide offers the first comprehensive guide to the musical works and literature of one of the leading American composers of our time. The research guide catalogs and summarizes materials relating to Adams’s work, providing detailed annotated bibliographic entries for both primary and secondary sources. Covering writings by and interviews with Adams, books, journal articles and book chapters, newspaper articles and reviews, dissertations, video recordings, and other sources, the guide also contains a chronology of Adams’s life, a discography, and a list of compositions. Robust indexes enable researchers to easily locate sources by author, composition, or subject. This volume is a major reference tool for all those interested in Adams and his music, and a valuable resource for students and researchers of minimalism, contemporary American music, and twentieth-century music more broadly.


Creative and Critical Projects in Classroom Music

Creative and Critical Projects in Classroom Music

Author: John Finney

Publisher: Routledge

Published: 2020-10-29

Total Pages: 398

ISBN-13: 1000204189

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Creative and Critical Projects in Classroom Music is both a celebration and extension of John Paynter and Peter Aston’s groundbreaking work on creative classroom music, Sound and Silence, first published in 1970. Building on the central themes of the original work – the child as artist, the role of musical imagination and creativity, and the process of making music – the authors and contributors provide a contemporary response to the spirit and style of Sound and Silence. They offer reflections on the ideas and convictions underpinning Paynter and Aston’s work in light of scholarship developed during the intervening years. This critical work is accompanied by 16 creative classroom projects designed and enacted by contemporary practitioners, raising questions about the nature and function of music in education and society. In summary, this book aims to: Celebrate seminal work on musical creativity in the classroom. Promote the integration of practical, critical and analytical writing and thinking around this key theme for music education. Contribute to initiating the next 50 years of thought in relation to music creativity in the classroom. Offering a unique combination of critical scholarship and practical application, and published on the occasion of the 50th anniversary of Sound and Silence, themes from Paynter and Aston’s work are here given fresh context that aims to inspire a new generation of innovative classroom practice and to challenge current ways of thinking about the music classroom.


Music, Technology, and Education

Music, Technology, and Education

Author: Andrew King

Publisher: Routledge

Published: 2016-06-10

Total Pages: 283

ISBN-13: 1317091515

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The use of technology in music and education can no longer be described as a recent development. Music learners actively engage with technology in their music making, regardless of the opportunities afforded to them in formal settings. This volume draws together critical perspectives in three overarching areas in which technology is used to support music education: music production; game technology; musical creation, experience and understanding. The fourteen chapters reflect the emerging field of the study of technology in music from a pedagogical perspective. Contributions come not only from music pedagogues but also from musicologists, composers and performers working at the forefront of the domain. The authors examine pedagogical practice in the recording studio, how game technology relates to musical creation and expression, the use of technology to create and assess musical compositions, and how technology can foster learning within the field of Special Educational Needs (SEN). In addition, the use of technology in musical performance is examined, with a particular focus on the current trends and the ways it might be reshaped for use within performance practice. This book will be of value to educators, practitioners, musicologists, composers and performers, as well as to scholars with an interest in the critical study of how technology is used effectively in music and music education.


Sonic Encounters with Blanchot

Sonic Encounters with Blanchot

Author: Adam Potts

Publisher: Routledge

Published: 2020-06-05

Total Pages: 471

ISBN-13: 042951655X

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Sonic Encounters with Blanchot is the first book to explore the relationship of sound and music with the work of Maurice Blanchot. The volume brings together scholars from a range of disciplines who listen closely to the sounds and resonances emanating from within Blanchot’s work and who consider their significance both within his work and beyond. The latent and explicit sonic content of Blanchot’s writing is explored, as is his treatment of music and the possibilities of thinking about contemporary music and sound art through his work. Although Blanchot is best known for his engagement with literature, an engagement that often relies on visual references and experiences, this collection takes a sonic route into one of the most exciting and demanding thinkers of the twentieth century. As an interdisciplinary exploration of sound and Blanchot’s work, this book will be interest to those studying sound in literature and music, as well as students of Blanchot’s work in general. This book was originally published as a special issue of Angelaki.


The Longing for Less

The Longing for Less

Author: Kyle Chayka

Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing USA

Published: 2020-01-21

Total Pages: 273

ISBN-13: 1635572118

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The New Yorker staff writer and Filterworld author Kyle Chayka examines the deep roots-and untapped possibilities-of our newfound, all-consuming drive to reduce. “Less is more”: Everywhere we hear the mantra. Marie Kondo and other decluttering gurus promise that shedding our stuff will solve our problems. We commit to cleanse diets and strive for inbox zero. Amid the frantic pace and distraction of everyday life, we covet silence-and airy, Instagrammable spaces in which to enjoy it. The popular term for this brand of upscale austerity, “minimalism,” has mostly come to stand for things to buy and consume. But minimalism has richer, deeper, and altogether more valuable gifts to offer. In The Longing for Less, one of our sharpest cultural critics delves beneath the glossy surface of minimalist trends, seeking better ways to claim the time and space we crave. Kyle Chayka's search leads him to the philosophical and spiritual origins of minimalism, and to the stories of artists such as Agnes Martin and Donald Judd; composers such as John Cage and Julius Eastman; architects and designers; visionaries and misfits. As Chayka looks anew at their extraordinary lives and explores the places where they worked-from Manhattan lofts to the Texas high desert and the back alleys of Kyoto-he reminds us that what we most require is presence, not absence. The result is an elegant synthesis of our minimalist desires and our profound emotional needs. With a new afterword by the author.


Dinner with Lenny

Dinner with Lenny

Author: Jonathan Cott

Publisher: Oxford University Press

Published: 2013-03-28

Total Pages: 192

ISBN-13: 0199858446

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Features a complete account of the author's twelve-hour interview with Bernstein one year before the classical music personality's death in 1990.


Architecture and Silence

Architecture and Silence

Author: Christos P. Kakalis

Publisher: Routledge

Published: 2019-08-23

Total Pages: 324

ISBN-13: 042979519X

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This book explores the role of silence in how we design, present and experi-ence architecture. Grounded in phenomenological theory, the book builds on historical, theoretical and practical approaches to examine silence as a methodological tool of architectural research and unravel the experiential qualities of the design process. Distinct from an entirely soundless experience, silence is proposed as a material condition organically incorporated into the built and natural landscape. Kakalis argues that, either human or atmospheric, silence is a condition of waiting for a sound to be born or a new spatio-temporal event to emerge. In silence, therefore, we are attentive and attuned to the atmos-phere of a place. The book unpacks a series of stories of silence in religious topographies, urban landscapes, film and theatre productions and architec-tural education with contributed chapters and interviews with Jeff Malpas and Alberto Pérez-Gómez. Aimed at postgraduate students, scholars and researchers in architectural theory, it shows how performative and atmospheric qualities of silence can build a new understanding of architectural experience.


The Subject of Minimalism

The Subject of Minimalism

Author: Thomas Phillips

Publisher: Springer

Published: 2013-09-04

Total Pages: 326

ISBN-13: 1137341025

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Utilizing a wide range of theoretical and creative texts, Phillips offers an examination of subjectivity as considered, enacted, and embodied, through the frame of minimalist aesthetics. Provocatively, he makes the claim that lived experience is capable of being refined according to the paradoxically rich parameters of a minimalist aesthetic.