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Recorded Music in Creative Practices: Mediation, Performance, Education

Pre-order,Recorded Music in Creative Practices: Mediation, Performance, Education

  • Editor: Barolsky, Daniel G
  • Editor: Volioti, Georgia

Book

$195.75

Due for release on 9th Jul 2024

Order now and we will deliver it when available

Contents

  • List of figures
  • List of tables
  • List of music examples
  • Note for the reader about e-resources
  • List of online video examples
  • Notes on contributors
  • Acknowledgements
  • Introduction: New approaches to integrating the study and practice of recording in higher music education
  • PART I – Recordings as agents of mediation
  • 1. History, imitation, and freedom in classical performers’ uses of recordings
  • 2. Reinterpreting the history of the tenor voice: An autoethnographic study using early recordings
  • 3. The enchantment of phonography: Materiality and mediation in early twentieth-century children’s recordings
  • 4. Recorded performance reviewed: Discovering classical music recordings through critics’ writings
  • PART II – (Re)creative performances in context
  • 5. Creative processes in recreating early recordings
  • 6. Performing rock in the recording studio: Agency and structure within creative practice
  • 7. Furrowing sound: Performance record cutting
  • 8. From magnetic tape to digital media: Performative approaches to the recorded contents of Constança Capdeville’s experimental musical works
  • PART III – Educational prospects and challenges
  • 9. Nurturing the musical imagination: Listening to recordings for self-regulated and creative learning
  • 10. Early recordings and the training of performers: Lessons from a European conservatoire
  • 11. Teaching the rights way: The case for integrating copyright into the higher music education curriculum
  • 12. The analogue music studio: Education and research as heritage-in-process
  • 13. New approaches to working with recordings in practice-led research and teaching of ‘world’ musics: A case study of Cuban dance music
  • 14. Afterword: Acknowledging our cyborg identities in the music history curriculum
  • Index