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Muziektheorie (7)
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Voices, Bodies, Practices
Performing Musical Subjectivities
2019 || Paperback || Catherine Laws e.a. || Leuven University Press
Who is the “I” that performs? The arts of the twentieth and twenty-first centuries have pushed us relentlessly to reconsider our notions of the self, expression, and communication: to ask ourselves, again and again, who we think we are and how we can speak meaningfully to one another. Although in other performing arts studies, especially of theatre, the performance of selfhood and identity continues to be a matter of lively debate in both practice and theory, the question of how a sense o...
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Orpheus Institute Series Experimental Affinities in Music
2016 || Paperback || Paulo de Assis || Leuven University Press
Exploring experimental attitudes in music.
Experimental Affinities in Music brings together diverse artistic, musicological, historical, and philosophical essays, enhancing a broad discourse on artistic experimentation, and exploring various experimental attitudes in music composed between the thirteenth and twentieth centuries.
The golden thread running through the different chapters is the quest for inherently experimental musical practices, a quest pursued from interrogating, descriptive, ...
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Aberrant Nuptials
Deleuze and Artistic Research
2019 || Paperback || Paulo De Assis e.a. || Leuven University Press
Aberrant Nuptials explores the diversity and richness of the interactions between artistic research and Deleuze studies. “Aberrant nuptials” is the expression Gilles Deleuze uses to refer to productive encounters between systems characterised by fundamental difference. More than imitation, representation, or reproduction, these encounters foster creative flows of energy, generating new material configurations and intensive experiences. Within different understandings of artistic research,...
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Orpheus Institute Series The Dark Precursor
Deleuze and Artistic Research
2018 || Hardcover || Paulo de Assis e.a. || Leuven University Press
Deleuze's and Guattari's philosophy in the field of artistic research.
Gilles Deleuze's intriguing concept of the dark precursor refers to intensive processes of energetic flows passing between fields of different potentials. Fleetingly used in Difference and Repetition, it remained underexplored in Deleuze's subsequent work. In this collection of essays numerous contributors offer perspectives on Deleuze's concept of the dark precursor as it affects artistic research, providing a wide-rangin...
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Orpheus Institute Series Powers of Divergence
2018 || Paperback || Lucia D'Errico || Leuven University Press
Beyond resemblance: creative divergence in music performance.
What does it mean to produce resemblance in the performance of written music? Starting from how this question is commonly answered by the practice of interpretation in Western notated art music, this book proposes a move beyond commonly accepted codes, conventions and territories of music performance. Appropriating reflections from post-structural philosophy, visual arts and semiotics, and crucially based upon an artistic research ...
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Two-Dimensional Sonata Form / Druk 2
Form and Cycle in Single-Movement Instrumental Works by Liszt, Strauss, Schoenberg and Zemlinsky
2024 || Paperback || Steven Vande Moortele || Leuven University Press
Two-Dimensional Sonata Form is the first book dedicated to the combination of the movements of a multimovement sonata cycle with an overarching single-movement form that is itself organized as a sonata form. Drawing on a variety of historical and recent approaches to musical form (e.g., Marxian and Schoenbergian Formenlehre, Caplin’s theory of formal functions, and Hepokoski and Darcy’s Sonata Theory), it begins by developing an original theoretical framework for the analysis of this type...
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Unfolding Time
studies in temporality in twentieth-century music
2011 || Paperback || Darla Crispin e.a. || Leuven University Press
Questions concerning music and its inextricably intertwined and complex interface with time continue to fascinate musicians and scholars.
For performers, the primary perception of music is arguably the way in which it unfolds in real time; while for composers a work appears whole and entire, with the presence of the score having the potential to compress, and even eliminate, the perception of time as passing.
The paradoxical relationship between these two perspectives, and the sub...