The aim of this paper is to examine the use of graphic notation in relation to improvisation and indeterminacy in practice. The paper opens with a background context around terms and ideas about improvisation and indeterminate music pioneered by composers in the 20th century. The techniques the author used in the pieces Fluttering (Brondum 2015) and Serpentine Line (Brondum 2010) are examined and discussed in informal interviews with four musicians. The paper closes with a discussion and conclusions gained from the interviews and from working with musicians in the context of using graphic notation as a bridge between improvisation and notated music. Documentation of the author’s practice and research of these methodological and aesthetical ...
Abstract Centering on notation is a characteristic of Western tonal music. The printed scores are ex...
Presents graphic notation as the making of aural scores to memorise or analyse improvised music ther...
This essay seeks to demonstrate a common approach to the interpretation of experimental music scores...
The aim of this paper is to examine the use of graphic notation in relation to improvisation and ind...
The aim of this paper is to examine the use of graphic notation in relation to improvisation and ind...
This thesis examines practitioner perspectives on graphic scores and applies the findings composit...
This research explores the concept of musical gesture as it relates to graphic notation, in three 20...
The relationship between imagination and image has significant influences on a composer's engagement...
This article presents a method of graphic notation-“aural scores”-that facilitates memorizing and an...
This paper examines performers’ notational practices and seeks to uncover the creative possibilities...
This paper reflects critically on changes to the author’s notational practice brought about by dialo...
Visual artist Danica Maier and composer Martin Scheuregger have been collaborating on an ACE-funded ...
The research presented here is product of a practice-based process that primarily generates knowledg...
The genre of trumpet and string quartet is in its early stages. While the combination is opportunist...
Paper from European Congress of Music Therapy, Leuven 1998. Some examples are quoted and principles ...
Abstract Centering on notation is a characteristic of Western tonal music. The printed scores are ex...
Presents graphic notation as the making of aural scores to memorise or analyse improvised music ther...
This essay seeks to demonstrate a common approach to the interpretation of experimental music scores...
The aim of this paper is to examine the use of graphic notation in relation to improvisation and ind...
The aim of this paper is to examine the use of graphic notation in relation to improvisation and ind...
This thesis examines practitioner perspectives on graphic scores and applies the findings composit...
This research explores the concept of musical gesture as it relates to graphic notation, in three 20...
The relationship between imagination and image has significant influences on a composer's engagement...
This article presents a method of graphic notation-“aural scores”-that facilitates memorizing and an...
This paper examines performers’ notational practices and seeks to uncover the creative possibilities...
This paper reflects critically on changes to the author’s notational practice brought about by dialo...
Visual artist Danica Maier and composer Martin Scheuregger have been collaborating on an ACE-funded ...
The research presented here is product of a practice-based process that primarily generates knowledg...
The genre of trumpet and string quartet is in its early stages. While the combination is opportunist...
Paper from European Congress of Music Therapy, Leuven 1998. Some examples are quoted and principles ...
Abstract Centering on notation is a characteristic of Western tonal music. The printed scores are ex...
Presents graphic notation as the making of aural scores to memorise or analyse improvised music ther...
This essay seeks to demonstrate a common approach to the interpretation of experimental music scores...