Vol I Exegesis -- Vol II Sound recordings -- Vol III ScoresSound recordings and Scores unavailable due to Copyright restrictionsThis performance-based study examines stylistic cross-pollination in the classical guitar repertoire. The submission comprises 240 minutes of recorded performances – the majority of which are world premiere recordings – and a supporting exegesis. The music performed and analysed reflects a change from the more introspective and Eurocentric Segovian soloist approach towards a more collaborative, stylistically diverse and inclusive identity. A destinctive feature of that shift is the guitar’s strong South American heritage and a preparedness by composers and performers alike to look beyond the European traditions in ...
This submission for the degree of Master of Music at the Elder Conservatorium of Music explores, thr...
Includes bibliographical references (page 10)This is a recital in partial fulfillment of the Master ...
A review of Nineteenth-Century Guitar Songs: An Idiosyncratic Survey, by Ian Gammie
Through the use of distinctive techniques and conventions, folkloric and popular music can provide a...
Entangled in global cultural flows, but also held in place locally, empowered and agential, musical ...
The five-course ‘baroque’ guitar was regularly employed in the accompaniment of song and dance, and ...
From a sample of the research into the guitar indexed in the Brazilian Digital Library of Theses and...
PhD ThesisThis thesis consists of four chapters, an introduction and a conclusion. It asks the quest...
textThis dissertation explores the social life of the Chilean guitarrón: how a folk instrument embo...
Part A: Recorded Recitals -- Part B: ExegesisThis study explores the technical and musical approache...
The article focuses on the personalized genre and style approach to the analysis of Latin American c...
Includes abstract.Includes bibliographical references (leaves 296-309).This is the first comprehensi...
Includes recorded audio files in WAV and MP3 formats, 43:01 in length.The pieces that have been sele...
From a sample of the research into the guitar indexed in the Brazilian Digital Library of Theses and...
The last four hundred years have seen the guitar fall in and out of fashion, from its position as a...
This submission for the degree of Master of Music at the Elder Conservatorium of Music explores, thr...
Includes bibliographical references (page 10)This is a recital in partial fulfillment of the Master ...
A review of Nineteenth-Century Guitar Songs: An Idiosyncratic Survey, by Ian Gammie
Through the use of distinctive techniques and conventions, folkloric and popular music can provide a...
Entangled in global cultural flows, but also held in place locally, empowered and agential, musical ...
The five-course ‘baroque’ guitar was regularly employed in the accompaniment of song and dance, and ...
From a sample of the research into the guitar indexed in the Brazilian Digital Library of Theses and...
PhD ThesisThis thesis consists of four chapters, an introduction and a conclusion. It asks the quest...
textThis dissertation explores the social life of the Chilean guitarrón: how a folk instrument embo...
Part A: Recorded Recitals -- Part B: ExegesisThis study explores the technical and musical approache...
The article focuses on the personalized genre and style approach to the analysis of Latin American c...
Includes abstract.Includes bibliographical references (leaves 296-309).This is the first comprehensi...
Includes recorded audio files in WAV and MP3 formats, 43:01 in length.The pieces that have been sele...
From a sample of the research into the guitar indexed in the Brazilian Digital Library of Theses and...
The last four hundred years have seen the guitar fall in and out of fashion, from its position as a...
This submission for the degree of Master of Music at the Elder Conservatorium of Music explores, thr...
Includes bibliographical references (page 10)This is a recital in partial fulfillment of the Master ...
A review of Nineteenth-Century Guitar Songs: An Idiosyncratic Survey, by Ian Gammie