This study documents and analyzes cyclic patterns used as melodic vocabulary in John Coltrane's improvisations from compositions of 1965 to 1967. The analysis is categorized in two distinct sections. The first section analyzes melodic vocabulary that is derived from the cycle of descending major thirds progressions found in the compositions of 1959 to 1960. The second section analyzes melodic vocabulary that is derived from Nicolas Slonimsky's Thesaurus of Scales and Melodic Patterns using the theoretical terminology incorporated in the treatise. Musical examples consist of patterns from the Thesaurus and excerpts from selected improvisations of John Coltrane as transcribed by Andrew White. Important scholarly contributions relevant to th...
Includes abstract and vita. --- Thesis (Ph. D)--University of Rochester, 2011. --- v.1.Part 1. The c...
Research on how jazz musicians improvise suggests that learned patterns or “licks” inserted during i...
The purposes of this essay are to (1) document and preserve, within the academic community, the uniq...
This thesis examines strategies employed by jazz musicians when they temporarily leave the underlyin...
This Independent Study examines the emergence of an improvisatory paradigm in jazz music during the ...
The impact of the saxophonist and composer John Coltrane (1926–67) on music is remarkably broad and ...
The aim of this research, through a transcription analytical approach, is to investigate improvisati...
Background in psychology. Researchers investigating the cognitive processes underlying creativity ha...
This thesis has traced the development of the various style trends in the music of john Cage through...
This study is an examination of the musical output of Ornette Coleman’s small ensembles during the 1...
This study is a comparative examination of the musical lives and improvisational styles of jazz trum...
It is well known that jazz improvisations include repeated rhythmic and melodic patterns. What is le...
Despite a widely held view that serialism is incompatible with jazz improvisation, there are many in...
Research on how jazz musicians improvise suggests that learned patterns or “licks” inserted during i...
Ornette Coleman (1930-2015) is frequently referred to as not only a great visionary in jazz music bu...
Includes abstract and vita. --- Thesis (Ph. D)--University of Rochester, 2011. --- v.1.Part 1. The c...
Research on how jazz musicians improvise suggests that learned patterns or “licks” inserted during i...
The purposes of this essay are to (1) document and preserve, within the academic community, the uniq...
This thesis examines strategies employed by jazz musicians when they temporarily leave the underlyin...
This Independent Study examines the emergence of an improvisatory paradigm in jazz music during the ...
The impact of the saxophonist and composer John Coltrane (1926–67) on music is remarkably broad and ...
The aim of this research, through a transcription analytical approach, is to investigate improvisati...
Background in psychology. Researchers investigating the cognitive processes underlying creativity ha...
This thesis has traced the development of the various style trends in the music of john Cage through...
This study is an examination of the musical output of Ornette Coleman’s small ensembles during the 1...
This study is a comparative examination of the musical lives and improvisational styles of jazz trum...
It is well known that jazz improvisations include repeated rhythmic and melodic patterns. What is le...
Despite a widely held view that serialism is incompatible with jazz improvisation, there are many in...
Research on how jazz musicians improvise suggests that learned patterns or “licks” inserted during i...
Ornette Coleman (1930-2015) is frequently referred to as not only a great visionary in jazz music bu...
Includes abstract and vita. --- Thesis (Ph. D)--University of Rochester, 2011. --- v.1.Part 1. The c...
Research on how jazz musicians improvise suggests that learned patterns or “licks” inserted during i...
The purposes of this essay are to (1) document and preserve, within the academic community, the uniq...