Composition portfolio commentary

This thesis consists of a portfolio of fourteen compositions, an accompanying commentary and recordings of the works on CD and DVD. The portfolio comprises one electronic composition, which is presented on the DVD, and thirteen printed scores spanning chamber, orchestral and vocal music, music writt...

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Main Author: Bowden, Mark
Published: Royal Holloway, University of London 2009
Subjects:
780
Online Access:http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.538783
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spelling ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-5387832015-03-20T04:31:18ZComposition portfolio commentaryBowden, Mark2009This thesis consists of a portfolio of fourteen compositions, an accompanying commentary and recordings of the works on CD and DVD. The portfolio comprises one electronic composition, which is presented on the DVD, and thirteen printed scores spanning chamber, orchestral and vocal music, music written for young people and amateurs, and music created in collaboration with artists from different disciplines including text, film and dance. Through the works presented in the portfolio I have explored approaches to the construction of melody and harmony, the design and function of musical structure and form, and the variety of instrumental colour and timbre that can be achieved through the creative application of instrumentation. I consider these three areas to be fundamental compositional elements in my own work and areas for further exploration and expansion. The commentary comprises a broad discussion of the creative processes undertaken and how the portfolio relates to some movements and developments in current contemporary art music. The portfolio is contextualized with references to practitioners who have influenced my compositional output. These practitioners include Per Norgard, in particular his approach to melody and harmony through his discovery of the infinity series, and Magnus Lindberg, in particular his method of creating structural tempo relationships. Reference is also made to composers whose music elevates timbre to the same level of compositional significance as rhythm, melody, harmony and form, particularly composers of the so-called spectral movement such as Gerard Grisey. Please be aware that the compositions referred to in this thesis have not been digitised for copyright reasons.780Royal Holloway, University of Londonhttp://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.538783http://digirep.rhul.ac.uk/items/398de9c6-6c68-3b1b-9c05-aaf9ec2be461/1/Electronic Thesis or Dissertation
collection NDLTD
sources NDLTD
topic 780
spellingShingle 780
Bowden, Mark
Composition portfolio commentary
description This thesis consists of a portfolio of fourteen compositions, an accompanying commentary and recordings of the works on CD and DVD. The portfolio comprises one electronic composition, which is presented on the DVD, and thirteen printed scores spanning chamber, orchestral and vocal music, music written for young people and amateurs, and music created in collaboration with artists from different disciplines including text, film and dance. Through the works presented in the portfolio I have explored approaches to the construction of melody and harmony, the design and function of musical structure and form, and the variety of instrumental colour and timbre that can be achieved through the creative application of instrumentation. I consider these three areas to be fundamental compositional elements in my own work and areas for further exploration and expansion. The commentary comprises a broad discussion of the creative processes undertaken and how the portfolio relates to some movements and developments in current contemporary art music. The portfolio is contextualized with references to practitioners who have influenced my compositional output. These practitioners include Per Norgard, in particular his approach to melody and harmony through his discovery of the infinity series, and Magnus Lindberg, in particular his method of creating structural tempo relationships. Reference is also made to composers whose music elevates timbre to the same level of compositional significance as rhythm, melody, harmony and form, particularly composers of the so-called spectral movement such as Gerard Grisey. Please be aware that the compositions referred to in this thesis have not been digitised for copyright reasons.
author Bowden, Mark
author_facet Bowden, Mark
author_sort Bowden, Mark
title Composition portfolio commentary
title_short Composition portfolio commentary
title_full Composition portfolio commentary
title_fullStr Composition portfolio commentary
title_full_unstemmed Composition portfolio commentary
title_sort composition portfolio commentary
publisher Royal Holloway, University of London
publishDate 2009
url http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.538783
work_keys_str_mv AT bowdenmark compositionportfoliocommentary
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