Dissertation/ Thesis

Monolith: A Piece for Midi Piano, Mixed Sextet, and Fixed Electronics

Bibliographic Details
Title: Monolith: A Piece for Midi Piano, Mixed Sextet, and Fixed Electronics
Authors: Vaughn, Mark
Contributors: May, Andrew, 1968, Nelson, Jon Christopher, Dworak, Paul E., 1951
Publisher Information: University of North Texas Libraries, 2025.
Publication Year: 2025
Subject Terms: Pierrot ensemble, Art music, Steve Reich, Contextual analysis, Musical meter and rhythm, Scores, Fixed electronics, Conlon Nancarrow, Composition (Music), György Ligeti, Academic theses
Description: Reference to a regular pulse is one of the most common ways of measuring time in music. As the basis for tempo, meter, subdivisions, and even formal symmetry, pulse, or the sonic articulation of regular units of time, is found throughout all levels of music. In this paper, I describe how I used a structure of twelve simultaneous pulses to compose "Monolith," a recent piece for MIDI piano, Pierrot ensemble, and fixed electronics. In the first chapter, I contextualize "Monolith" by briefly examining pulse's relationship to hierarchical structure in music and the possibilities for creativity in pulse-based hierarchical structures. In the second chapter, I analyze the use of pulse in Steve Reich's "Music for 18 Musicians," György Ligeti's "Self-portrait with Reich and Riley (with Chopin in the background), and Conlon Nancarrow's "Study No. 36 for Player Piano." In the third chapter, I describe in detail the relationship between the twelve-pulse structure and the various movements that comprise "Monolith," focusing on the relationship between compositional freedom and prescribed structure throughout the work.
Document Type: Doctoral thesis
Thesis
File Description: Text
DOI: 10.12794/metadc1011853
Accession Number: edsair.doi.dedup.....bf74b2bb1f5b5145fef20b92f6717ba6
Database: OpenAIRE
Description
DOI:10.12794/metadc1011853