Browsing Music and Dance Theses and Dissertations by Title

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  • Kirilov, Kalin Stanchev (University of Oregon, 2007)
    This study focuses on the development of harmonic vocabulary in Bulgarian music. It analyzes the incorporation of harmony in village music from the 1930s to the 1990s, "wedding music" from the 1970s to 2000, and choral ...
  • Britton, Jason Grant, 1972- (University of Oregon, 2008-06)
    Beethoven's last five string quartets have engaged the imagination and curiosity of performers, listeners, and critics at a level that has rarely been touched in the world of chamber music, or beyond. Throughout the late ...
  • Gorney, Christopher Cole, 1977- (University of Oregon, 2009-06)
    The purpose of this study was to identify and define the essential characteristics of hip hop dance. Hip hop dance has taken many forms throughout its four decades of existence. This research shows that regardless of the ...
  • Arenas, Erick G. (University of Oregon, 2004-08)
    Church music has been given relatively little scholarly attention in the study of nineteenth-century music. While there is an array of mass settings that were composed by Romantic-era composers, current musicological ...
  • Abrahamson, Krista (University of Oregon, 2016-10-27)
    This dissertation follows the history of functional ideas and their pedagogy, illuminates with many examples the implementation of my updated system of Functional Analysis, and discusses the pedagogical implications that ...
  • Wang, Yanjie (University of Oregon, 2019-01-11)
    This thesis focuses on the relationship between piano performance and Schenkerian analysis. Schenkerian analysis was designed initially as a practical guide for performers. In the different levels of a Schenkerian graph, ...
  • Soenyun, Nicholas (University of Oregon, 2019-09-18)
    The purpose of this study was to determine what relationships exist, if any, between psychological well-being, psychosocial well-being, internalized homonegativity (IH), and LGBT community band participation, as well as ...
  • Chang, Hau-Wei (University of Oregon, 2013-10-03)
    Inferno, Volume I of Dante Alighieri's timeless magnum opus, The Divine Comedy, persists to modern times as a work of immense imagination and philosophical poignancy. Dante, as the Pilgrim, spins in verse a massive tale ...
  • Kane, Lynn Marie, 1977- (University of Oregon, 2006-06)
    The use of basso continuo in the performance of many late eighteenth- and early nineteenth-century genres is well documented, yet the influence of this practice on the Lieder during that time has never been fully explored. ...
  • Imhoff, James S. (University of Oregon, 1995)
    Recent developments in Cognitive Science have demonstrated that, contrary to traditional thinking, categories are not rigid, feature-defined phenomena. Rather , they are influenced by human experience and by the context ...
  • Pyle, Sarah (University of Oregon, 2015-01-14)
    Sixteenth- and seventeenth-century portraits from the Italian peninsula that depict women with keyboard instruments have been discussed as an apparent trend by feminist art historians and musicologists. While the connection ...
  • Pell, Hannah (University of Oregon, 2019-09-18)
    This thesis is an interdisciplinary study to compare the simultaneous “revolutions” in music theory and physics during the early decades of 20th-century Vienna. In my first case study, I situate music theorist Heinrich ...
  • Walls, Jacob (University of Oregon, 2014-09-29)
    The interpretation of analytical claims about music presents a dilemma between positivism and fictionalism: is it that the structures imputed by the analysis are part of the reality of "the music itself" or are the structures ...
  • Spencer, Helena (University of Oregon, 2014-06-17)
    Much scholarship on French grand opera has understandably focused on the monumentality of the genre--its sweeping historical panoramas, public spectacles, and large onstage chorus. This focus is reinforced, for example, ...
  • Hurley, Therese (University of Oregon, 2013-07-11)
    The purpose of this study is to examine the presentation of Joan of Arc's life in two lyric works, Jules Barbier and Charles Gounod's Jeanne d'Arc (1873) and Auguste Mermet's Jeanne d'Arc (1876), that premiered in Paris ...
  • Kernel 
    Walls, Jacob (University of Oregon, 2015-08-18)
    Kernel is a fifteen-minute work for wind ensemble. Its unifying strands of rhythm, melody, and harmony are spun out of simple four-note tone clusters which undergo changes in contour, intervallic inversion, register, ...
  • Hutchinson, Simon (University of Oregon, 2013-10-03)
    "A Lawn in the Sky" is a musical drama in two acts on a libretto by Katherine Hollander. The piece is based on the true story of Lieutenant Onoda Hiroo, a Japanese "straggler" who refused to believe that Japan had surrendered ...
  • Nason, Ryan (University of Oregon, 2018-09-06)
    Pit musicians have fallen through the cracks of musical theater scholarship. In all my research, I have yet to come across any sources that thoroughly examine musical theater from the perspective of the musicians who perform ...
  • Chen, Rongrong (University of Oregon, 2024-01-09)
    My thesis piece "Listening to the Arts" is a twenty-minute long composition for chamber orchestra that consists of four movements. Each movement is inspired by an artwork from a different artist, namely Antonio Canova's ...
  • Na, Joanne (University of Oregon, 2022-02-18)
    Madame Park is a tone poem for chamber orchestra. It is based on the Korean classical literature “박씨부인 (bak-ssi-bu-in).” The story is written by an anonymous person in the Joseon dynasty after the Qing invasion of Joseon ...

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