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Brad Osborn deposited The Bloomsbury Handbook of Popular Music Video Analysis. Edited by Lori A. Burns and Stan Hawkins. New York: Bloomsbury, 2019. 464 pp. ISBN 9781501342332. in the group
Society for Music Theory (SMT) on Humanities Commons 4 years, 7 months agoReview of The Bloomsbury Handbook of Popular Music Video Analysis.
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Brad Osborn deposited Resistance Gazes in Recent Music Videos in the group
Society for Music Theory – Popular Music Interest Group (SMT PMIG) on Humanities Commons 4 years, 8 months agoA number of recent music videos by women subvert the male gaze (Mulvey) through a number of techniques I construe as “resistance gazes.” These videos subvert the hypersexualization, infantilization, objectification, and victimi- zation regularly seen in music videos using imagery that resonates with broader cultural movements such as #metoo and #timesup.
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Brad Osborn deposited Resistance Gazes in Recent Music Videos in the group
Society for Music Theory (SMT) on Humanities Commons 4 years, 8 months agoA number of recent music videos by women subvert the male gaze (Mulvey) through a number of techniques I construe as “resistance gazes.” These videos subvert the hypersexualization, infantilization, objectification, and victimi- zation regularly seen in music videos using imagery that resonates with broader cultural movements such as #metoo and #timesup.
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Christine Boone started the topic CFP: Midwest Pop Culture/American Culture Association Conference in the discussion
Society for Music Theory – Popular Music Interest Group on Humanities Commons 4 years, 9 months agoCFP – attached Word document
Submissions will be accepted until April 30th, and people will be notified of their acceptance/rejection within one week of submitting. Those interested can visit https://mpcaaca.org/ for more information or contact Bryan Bove at bbove@bgsu.edu with any questions.
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Roger Press started the topic Spotify new genre and decade-based mixes. MusicID insights gives you the data in the discussion
Society for Music Theory – Popular Music Interest Group on Humanities Commons 4 years, 9 months agoWell, it is expected that Spotify will launch new types of mixes from time to time. They through their algorithms at the music and see what happens. As a scholar, with MusicID you can see the stream counts. You can work out whether they’re selecting the right music, in your opinion. Read more at Music Ally…[Read more]
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Channan Willner replied to the topic New two-part Mozart study on my website in the discussion
Society for Music Theory on Humanities Commons 4 years, 9 months agoApologies for posting several times. There was no confirmation when I clicked “Submit,” so I clicked again….
Sigh,
Channan
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Channan Willner started the topic New two-part Mozart study on my website in the discussion
Society for Music Theory on Humanities Commons 4 years, 9 months agoDear colleagues,
I should like to alert you to the publication of a new two-part study on my website, entitled “Mozart’s Delayed Dominants” athttp://www.channanwillner.<wbr />com/online.htm. Part I demonstrates that in Mozart’s (and in other late 18th-century) sonata form, the arrival of the structural dominant is often delayed almost to the e…[Read more]
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Channan Willner started the topic New two-part Mozart study on my website in the discussion
Society for Music Theory on Humanities Commons 4 years, 9 months agoDear colleagues,
I should like to alert you to the publication of a new two-part study on my website, entitled “Mozart’s Delayed Dominants” athttp://www.channanwillner.<wbr />com/online.htm. Part I demonstrates that in Mozart’s (and in other late 18th-century) sonata form, the arrival of the structural dominant is often delayed almost to the e…[Read more]
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Channan Willner started the topic New two-part Mozart study on my website in the discussion
Society for Music Theory on Humanities Commons 4 years, 9 months agoDear colleagues,
I should like to alert you to the publication of a new two-part study on my website, entitled “Mozart’s Delayed Dominants” athttp://www.channanwillner.<wbr />com/online.htm. Part I demonstrates that in Mozart’s (and in other late 18th-century) sonata form, the arrival of the structural dominant is often delayed almost to the e…[Read more]
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Channan Willner started the topic New two-part Mozart study on my website in the discussion
Society for Music Theory on Humanities Commons 4 years, 9 months agoDear colleagues,
I should like to alert you to the publication of a new two-part study on my website, entitled “Mozart’s Delayed Dominants” athttp://www.channanwillner.<wbr />com/online.htm. Part I demonstrates that in Mozart’s (and in other late 18th-century) sonata form, the arrival of the structural dominant is often delayed almost to the e…[Read more]
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Channan Willner started the topic New two-part Mozart study on my website in the discussion
Society for Music Theory on Humanities Commons 4 years, 9 months agoDear colleagues,
I should like to alert you to the publication of a new two-part study on my website, entitled “Mozart’s Delayed Dominants” athttp://www.channanwillner.<wbr />com/online.htm. Part I demonstrates that in Mozart’s (and in other late 18th-century) sonata form, the arrival of the structural dominant is often delayed almost to the e…[Read more]
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Alyssa Barna started the topic PMIG Examples Database in the discussion
Society for Music Theory – Popular Music Interest Group on Humanities Commons 4 years, 10 months agoHi Everyone,
We had a bit of an issue with the new database defaulting to an Excel file rather than a Google Sheet. I’ve converted the database and you should be able to freely edit and add new examples! I will delete the old thread to avoid confusion, but include Christine’s original message…[Read more]
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Brian Robison started the topic Lavengood's "novelty layer" in experimental pop/rock? in the discussion
Society for Music Theory – Popular Music Interest Group on Humanities Commons 4 years, 11 months agoHi!
I’m currently applying Megan Lavengood’s concept of the “novelty layer” in pop texture (see her 2020 MTO article) to King Crimson’s 1973 album Larks’ Tongues in Aspic.
Is anyone else out there doing work along these lines with selections from progressive rock? art rock? experimental pop? etc.?
Many thanks,
Brian
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Brian Robison replied to the topic Contour Segments in Pop? in the discussion
Society for Music Theory – Popular Music Interest Group on Humanities Commons 4 years, 11 months agoI take it you’re looking for examples less than a decade old?
Both SZA’s “Broken clocks” (2017) and Azealia Banks’s “Anna Wintour” (2018) include melodic sequences that are constructed from pentatonic scales … so, the generic melodic intervals don’t necessarily match, but the csegs do.
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Claire Arthur replied to the topic IT'S TIME TO VOTE!!! in the discussion
Society for Music Theory – Popular Music Interest Group on Humanities Commons 4 years, 11 months agoHi Christine, I just thought I’d mention that it’s not obvious which “way” the numbers are supposed to be ranked. I assumed #1 was top priority and #4 was lowest but someone else may have interpreted this differently! You may wish to reply here to clarify or include that note in the instructions themselves.
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Christine Boone started the topic IT'S TIME TO VOTE!!! in the discussion
Society for Music Theory – Popular Music Interest Group on Humanities Commons 4 years, 11 months agoPlease share this with your PMIG friends who might not follow our Humanities Commons site!
We’re deciding on a topic/format for next fall’s SMT meeting, and we don’t yet know whether it will be in person or virtual. Please click on this link and let us know your preferences! (And please, only vote once.)
I will close the survey at 5:00 pm (EST)…[Read more]
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Christine Boone started the topic SOLICITING YOUR IDEAS! in the discussion
Society for Music Theory – Popular Music Interest Group on Humanities Commons 5 years agoHi everyone! Your attendance and participation at our virtual session at SMT in November was much appreciated – I was overwhelmed with how smoothly everything went, with the superb presenters, and with the rich discussion.
So…IT’S TIME TO START BRAINSTORMING FOR NEXT YEAR!
Send me your ideas for a discussion/analysis panel! You can respond to…[Read more]
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Marcello Messina deposited Cartridge Music in the Quarantine: Presence, Absence, Contingency Setups and (De-)territorialised Performances in the group
Society for Music Theory – Popular Music Interest Group (SMT PMIG) on Humanities Commons 5 years agoBetween the end of May and the beginning of June, 2020, we performed individually, filmed, synced together, edited and presented a quarantine version of John Cage’s Cartridge Music. Uploaded on YouTube, the performance was broadcast on 1 June, as part of the 4th Research Colloquium of the Postgraduate Programme in Music of the Federal University o…[Read more]
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Marcello Messina deposited Editorial: Ubiquitous Music Making in COVID-19 Times in the group
Society for Music Theory – Popular Music Interest Group (SMT PMIG) on Humanities Commons 5 years agoPicture a world with no mobility. Planes are landed. Urban transportation stopped. Large gatherings are non-existent and everybody is at home. That’s 2020, today. Most countries have reduced social interactions to a minimum. Food markets, drugstores and gas stations remain open. But shopping malls, cinemas, coffee shops and pubs have closed t…[Read more]
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Jeremy Coleman deposited ‘In ein fernes Land’: The Politics of Translation in Wagner’s Arrangement of Gluck’s Iphigénie en Aulide in the group
Society for Music Theory (SMT) on Humanities Commons 5 years agoArticle on Wagner’s 1847 arrangement of Gluck’s _Iphigénie en Aulide_; adapted from, and may be read in conjunction with, Chapter 3 of Jeremy Coleman, _Richard Wagner in Paris: Translation, Identity, Modernity_ (The Boydell Press, 2019).
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