Melbourne Conservatorium of Music - Theses

Permanent URI for this collection

Search Results

Now showing 1 - 5 of 5
  • Item
    Thumbnail Image
    The pursuit of originality: aspects of unity and individuality through compositional synthesis
    Alvaro, Lorenzo ( 2018)
    This thesis forms case studies using compositions by its author Lorenzo Alvaro as a catalyst for understanding how originality is manifested in the consistent re-enactment of borrowing and self-borrowing. Understanding how compositions ‘come together’ through ‘Synthesis’ oppose long-debated theories of originality being an innate power giving rise to the notion of ‘genius’. More recent scholarship acknowledge borrowing and collaboration as a means for originality, and based on this, the thesis argues that true originality is nothing more than an ideal.
  • Item
    Thumbnail Image
    Folio of compositions
    Riley, Daniel ( 2018)
    Folio of 6 compositions including orchestral, choral and chamber music. The works traverse a stylistic spectrum, moving freely between the simple and the complex, synthesising liturgical choral traditions with instrumental modernism, resulting in a unique approach to harmonic and rhythmic materials.
  • Item
    Thumbnail Image
    Folio of compositions
    Bragg, Jake ( 2018)
    The works within this portfolio represent the culmination of my Master of Music candidature at the University of Melbourne. Commencing in February 2016, my two years of study have allowed for a meticulous examination of my compositional practice, resulting in a widening of how I approach writing and a greater focus upon my chosen musical language.
  • Item
    Thumbnail Image
    The remains of decay: composing auditory afterimages
    Chisholm, David ( 2018)
    This autoethnographic critical exploration reflects on an accompanying folio of music compositions created between early 2013 and late 2016: Suite from The Bloody Chamber for three harps, Rung for electric guitar, contrabass recorder, violin, double bass and sensor-triggered bells, extracts from The Experiment: a musical monodrama; bound south for string quartet and Harp Guitar Double Concerto for two soloists and chamber orchestra. A post-structuralist reading reveals an emergent philosophical and practice preoccupation with the sonic phenomenon of the auditory afterimage.
  • Item
    Thumbnail Image
    Repurposing material and idiom in new music
    Keeffe, David ( 2018)
    A folio of nine works is presented, which explore three significant aspects of the composer’s art. Firstly, “musical language” itself is used as an expressive device, and resulting expectations and associations are intended to stimulate the listener. Secondly, recognition of the significant cultural lineage of western music has encouraged the reuse and repurposing of established and even traditional elements beyond their usual contexts. Finally, the works explore the effectiveness of “musification” where non-musical cues, such as dramatic narrative and visual metaphors, are represented in musical terms. The works are mostly for larger ensembles, such as orchestra or wind ensemble, but the central work of the folio is a song cycle setting poems by the Melbourne-born poet and writer Walter J Turner.