Melbourne Conservatorium of Music - Theses

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    Rubato in Scriabin’s 24 Preludes Op. 11: The Score and Piano Roll Recordings
    Xi, Joy Huan ( 2022)
    The Twenty-Four Preludes Op. 11 of Alexander Scriabin, written over a period of eight years between 1888 and 1896, are a quintessential representation of the composer’s first period of composition. This collection of pieces presents to modern day pianists the challenge of conceiving an interpretation representative of the freer performing culture of Scriabin’s time. In performing the Twenty-Four Preludes Op. 11, performers of the work should give recognition to the score as a communicator of the composer’s rubato style. Within the current literature, studies have thoroughly documented Scriabin’s performing style, focusing particularly on his unique approach to rubato through the analysis of his recordings; however, research has largely ignored the role of the composer’s score markings and indications as directions for rubato. This study aims to explore Scriabin’s use of score directions to convey rubato through a concurrent investigation of his recordings of Preludes Nos. 1, 2, 13 and 14 and the written music. Findings evidence a correlation between Scriabin’s performance of rubato and the different markings and indications in the score, which, aside from his tempo directions, are not necessarily associated with tempo modification. The results of this study provide a framework that performers may use to inform their interpretation of the Twenty-Four Preludes Op. 11, as well as other Scriabin works. This thesis serves as part of a component worth 25% in compliment to larger performance exam worth 75%.
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    Folio of Compositions
    Barry, Danielle Elizabeth ( 2022)
    Drawing inspiration from the constant, internal movement of the human body, to the hum of cityscapes and stillness of the natural world, this portfolio seeks to provide the listener with a range of unique experiences which encourage them to hear everyday sounds in new ways. The resulting portfolio encompasses works for orchestra, chamber ensemble, and electronics. It takes inspiration from the author's experience as a medical doctor, with stethoscope recordings providing a window into the human body, while binaural recordings of the lived environment provide an immersive and meditative listening experience. It seeks to build upon the foundations set by the pioneers of Musique concrete and challenge conventional notions of music and sound.
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    The 24 Monographs of Frederick Septimus Kelly
    Hazelbank, Alexander Carl ( 2022)
    This thesis presents an analysis of Frederick Septimus Kelly’s 24 Monographs for piano in light of the composer’s private writings. Through a comparative analysis between the Monographs and other piano works, connections are drawn between Kelly and the composers who impacted him. These connections are illuminated by Kelly’s diaries, which are held at the National Library of Australia. In the past, these have revealed much about the composer’s life for biographers, but this analysis has sought from them a better understanding of Kelly’s music. Among its findings are clues to the meaning of the title ‘Monograph’, a regimented harmonic ordering of the 24 pieces and a strong connection to the piano writing of Johannes Brahms.
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    An Analysis of Gideon Klein’s Music: Renewing Perspectives on a ‘Holocaust Composer’
    Healey, Joshua David ( 2022)
    Gideon Klein (1919-1945) was a Czech-Jewish pianist and composer born in Prerov. He later moved to Prague to pursue his high school and tertiary musical education until the invasion and annexation of Czechoslovakia, and establishment of the Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia by Nazi Germany. His education was halted, mere months into his tertiary studies, and his performance career was curtailed to private performances, until he was deported to Theresienstadt on 4 December 1941, where he was interned and later moved to Furstengrube and murdered in late-January 1945. Musicologists and students have tended to focus on the final period of Klein’s life, often dismissing the works prior to his internment. Investigations often analyse specific works, interrogating them in isolation. My research takes a broader stance on Klein and his works, investigating his entire corpus demonstrating that his compositional development was continuous throughout his life. Klein’s identity has been reconstructed by scholars within a ‘resistance’ narrative. I seek to renew perspectives on Klein by offering new interpretations of compositional choices. I reveal previously overlooked continuities across Klein’s oeuvre and present him as a composer consistently interested in pursuing modernist techniques across his tragically short life.
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    Staying in tune: Exploring the perspectives of support workers in a long-term, community-based music therapy group
    Cameron, Helen Jean ( 2022)
    Music therapists are often assisted by support workers in their work with people with disabilities to enable access and participation during sessions. Support workers provide vital services to people with disabilities over a wide range of personal care tasks, including facilitating access to activities such as music therapy in the community. How music therapists interact and collaborate with this vital workforce, is key to the optimal provision of music therapy services. Music therapists have long been assisted by other workers in a variety of contexts and the literature has often reflected music therapists’ perspectives of working with assistants. However, scant attention has been given to the perspectives of the support worker in music therapy. Additionally, there is little literature addressing the community-based context. This master’s research project stems from my private practice group work for people with intellectual disabilities, which operates in a community venue. Support workers have assisted since its inception in 1998 and have always been engaged externally from the program, funded by the group member with disability. With the full rollout of the National Disability Insurance Scheme in 2016 in Australia, access to and funding for support workers has increased and they have an important role in providing community access and participation. However, this burgeoning workforce has no set standards of training and experience, thus it is important to explore how best to collaborate with support workers who are variously trained and resourced. This research project aimed to explore the lived experiences of six support workers who provided assistance to group members with disability at a long-term music therapy group. Employing Interpretative Phenomenological Analysis methods, rich data from semi-structured interviews revealed key aspects of this experience: that Support workers value information and guidance; that there is a reciprocal impact of the music therapy session on the support worker and of the support worker on the music therapy session; support workers can experience a sense of belonging and an inclusive culture; and support workers have and develop a range of skills sets as a result of long term involvement in group music therapy in the community. The findings provided a rich picture of the support worker's role in a community-based music therapy context. As support workers felt a sense of belonging and inclusion in the group, this expands the notion of inclusion in this music therapy group developed exclusively for people with disability in the community. Collaboration with and support through information and guidance to the support worker, drawing on their knowledge, skills, and abilities may provide a sense of inclusion and community within the session. This may create an optimal experience of staying in tune for all the group members at music therapy.
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    Story and Sound: Developing a narrative-led approach within Large Ensemble Jazz Composition
    Smith, Madison James ( 2022)
    Music and storytelling have always held a significant relationship with each other. From antiquity to the 21st century, composers have employed the two mediums to produce context and meaning, and to express social and cultural identities within their work. One such composer was Richard Wagner, whose narrative-led compositional approach – and especially his use of leitmotif – left a lasting effect on not only 20th and 21st century classical music, but on music within other mediums (film, television, and video games). My research aims to further explore the relationship between music and storytelling, with a focus on its application in jazz composition. By unpacking thematic compositional devices employed by composers from different mediums, I have developed techniques and concepts to adapt and employ such devices in a contemporary large ensemble jazz context. Notably, I place a special focus on the concept of leitmotif and the various ways it can be employed in different contexts. Additionally, to assist in investigating more abstract meaning-making compositional techniques, I utilise an analytical framework derived from the conceptual metaphor theory of philosopher Mark Johnson, and the ecological approach to the perception of musical meaning by musicologist Eric Clarke. The techniques and insights derived from this practical and theoretical research are demonstrated in the composition of a new work using Dan Simmons’ 1989 novel Hyperion as the literary source material, in which the novel’s narrative will be “retold” in a multi movement suite for large jazz ensemble.
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    The development of a performance companion to the Third Clarinet Concerto of Carl Stamitz played on five- and six-key period clarinets: an analysis of technical capability and performance style through practice-led research
    Rosenfeld, Jeffrey Victor ( 2022)
    This study explores the process of learning to play five- and six-key Classical clarinets from the perspective of a modern clarinettist. Utilising practice-led research methodology, this project consists of an exegesis and a full-length recital informed by this research. The recital featured a range of clarinet compositions of the Classical period including; Johann Stamitz (1717–1757) Clarinet Concerto (circa 1754–1755), Carl Stamitz (1745–1801) Third Clarinet Concerto (1785), Jean-Xavier Lefevre (1763–1829) Grand Sonata no.2 (c.1804–1805) and Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (1756–1791) ‘Kegelstatt’ Trio for viola, clarinet and piano, KV 498 (1786). The recital was performed on the Classical ‘period’ clarinet with fortepiano and ‘period’ viola. This research project was underpinned by an exploration of the evolution of the clarinet during the eighteenth century and the impact of clarinettists, composers and instrument makers on clarinet development and capability. The performance-led research comprises: 1. an exploration of the technical aspects of playing the five-and six-key Classical clarinets including the development of a new fingering chart; 2. an exploration of eighteenth-century performance style; and 3. the development of a performance guide to the Third Clarinet Concerto of Carl Stamitz. Through this research, I have discovered that learning to play the Classical period clarinet has many unique challenges which takes at least twelve months to appreciate and address. These include: the technical aspects of setting up the instrument to its optimal playing condition; mastering the fingering system, mouthpiece and reed setup which are quite different from a modern clarinet; producing a beautiful tone across the full range of the instrument; appreciating subtle variations in intonation, dynamics, articulation and timbre of this instrument; and finally, appreciating the many nuances of playing in the Classical period style with other classical period instruments.
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    Handel’s Penultimate Oratorio Theodora: A Performance History
    Cozzolino, Alexander ( 2022)
    The performance histories of Handel’s oratorios have received little attention from musicologists, yet they provide important cultural and musical insights. Composed in 1749, Theodora is Handel’s penultimate oratorio. From Handel’s death in 1759 to the first commercial recording in 1968, the work was performed on at least fifty separate occasions. This research examines the reception of these performances using predominantly press reports. A focus of the thesis is the trend to stage oratorio that emerged in the 1920s and continues into the twenty-first century. A staging of Theodora in Chicago in 1935, and sets of performances in London in 1952, 1958 and 1966 are used as case studies. In addition, the research also considers early twentieth-century recordings of the aria ‘Angels, ever bright and fair’ which between 1903 and 1932 was recorded on at least twenty-nine occasions. This aria is used as an example to illustrate changes in performance practice and taste over an extended period. By examining both written and aural sources, the research provides insights into the changes in baroque interpretive practices between the eighteenth and twentieth centuries.
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    A Proposed Framework for Collaboratively Producing a Soundtrack in Dramatic Community Theatre
    Hornett-Devers, Saxon ( 2022)
    Composing music for theatre presents inherent challenges that are often difficult to navigate for composers new to theatre composition. Through Practice-led research, derived from my experience of composing six soundtracks for a northwest-based Tasmanian community theatre company, a three-stage framework is proposed to facilitate producing soundtracks for dramatic community theatre. Based upon two principles - the Director’s vision and musical enhancement of the score - the framework proposes proceeding via collaboratively establishing a creative brief, conceptualising primary musical ideas, and then realising the soundtrack through a collaborative process with primary and secondary stakeholders. The framework also features experience-based strategies to maximise effectiveness. Developing and articulating the framework enabled me clarification to accelerate, maximise and develop my artistic capabilities and output. Furthermore, its development contributes to the literature, as a primary first-person source on how community theatrical soundtracks can be produced. It has the potential to be a useful starting point for composers new to writing for community theatre. The supporting folio of work also adds new music that can be reflected and evaluated regarding the time-period and demonstrates how an effective framework spotlights the composer.
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    Seeing Double: Towards a Motor Grammar for Two-Line Improvisation on the Bass Guitar
    Connolly, Sean William ( 2022)
    A two-line improvisation is a form of polyphonic playing in which a single performer improvises two melodies simultaneously. Whilst this form of improvising is common practice on some instruments (namely piano and guitar), it has received little attention from bassists. Accordingly, this research aims to present a foundational motor grammar for two-line improvisation on the bass guitar. This is to be achieved by reframing the left-hand technique used on the bass guitar and adapting Sid Jacobs’ Counterpoint Concepts as a cross-instrumental framework for practice. Secondly, the research draws on similar studies for other instruments to develop an inverse variation model for the application of these techniques and concepts. This approach allows the practitioner to move progressively from predetermined (composed) etudes towards improvisation. The techniques, concepts, and etudes developed in this research are presented through a series of scores, analyses, and video recordings in the accompanying portfolio.