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Author/artistAlessandro Cervino, Maria Lettberg, Tânia Lisboa and Catherine Laws (eds.)
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Publication year2011
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Date03 Oct 2011
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Publishing houseLeuven University Press
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SeriesORCiM Series
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SubtypeBook
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ISSN9789058678485
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DOI
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Price€ 25,00
The process of practising is intrinsic to musical creativity. Practising may primarily be thought of as technical, but it is often also musically meaningful, including elements of interpretation, improvisation, and/or composition. The practice room can be a space in which to explore a field of creative possibilities; a place to experiment and to refine ideas.
To date, the literature on practice has been primarily pedagogical and psychological. Little attention is paid to the significance of practice, and especially to the role of embodied experience - of understanding gained through doing - in the forming of musical ideas. The Practice of Practising is primarily concerned with considering practising as a practice in itself: a collection of processes that determines musical creativity and significance. The volume comprises four diverse case studies, in relation to music by J. S. Bach, Elliott Carter, Alfred Schnittke, and Morton Feldman, presenting both solo and ensemble perspectives.
ORCiM Series
This series of four books explicitly "zooms in" on studies that take artistic practice as their point of departure and deals with questions and challenges that arise from that practice. With this publication series, the Orpheus Institute helped develop a discipline-specific discourse in the field of artistic research in music, which at the same time acted as a springboard for future research in this young but fascinating area.