Dissertations / Theses on the topic 'Poulenc, Francis (1899-1963)'
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Dawson, Terence Evan. "Unifying devices in Poulenc : a study of the cycles Banalités and Tel jour telle nuit." Thesis, University of British Columbia, 1991. http://hdl.handle.net/2429/32136.
Full textArts, Faculty of
Music, School of
Graduate
Waleckx, Denis. "La musique dramatique de Francis Poulenc (les ballets et le théâtre lyrique)." Paris 4, 1996. http://www.theses.fr/1996PA040106.
Full textThis thesis, studying ballets and operas of Francis Poulenc, proves that the stage works constituted a very important part of Poulenc’s production. This thesis begins by studying ballets, first composed, and continues with opera's analysis
Nagai, Tamamo. "Études documentaires de Dialogues des Carmélites de Francis Poulenc : le parcours de la composition et de la réception." Thesis, Paris 4, 2015. http://www.theses.fr/2015PA040092.
Full textOur project intends to bring to light the documentary sources for Dialogues des Carmélites, Francis Poulenc’s second opera. The road to the « definitive » version of this work was so complicated that the composer’s documents left to analyse are numerous. Furthermore, Poulenc himself often reviewed the music, particularly for the January 1957 Milanese creation, as well as for the June 1957 Parisian creation. Indeed, Dialogues des Carmélites is a work whose « definitive versions » have often been rejected by their composer. Our analyses are organised around two main axes: one pertains the researches and analyses of the documentary sources, the other concerns the study of the music through the handwritten and printed scores. In the first chapter, we tackle the chronological documentary aspect of the topic, showing the interesting sources concerning the composer. The abundance of these sources and their peculiarities, with particular reference to the scores and the reworking lists, will allow us to define the compositional chronology of this opera. In the second chapter, we examine the composer’s musical notation and its progression in Dialogues des Carmélites. Finally, the last chapter focuse mainly on the reception of the audiences. Press reviews will illustrate the international and French reactions to the various creations of the opera, a work still widely praised all over the world
Cord, John T. "Francis Poulenc's Sonata for Horn, Trumpet and Trombone: A Structural Analysis Identifying Historical Significance, Form and Implications for Performance." Thesis, connect to online resource, 2009. http://digital.library.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metadc12104.
Full textBeard, Cynthia C. "Beyond the Human Voice: Francis Poulenc's Psychological Drama La Voix humaine (1958)." Thesis, University of North Texas, 2000. https://digital.library.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metadc2543/.
Full textKipling, Diane. "Harmonic organization in Les mamelles de Tirésias by Francis Poulene." Thesis, McGill University, 1995. http://digitool.Library.McGill.CA:80/R/?func=dbin-jump-full&object_id=23222.
Full textThe thesis consists of two volumes. Volume I contains the introduction, three chapters and the conclusion. Volume 2 contains musical examples, analytical graphs and reproductions of Act 1, Scenes 1 and 2, and Act 2, Scenes 7 and 8 from the piano-vocal score of Les mamelles de Tiresias.
The first chapter of Volume 1 reviews two Ph.D. dissertations that examine Poulenc's harmonic language; and summarizes the more recent analyses by Vivan Wood, Pamela Poulin and Keith Daniels. Figures (the musical examples) for Chapter 1 are given in Volume 2.
Chapter 2 of Volume 1 examines the large-scale harmonic organization in pivotal scenes that are representative of the musical language in the opera.
Chapter 3 of Volume I extends Warren Werner's and Richard Bobbitt's approach to show how local events and large-scale harmonic motions can be viewed as leitmotives that symbolize key events in the drama. Figures (the musical examples) and Graphs (the analytical graphs) for Chapter 3 are given in Volume 2.
The conclusion reviews there observations of the study and makes some general remarks about Poulenc's harmonic language. (Abstract shortened by UMI.)
Teal, Terri Denise. "Tempo Determination in the Choral Works of Francis Poulenc." Thesis, University of North Texas, 1989. https://digital.library.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metadc500725/.
Full textFerraty, Franck. "La musique pour piano de Françis Poulenc ou le temps de l'ambivalence." Toulouse 2, 1998. http://www.theses.fr/1998TOU20043.
Full textPoulenc's intermittent piano disconcerts with its bewildering eclecticism. Why such a fragmentation? Primeval traumas, cyclothymia, a disturbed libido, are the signs of an ambivalent personality. The resonant, divided subject tries to contain the scattered pieces of a threatened unity: between the articulation and disarticulation of tonal language, his psyche wavers. To test himself and to listen to himself, the musician adheres to the piano: with him, individual time and collective time cross hands on the fantasized keyboard of the body and of affectivity which are wandering from the whims of his imagination and his/story "in black and white". Times of overlapping, of dual behaviour, of suspended movement, Poulenc is their plaything and reflection: born in times of great change, the musician awakened to the fires of a creation eager for light, in a shady world thirsting for inhuman catastrophes. Haunted by the memory of the departed, he tried to escape his chronic anxieties by perpetuating a "timeless" art of correspondences. In the eternal renewal of an alienating story, the musician played in an anachronistic way with the metaphor of time lost and found: his piano expressively referred to a past which was quite surprised at modernity; from whims to stylistic "mistakes", the composer dealt in the rear-avant-garde. Originating from a conflictual primeval split, Poulenc's ambivalence temporarily found its resolution in the stabilizing expression of archaic musical courses. Because Poulenc unwillingly says he has "failed" in his piano production, it reveals like a negative the most hidden workings of his imagination. At the meeting-point of the sensitive and the intelligible, hand in hand, the ambivalent pairs identity/otherness, inferiority/exteriority, individuality/ supra-individuality, become equivocal on the imaginary stage of an interiorized choreographic time-in-between which is forever undone and always to be done again
Louženský, Petr. "Světská sborová tvorba a capella Francise Poulenca." Master's thesis, Akademie múzických umění v Praze.Hudební a taneční fakulta. Knihovna, 2013. http://www.nusl.cz/ntk/nusl-177880.
Full textCanivenq, Maryline. "Le Rossignol à larmes ou l'opéra pour femme seule : Erwartung d'Arnold Schoenberg, La Voix humaine de Françis Poulenc, Erzsebet de Charles Chaynes : contribution à l'étude du monodrame lyrique féminin." Toulouse 2, 1994. http://www.theses.fr/1994TOU20086.
Full textOeuvres originales dont le succes est incontestable. Opera for a single female voice in the history of music. This work was to remain unique -as well as its characteruntil 1958 when francis poulenc wrote the human voice. Then, in 1983, charles chaynes composed erzsebet. Even though the genre originated in this century. Only three lyrical monodramas have been created. Could this original setting of lyrical solitude appear as the reflection of an age or the creator's personal sense of distress and loss ? isn't this dramatic confinement of the heroin in a forest or in a room. The projection of a situation experienced by all on a stage which then becomes a place for speech, for analysis, for exorcism ? when we nalyse the woman's gratuitous words, we find she expresses certain permanent features which, first of all, allow us to extract specific literary themes : suffering, neurosis, psychosis, hysteria, schizophrenia, blood, the relationship between master and slave. Yet, this woman expresses herself through song : and we can then examine how the musical setting conveys this solitude and suffering. The absence of other characters imposes to the composers certain particular choices which give the monodrama its specificity : it is a place for experiment and freedom (atonal music without themes) and an opera of internal movement depends exclusively on the desperate sensitivity of a woman. To conclude, in spite of all the difficulties of the genre, which can be seen as a forerunner, this 'expressionist" opera is undoubtedly a
Ehman, Caroline. "From the banal to the surreal : Poulenc, Jacob, and Le Bal masqué." Thesis, McGill University, 2005. http://digitool.Library.McGill.CA:80/R/?func=dbin-jump-full&object_id=83180.
Full textThis thesis seeks to shed light on Poulenc's largely neglected artistic interaction with Jacob by exploring musical counterparts to the poet's unique surrealist aesthetic in Le Bal masque. Chapter one examines Poulenc's artistic milieu surrounding the composition and first performance of Le Bal masque, and reviews previous literature on Poulenc's involvement with avant-garde art and literature. Chapter two focuses on Jacob himself and discusses key aspects of his subversive poetic aesthetic. Chapter three outlines the fundamental characteristics of surrealist art in general and reviews previous discussions of music and surrealism. The final chapter explores surrealist influences in Le Bal masque while concentrating on musical parallels to central features of Jacob's poetry and surrealist art in general described in the preceding chapters.
Arbey, Dominique. "Francis Poulenc et la musique populaire." Thesis, Paris 4, 2011. http://www.theses.fr/2011PA040066.
Full textThe composer Francis Poulenc (1899-1963) was particularly influenced by the popular music of his time. In order to study this very specific aspect of his works, our research will take into account the musical production of the composer, his personal testimonies (such as correspondence, radio programs and various pieces of writing) and all documents related to the creation and reception of his works.When composing Bal Masqué (The Masked Ball) the composer’s aim was not to copy popular music but just to make use of some of its characteristics. Just like a painter he created what he would call ‘portraits de music-hall’ (‘Music-hall portraits’). For this impregnation to be fully appreciated, our analyses will tackle different musical parameters such as melody, rhythm, harmony, structures, orchestration and vocal effects. The purpose of our research involving socio-cultural perspectives, the analysis of those technical aspects cannot be dissociated from the historical context relative to the composer and, to a wider extent, to the ‘Groupe des Six’
Kwag, Munjung. "A Performance Guide on Selected Sonatas for Flute and Piano by:Darius Milhaud (1892-1974), Louis Durey (1888-1979), Francis Poulenc (1899-1963)." University of Cincinnati / OhioLINK, 2021. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=ucin1627665101419925.
Full textCollin, Florence. "Le parallélisme de la musique et des arts plastiques dans les écrits de Francis Poulenc : une approche originale de la conception et de la perception musicale." Paris 4, 2006. http://www.theses.fr/2006PA040141.
Full textAs composer, interpreter, musical critic and listener, Francis Poulenc (1899-1963) produced lots of writings, interviews and broadcastings, in which he evoqued many parallels between music and fine arts. The first part of this work studies connects between composers' works and fine arts works Poulenc has mentionned. The same study, with his own compositions, constitutes the second part. In the third part, we study pictural works from artists inspired by the composer. After these connects, we tempted to find why the parallels evoqued by Poulenc allow to show his esthetics cares about conception and perception of musical works
Kozáková, Adéla. "Flétnová tvorba členů skupiny Les six." Master's thesis, Akademie múzických umění v Praze.Hudební a taneční fakulta. Knihovna, 2015. http://www.nusl.cz/ntk/nusl-202911.
Full textDumery, Aline. "Les mises en musique du Bestiaire ou Cortège d'Orphée (1911) d'Apollinaire par Francis Poulenc, Louis Durey et d'autres compositeurs : Analyse et étude stylistique." Thesis, Tours, 2014. http://www.theses.fr/2014TOUR2029.
Full textThe poem collection Le Bestiaire or Cortège d’Orphée (1911) by Apollinaire still attracts vocal composers of our time. Drawing on ancestral traditions, the setting to music of short poems about animals guided by Orpheus constitutes an inestimable “zoo” for musicians. Did Apollinaire imagine an exploration of this type? Are these musical creations, from Le Bestiaire onward, posthumously, homages to Apollinaire? From the most famous of animal cycles by Poulenc and Durey (1919), to that of Régis Campo (2008), as well as the collections of Claude Ballif and Robert Caby (1945) , each version gives rise to a specific reingagement with the poems. In this diachronic study from 1919 to 2008, the compositions in question are analyzed in their context and examined through the plurality of musical languages that they employ. In addition to Poulenc and Durey, here, in chronological order, are the other composers discussed: Yves Nat (Dans vos viviers, dans vos étangs, 1943); Claude Ballif (Le Cortège d’Orphée, op. 1b, 1945-1948); Robert Caby (Cycle of seven songs, 1945-1948); Robert Cornman (Le Bestiaire Alpha, 1961-1963, Le Bestiaire Bêta, 1972); Jean Absil (Bestiaire, op. 58, 1964); Lionel Daunais (Le Bestiaire, 1978); more recent, May Breguet (Bestiaire, 1982); Alain Corbellari (Bestiaire bis, 1991); Rachel Laurin (Bestiaire, op. 22, 1992); and, finally, John Carbon (Bestiaire, 2002) and Régis Campo (Le Bestiaire, 2008)
Clifton, Kevin Mark. "Poulenc's ambivalence a study in tonality, musical style, and sexuality /." Thesis, 2002. http://wwwlib.umi.com/cr/utexas/fullcit?p3099436.
Full textLAI, JHENG-HAO, and 賴政豪. "The Analysis and Interpretation of 【Trois Pièces pour Piano】by Francis Poulenc (1899-1963)." Thesis, 2016. http://ndltd.ncl.edu.tw/handle/64361081425715889355.
Full text東吳大學
音樂學系
104
The purpose of this thesis is to analyze the work of Trois Pièces pour Piano by Francis Poulenc (1899-1963), as well as to look into the relationship between Poulenc and Neo-classism, thus to perform as according to the understanding of this analyses. This thesis has divided into five different chapter. First chapter is regarding the methodology which use on the research. The second chapter is synthesis of Poulenc personal biography and style of music. Chapter three is the relationship between Trois Pastorales Pour Piano and Trois Pièces. Chapter four uses intensity graph to show the changes of dynamic, texture and tension as well to provide solution to technical and musical difficulties that might face in the performance. In the conclusions discussion on two performance practice of by pianists Eric Parkin and Pascl Roge. The work of Trois Pièces pour Piano by Poulenc is completed during 1928. Music which composed during that era has greatly influenced by Stravinsky. Therefore, there are trace of using Neo-classism composition technique, as well as the French melody and Poulenc's style of harmony. There are more studies on the major work of Poulenc's work, hence in the future, hopefully there will be more Analytical study with Poulenc's small piano work.