Literatura científica selecionada sobre o tema "Violinists, violin cellists"

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Artigos de revistas sobre o assunto "Violinists, violin cellists"

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Geringer, John M., e Michael L. Allen. "An Analysis of Vibrato among High School and University Violin and Cello Students". Journal of Research in Music Education 52, n.º 2 (julho de 2004): 167–78. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/3345438.

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We investigated vibrato performance of university student and high school string players. Forty violinists and cellists performed an eight-measure passage both with and without vibrato. Analyses indicated that the mean rate of vibrato was approximately 5.5 Hz, with no significant differences between instruments or performer experience level. The mean width of violin vibratos was larger than cello vibratos. Violinists' mean pitch levels were sharper than cellists' in both vibrato and nonvibrato performances. Analysis of intonation patterns within the duration of tones showed that performers were more stable when using vibrato. University players tended to become sharper during both vibrated and nonvibrated tones compared to the younger players. Pitch oscillations during vibrato were alternations both above and below conceived pitch, rather than oscillations only above or only below the conceived pitch.
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Baldwin, Olive, e Thelma Wilson. "Getting and spending in London and Yorkshire: a young musician’s account book for 1799–1800". Royal Musical Association Research Chronicle 51 (janeiro de 2020): 137–48. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/rrc.2019.2.

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AbstractIn March 1799 John White was 20 years old and already an experienced professional violinist and cellist. He kept a detailed account book between March 1799 and March 1800 that provides much information about the economic and professional life of a young musician at the very end of the eighteenth century. White had showed early musical promise, and when he was 15 he attracted the patronage of the future Lord Harewood, who enabled him to take lessons from leading musical figures and appointed him as his director of music. White lived at Harewood House, near Leeds, but he spent some months of the London season each year with the Harewood family in their house in Hanover Square. The accounts show how White earned money in London by playing at private and public concerts and deputising at almost every place of musical entertainment in the capital. In Yorkshire he led orchestras in concerts and oratorio performances, took on pupils and visited Scarborough. White’s meticulous lists of his income and expenditure, from an expensive violin, a harp and harp lessons to silk stockings, waistcoats and hair ribbon, paint a fascinating picture of a young man making his way in the musical profession.
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"Imre Waldbauer, an Important but Little-Known Violinist Partner of Béla Bartók". Studia Musicologica 62, n.º 1-2 (20 de dezembro de 2021): 149–73. http://dx.doi.org/10.1556/6.2021.00010.

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Abstract Imre Waldbauer (1892–1952) attained his greatest stature as a performer in his position as the first violinist of the Waldbauer–Kerpely Quartet, named after him and cellist Jenő Kerpely. This ensemble premièred Bartók's String Quartets nos. 1, 2 and 4 and his early Piano Quintet. Although Waldbauer's name is mostly mentioned in the Bartók-literature primarily because of his quartet, he was also important for Bartók as a “standalone” violinist as well. Waldbauer and Bartók played numerous sonata recitals from the 1910s to the 1930s, and Waldbauer also played the first performance of important violin works by Bartók: the “One Ideal” from the Two Portraits, (première: Budapest, 12 February 1911), the Violin Sonata no. 2 (première: Berlin, 7 February 1923) and nos. 16, 19, 21, 28, 36, 42, 43, 44 from the Forty-Four Duos (concert hall première: Budapest, 20 January 1932). Although Waldbauer seems like an individual of special importance, very little is known about his relation to Bartók and about his life in general (unlike his violinist contemporaries, e.g. Joseph Szigeti or Zoltán Székely). The present paper focuses on the relationship between the composer and the violinist, using materials from the yet unexplored Waldbauer legacy held in the Budapest Bartók Archives (recent donation from the Waldbauer family).
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Livros sobre o assunto "Violinists, violin cellists"

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Leo, Rostal, Schenk Dietmar e Kalcher Antje, eds. Violin, Schlüssel, Erlebnisse: Erinnerungen. Berlin: Ries & Erler, 2007.

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Capítulos de livros sobre o assunto "Violinists, violin cellists"

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Beamnt, Jams. "The Bridge, Soundpost, and Tailpiece". In The Violin Explained, 33–50. Oxford University PressOxford, 1997. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198166238.003.0003.

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Abstract The bridge transfers the vibration of the string to the body and plays a much larger part in determining tone than is often recognized. We saw in the previous chapter that it is also involved with pitch. A well cut, perfectly fitting bridge of the right weight is essential. Would that every player appreciated that a good professionally cut bridge is also precious. The bridge has one foot near the point where the front is supported internally by the sound post; the other foot is over the bass bar, a beam along the inside (Fig. S. l ). In the playing position the violinist and violist see the sound post side on their right; the cellist and bassist see it on their left. In the figures the bass bar is marked Bb and the sound post Sp.
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