scholarly journals The Idea of an ‘Icon in Sound’ in the Works of John Tavener

2021 ◽  
Vol 57 (1) ◽  
pp. 217-231
Author(s):  
Joanna Miklaszewska

Abstract                            The aim of this article is to present an innovative concept of the ‘icon in sound’ created by the English composer John Tavener. The first part of the article presents the intermedial and intertextual features of Tavener's work, the second shows the genesis of the concept of ‘icon in sound’, to which three factors have contributed: 1) the composer’s interest in religious topics in his pieces, 2) the composer’s conversion to Orthodoxy, 3) collaboration with Mother Tekla, the author of the texts of many Tavener’s works.                               The last, third part of the article describes issues related to the formal structure and musical symbolism present in Tavener’s musical icons. The composer refers to painted icons by composing works characterised by static form and the expression of spirituality, mysticism and inner peace. These features result from the juxtaposing of melismatic structures, inspired by Byzantine music, with repetitive technique and dynamics often characterised by a low intensity. One characteristic of Tavener’s sound icons is a ‘luminous’ sound, achieved through the use of high registers of voices and instruments, which are combined with contemplative and lyrical expression. An important feature of John Tavener’s musical icons was the introduction of archaic elements, resulting primarily from the inspiration that the composer drew from the musical culture of the Orthodox Church (eg the use of Byzantine scales in Mary of Egypt, the introduction of instruments such as simantron in Mary of Egypt).  

2016 ◽  
Vol 847 ◽  
pp. 492-504
Author(s):  
Marco Vailati ◽  
Giorgio Monti ◽  
Giorgia di Gangi

Infill panels and partitions are widely used non-structural elements in reinforced concrete buildings, characterized by a significant seismic vulnerability as testified by disastrous collapses observed during recent earthquakes, for both in-plane and out-of-plane actions. The most advanced building codes foresee mandatory verifications of these elements, both when designing a new building and when assessing the seismic adequacy of an existing one. Moreover, recent evaluations have shown that, after low-intensity earthquakes, damage of non-structural parts strongly influences repair costs for typical multi-storey buildings. In this paper, an innovative concept for infill panels and partitions is presented, in which (either concrete or clay) blocks are connected, rather than with the usual mortar layers, by means of recycled-plastic joints. A comparison is also carried out with respect to conventional infill typologies, by evaluating their performance in terms of energy efficiency and acoustic. A brief description of seismic performances of innovative infill panels are shown at the end of work.


Author(s):  
Н. Двинина-Мирошниченко ◽  
N. Dvinina-Miroshnichenko ◽  
А. Аронов ◽  
A. Aronov

Article is devoted to problems of spiritual education of youth in extra temple activity of the Church connected with an educational mission of orthodox musical art. At a boundary of the 20–21st centuries we observe significant turn of the Russian culture to orthodox traditions. The course of state policy directed to effective cooperation with Russian Orthodox Church provided development of orthodox musical art in a number of the directions, including, in activity of Sunday schools, military patriotic clubs, festivals of orthodox art for children and young people and so forth. The author of the article, highlighting the advantages of various functions of orthodox musical creativity, emphasizes the importance of the study of ancient Russian songwriting: canonical and folk spiritual. This, for the most part, unused and unclaimed layer of Russian musical culture bears the main essential and semantic function of orthodox musical art: it is similar to sacred icons, demonstrates supermundane reality of the Kingdom. Without belittling the importance of song creativity of wide spiritual content, the author points to the advantages of teachers' orientation to the canonical direction, which in a musical form expresses the dogmas of the Church, revives the unique intonation fund of Russian musical and linguistic culture, retains a significant part of the genetic cultural memory.


Author(s):  
Olga Shcherbakova

The purpose of the article is to identify the intonation-content complex of the Sonata for Violin and Piano by the representative of the Odesa School of Composers Serafym Orfeyev in the area of the performer's interpretation of the symbolism of the sonata, comparison of similar works of Ukrainian composers in a specific historic period and identifying the original artistic concept of Orfeyev's work in accordance with his mindset. The scientific novelty is based on the fact that for the first time the work of Orfeyev, which has not yet been the subject of scientific research, is considered, and the significance of the composer's contribution to the development of the instrumental sonata of the XX century is revealed. Methodology. The personal features of the artist's creative preferences are determined through a complex of musical symbolism and reflection of the multiple meaning of the Orthodox church tradition of choral art, mythological information of folk-historical archaism in combination with professional achievements in the development of the chamber sonata genre. Conclusions. Sonata's analysis points to the signs of S. Orfeyev's stylistic search, which was expressed in the spread of the specifics of choral writing, to the comprehension of which (on the example of the works of Mykola Leontovych and Anatolii Lyadov) the composer paid great attention; in instrumental thinking, which was reflected in the saturation of the fabric of the ensemble work with a polyphonic plexus of voices, and especially hidden polyphony. The connection with folk art influences the reproduction of an expressive dynamic picture of a folk holiday. A rather complex synthesis of the dramatic and the lyrical creates a unique, deeply emotional concept of a musical work, which vividly complements the genre of the instrumental sonata with new features in the traditional romantic color.


Author(s):  
Costel-Mirel NECHITA ◽  

In 1775, the Austro-Hungarian Empire occupied Northern Bukovina, a wonderful land, sprinkled with towering mountains, covered with secular forests, rich grasslands and crystal-clear waters, and good householders and worthy people. The fate of this part of Romania was shared by other confreres, occupied by the same abusive empire: Transylvania in 1699, Banat and Oltenia in 1718. Thus, the occupied Romanians found themselves in a kind of forced diaspora, becoming neighbors of borders with their own brothers. The occupation was very oppressive, long-lasting and with disastrous consequences in all fields religious, social, and cultural, the occupier trying, and most of the time, succeeding in destroying the traditional local values and imposing its own. The phenomenon run slowly by the activity of enlightened hierarchs of the Church, as well as of some associations and institutions, which fought and defended themselves through culture, prevailing the musical culture, especially the choral one, which kept the Bukovinians closely united near the ancestral Church. Even if the Austro-Hungarian occupation brought certain benefits, it remains a black spot in bimillennial of the Romanian people.


2017 ◽  
Vol 2 (1) ◽  
pp. 31-36
Author(s):  
Pascal Wabnitz ◽  
Michael Schulz ◽  
Michael Löhr ◽  
André Nienaber

2012 ◽  
Author(s):  
Fiona Mathieson ◽  
Kara Mihaere ◽  
Sunny Collings ◽  
Anthony Dowell ◽  
James Stanley

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