Resounding Body
Title | Resounding Body PDF eBook |
Author | Andy Thomas |
Publisher | Sacristy Press |
Total Pages | 114 |
Release | 2020-09-01 |
Genre | Music |
ISBN | 1789591147 |
This valuable book encourages music leaders to step-up and persevere in low-resource contexts, and challenges all those who lead music in worship to focus not just on producing musical results but on building Christlike communities.
Resounding Truth
Title | Resounding Truth PDF eBook |
Author | Jeremy Begbie |
Publisher | Baker Academic |
Total Pages | 416 |
Release | 2007-12 |
Genre | Music |
ISBN | 0801026954 |
A world-renowned scholar and musician helps Christians respond with theological discernment to music.
Resounding the Sublime
Title | Resounding the Sublime PDF eBook |
Author | Miranda Eva Stanyon |
Publisher | University of Pennsylvania Press |
Total Pages | 286 |
Release | 2021-05-07 |
Genre | Literary Collections |
ISBN | 0812253086 |
What does the sublime sound like? Miranda Stanyon traces competing varieties of the sublime, a crucial modern aesthetic category, as shaped by the antagonistic intimacies between music and language. In resounding the history of the sublime over the course of the long eighteenth century, she finds a phenomenon always already resonant.
The Resounding Soul
Title | The Resounding Soul PDF eBook |
Author | Samuel Kimbriel |
Publisher | James Clarke & Company |
Total Pages | 397 |
Release | 2016-09-29 |
Genre | Philosophy |
ISBN | 0227905563 |
It is surely not coincidental that the term 'soul' should mean not only the centre of a creature's life and consciousness, but also a thing or action characterised by intense vivacity ('that bike's got soul!'). It also seems far from coincidental that the same contemporary academic discussions that have largely cast aside the language of 'soul' in their quest to define the character of human mental life should themselves be so bloodless, or so lacking in soul. The Resounding Soul arises from the opposite premise: that the task of understanding human nature is bound up with the more critical task of learning to be fully human. The papers collected here are derived from a conference in Oxford sponsored by the Centre of Theology and Philosophy and explore the often surprising landscape that emerges when human consciousness is approached from this angle. Drawing upon literary, philosophical, theological, historical, and musical modes of analysis, these essays remind the reader of the power of the ancient language of soul over against contemporary impulses to reduce, fragment, and overly determine human selfhood.
The Mechanism of the Human Voice
Title | The Mechanism of the Human Voice PDF eBook |
Author | Alfredo Martino |
Publisher | |
Total Pages | 40 |
Release | 1919 |
Genre | Singing |
ISBN |
Sound and Music
Title | Sound and Music PDF eBook |
Author | John Augustine Zahm |
Publisher | |
Total Pages | 464 |
Release | 1892 |
Genre | Music |
ISBN |
Resounding Afro Asia
Title | Resounding Afro Asia PDF eBook |
Author | Tamara Roberts |
Publisher | Oxford University Press |
Total Pages | 256 |
Release | 2016-02-16 |
Genre | Music |
ISBN | 0199377421 |
Cultural hybridity is a celebrated hallmark of U.S. American music and identity. Yet hybrid music is all too often marked -and marketed - under a single racial label. Resounding Afro Asia examines music projects that counter this convention; these projects instead foreground racial mixture in players, audiences, and sound in the very face of the ghettoizing culture industry. Giving voice to four contemporary projects, author Tamara Roberts traces black/Asian engagements that reach across the United States and beyond: Funkadesi, Yoko Noge, Fred Ho and the Afro Asian Music Ensemble, and Red Baraat. From Indian funk & reggae, to Japanese folk & blues, to jazz in various Asian and African traditions, to Indian brass band and New Orleans second line, these artists live multiracial lives in which they inhabit - and yet exceed - multicultural frameworks built on essentialism and segregation. When these musicians collaborate, they generate and perform racially marked sounds that do not conform to their individual racial identities. The Afro Asian artists discussed in this book splinter the expectations of racial determinism, and through improvisation and composition, articulate new identities and subjectivities in conversation with each other. These dynamic social, aesthetic, and sonic practices construct a forum for the negotiation of racial and cultural difference and the formation of inter-minority solidarities. Resounding Afro Asia joins a growing body of literature that is writing Asian American artists back into U.S. popular music history, while highlighting interracial engagements that have fueled U.S. music making. The book will appeal to scholars of music, ethnomusicology, race theory, and politics, as well as those interested in race and popular music.