Domesticated Noise: The Musical Reformation of Identity in Urban Vietnam
(2016)
author(s): Lonan O Briain
published in: Journal of Sonic Studies
In his composition “New Moon” (Trăng non), saxophonist Trần Mạnh Tuấn appropriates sounds from the musical cultures of Vietnam’s ethnic minorities to create a fusion of regional Vietnamese and international jazz music. The musical cultures are reduced to the raw sounds of instrument timbres which are then reformulated as part of a new popular style by the composer. His detachment of these sounds from the minority cultures and propagation of them as sonic referents to an internal Other nurtures an essentialized understanding of the minorities as different and distant from the urban majority. This research deploys Georgina Born’s proposal of four planes of distinct socialities that are mediated by music and sound (2011) to examine how the musical domestication of these ethnic-themed sounds contributes to the conceptualization of new economically-endowed social classes in urban Vietnam.
Goldberg’s Variations: investigating Aaron Goldberg’s improvisational style
(last edited: 2023)
author(s): Jelle van der Meulen
archived in: KC Research Portal
Name: Jelle van der Meulen
Main Subject: Jazz Piano
Research Supervisor: Patrick Schenkius
Title of Research: Goldberg’s Variations: investigating Aaron Goldberg’s improvisational style
Research Question:
How can I emulate characteristic devices from Aaron Goldberg’s improvisational style and apply these to my own playing?
Summary of Results:
In this research paper four improvisational devices that Aaron Goldberg uses are analysed. Examples of these devices are taken from five transcriptions of improvised solos on jazz standards (Con alma, Fantasy in D, The shadow of your smile, (Un) stable mates and Perhaps) and from recordings where Aaron Goldberg functions as a leader. The devices are selected for their occurrence in (almost) all of the transcribed solo’s and because they stand out and attract attention.
Together they make up an important part of Aaron Goldberg’s playing style. The four devices are: chromatic runs returning to one note, arpeggios over the bar line, motivic development and lines in intervals. Following the analyses and some words on the (possible) origin of these devices (Aaron Goldberg didn’t invent them, they are part of the jazz vocabulary and came forth out of the improvisational styles of musicians from the history of jazz) the research deals with the emulation of the devices and offers exercises which an improviser can do to apply the devices to his/her playing.
Biography:
Jelle van der Meulen (1990) studied jazz piano from 2008 at the conservatory of Amsterdam where he received his bachelor’s diploma in 2013. There he studied with Karel Boehlee, Rob van Bavel, Hans Vroomans and Kris Goessens. In 2015 he started his master studies at the Royal Conservatoire in The Hague where he studied with Juraj Stanik and is currently studying with Wolfert Brederode.
Jelle is the pianist of the hard bop band Bop This! and he leads his own piano trio. Jelle’s playing is featured on three recordings so far, the albums ‘Introducing’ and ‘Page Two’ by Bop This! and on the album ‘Out of Universe’ by the Amstel Bigband of which Jelle was the pianist from 2011 until 2014.
Mediating Musical Identity
(last edited: 2022)
author(s): PAN
This exposition is in progress and its share status is: visible to all.
A salient feature in all forms of jazz accompaniment since the 30s is the walking bass, which is “a line played pizzicato on a double bass in regular crotches in 4/4 metre, the notes usually moving stepwise or in intervallic patterns not restricted to the main pitches of the harmony”. The most developed virtual instrument of mine is the Walking Machine, which is thoroughly described in my thesis A Field of Possibilities (Nilsson, 2011) as well as in the ICMC 2008 proceedings. There are however a number of predecessors, as well as successors up to a present rendering, which together make up a work story of virtual walking bass instruments. Heard in the rear-view window, despite using quite different technologies, concepts and algoritms, it displays different sameness, variations of a permanence that mediates aesthetic preferences of its inventor and player, in this case within the realm of walking bass accompaniment.