Jack A. Taylor

Jack A. Taylor

Assuming jack is required, and a is required, and taylor is required, the following 13 results were found.

  • An Analysis of Triadic Post-tonality in Sky Macklay’s [i]Many Many Cadences[/i] for String Quartet

    Abstract Emerging composer Sky Macklay has written a string quartet entitled Many Many Cadences (2014) which inventively combines the basic operations of neo-Riemannian triadic transformations and voice leading (e.g., Parallel (P), Leading-tone (L),...

  • Women Conductors on the Orchestral Podium: Pedagogical and Professional Implications

    Introduction Recent discussions about women's experiences in the orchestral profession1 have revealed the gendered politics behind many of the generally accepted norms and customs in the orchestral tradition. With the bourgeoning of feminist...

  • Musical Pattern Perception

    of music in context. Journal of Research in Music Education, 17(1), 1969, 47-50. Carlsen, James C., Pierre Idvenyi and Jack A. Taylor. A preliminary study of perceptual expectancy in melodic configurations. Council for Research in Music Education,...

  • A Stylistic Analysis of Selected Pop Songs, 1965-1984

    Otto O. Ortmann, Problems in the Elements of Ear Dictation (Baltimore: Peabody Conservatory of Music, 1934); Jack A. Taylor and Randall G. Pembrook, "Strategies in Memory for Short Melodies: An Extension of Otto Ortmann's 1933 Study," Psychomusicology 3...

  • Psychomusicology—Perceptual/Cognitive Research with Implications for the Composer and Performer

    Vol. 14, pp. 1-66. __________. "The Role of Pitch in Rhythm," Psychological Review, 1911, Vol. 18, pp. 54-77. authors: Jack A. Taylor author_ids: 1296 authors: Jack A. Taylor author_ids: 1296

  • “Shot Into the Air Like a Rocket”: Climax in the Lieder of Alma Mahler

    Abstract The appropriation of musical climax as an act of subversion became a common claim in feminist analysis of music by women composers. The focus on the tension and release in Western classical music has been called out as overtly masculine and...

  • ". . . Our Daily Bread"

    There is a greater need than pianoforte teachers and singing teachers, and that is a numerous company of writers and talkers who shall teach the people how to listen to music so that it shall not pass through their heads like a vast tonal...

  • [i]Judith[/i] and the Louisville Orchestra: The Rest of the Story

    Introduction Musicians and scholars who lived through the late 1940s and early 1950s witnessed an astounding activity which took place in Louisville, Kentucky during that time. An ambitious effort by civic and musical leaders yielded an extraordinary...

  • The Fairbank Collection

    The Newberry Library, Chicago, contains a distinguished music collection, rare book, manuscript, and print holdings, and archives relevant both to the United States (and its Indian populations) and to the city of Chicago. Thus it is understandable that...

  • Needs for Research in Black-American Music

    Traditionally, the American musicologist engaged in historical research has concentrated upon the scientific study of art music in the western European tradition, focusing his attention primarily upon the "great musical work" produced by great masters...

  • Music Theory, Theories of Music, and Systematic Musicology

    There are rules for tonal grammar. They might be found in the top cell of Taylor's first flow chart (see article by Jack A. Taylor in this volume of Symposium) and they may sometimes be found lurking in obscure places in music theory texts. They will...

  • On [i]Symposium[/i] at 40

    This year, 1999, is the 40th anniversary of The College Music Society. It is also the year of my 40th high school reunion. Indeed, 1959 was a year that certainly came to have a great effect on me! Since I often say that I am now finally a mature young...

  • Developing Theories of Music—An Introduction to Systematic Musicology

    Systematic musicology is the study of the various systems which function in music. Although it has existed for over a hundred years as an academic discipline in Europe, it is a relatively new one in the United States. Its emergence is due in part to...

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