1,723,136 research outputs found
Jonathan David Knott
Program for the funeral of Jonathan David Knott, held at First Baptist Church of Orlando on April 15, 2025.https://digitalcommons.georgiasouthern.edu/willowhillheritage-obituaries/12355/thumbnail.jp
In Memoriam: Jonathan David Jones
The Virginia Tech community mourns the loss of Jonathan David Jones of Fredericksburg, Va. a first year student majoring in communication in the College of Liberal Arts and Human Sciences
The Profundity of Polychoralism: Exploring the work of Jonathan David Little [Interview and CD review]
Extended (7000-word) composer interview and CD review of "Woefully Arrayed: Sacred & Secular Choral & Polychoral Music of Jonathan David Little", by London-based international music critic, Colin Clarke.
[INTERVIEW:] "The disc of sacred and secular choral and polychoral music by Jonathan David Little, Woefully Arrayed … is nothing short of remarkable. Stunningly recorded, the pure sonic joy is visceral. On a personal level, I haven’t experienced such revelation in choral terms since the Tallis Scholars’ first recording of the Allegri Miserere. As an interviewee, it turns out, Little is every inch as fascinating as his music. The following in-depth interview may be seen as an indispensable complement to the listening experience itself."
[CD REVIEW:] "Jonathan David Little is a composer whose music is vital, urgent and yet somehow timeless at the same time. … Woefully Arrayed has a mesmeric element to it … [and] is a masterpiece of time-stretching. As lines float and interact throughout the soundspace, there is a distinct impression of atemporality, of altering the way the listener experiences time. … sound is superb, full and reverberant … magnificently handled … A superb disc, one that simply gets better on each and every listening. There is a radiance to Little’s writing that seems shot through with spiritual light and which speaks on a very deep level to the listener."
PROJECT OVERVIEW: International Polychoral Music Composition, Recording and Dissemination Project (2015-17)
“The lost potential of the acoustics of performing spaces begins to be rediscovered in these works.”
A complex and ambitious, large-scale, two-year “polychoral” music creation and recording project was commissioned by the Australia Council – involving communicating how “re-discovered” ancient Renaissance and Baroque techniques of acoustically-innovative performer placement may be revived within new, original, contemporary contexts. One aim was to generate interest in largely long-forgotten, but still hugely useful and aurally impressive composition methods. Following a period of research and experimentation, several new, accessible choral works were created – most featuring intricate, a cappella, polychoral-inspired techniques. Therefore different sections of the choir, or different “sub-choirs” and/or vocal soloists, are sometimes placed in various arrangements around and above the audience (occasionally also involving movement). Due to the incorporation of such techniques, a striking extra dimension is added both to recordings and live performances – where the aural “spatial” interest creates a quasi-theatrical effect.
OPEN-ACCESS ONLINE CD BOOKLET (including contextual essay, spatial configuration diagrams, lyrics, pictures and notes): http://www.navonarecords.com/catalog/nv6113/booklet---woefully-arrayed---jonathan-little.htm
Unfortunate attachment
"Published anonymously in 1773 and attributed to Georgiana, Duchess of Devonshire"--P. [4] of cover. "Seven independent sources list her [Georgiana, Duchess of Devonshire] as author, including the most recent and definitive work on the subject, The English novel, which atttibutes the novel to her with a question mark"--P. 10.Includes bibliographical references and index.Georgiana, Duchess of Devonshire ; edited and with an introduction by Jonathan David Gross
Digital markets as performative assemblages
Submitted by Jonathan David Schöps, BSc BSc MScKumulative Dissertation aus sechs ArtikelnDissertation Universität Innsbruck 2022Arbeit gesperr
Digital markets as performative assemblages
Submitted by Jonathan David Schöps, BSc BSc MScKumulative Dissertation aus sechs ArtikelnDissertation Universität Innsbruck 2022Arbeit gesperr
Jonathan David Katz: How AIDS Changed American Art
Queer Arts Festival and SFU\u27s Vancity Office of Community Engagement presented a lecture by Jonathan David Katz, PhD, on the exhibition ART/AIDS/AMERICA at the Tacoma Art Museum from now until Jan 10, 2016. Generally considered merely a tragic tangent to US culture, AIDS has in fact been one of the most powerful shaping forces in American culture since the 1980\u27s. We have repressed AIDS’ role in the making of our culture in keeping with our longstanding, repression of AIDS in general. But repression, as known from psychoanalysis, is the sign of great power. The lecture was followed by a Q&A with Dr. Katz.Jonathan David Katz is a pioneering academic and gay activist who works at the intersection of art history and queer history. Widely recognized as a leading authority in queer art history, his work as curator, scholar, and activist has had a profound impact on the understanding of queer art and artists in both academia and the larger world. Katz founded the Harvey Milk Institute, the world’s largest queer studies institute, and serves as president and chief curator of New York City\u27s Leslie Lohman Museum of Gay and Lesbian Art. His recent work includes co-curating “Hide/Seek: Difference and Desire in American Art,” an exhibition at the Smithsonian National Portrait Gallery that broke ground by focusing on LGBTQ (lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and queer) issues. Katz directs SUNY Buffalo’s PhD program in visual studies. Katz is currently co-curating ART/AIDS/AMERICA at the Tacoma Art Museum from now until January 10, 2016, and will curate the 2016 Queer Arts Festival visual arts exhibition this coming June
Jonathan David Aronson and Peter F. Cowhey, Trade in Services, a Case for Open Markets, 1984
Daude Jeannine. Jonathan David Aronson and Peter F. Cowhey, Trade in Services, a Case for Open Markets, 1984. In: Revue Française d'Etudes Américaines, N°26, novembre 1985. Le paysage américain. p. 473
Jonathan David Aronson and Peter F. Cowhey, Trade in Services, a Case for Open Markets, 1984
Daude Jeannine. Jonathan David Aronson and Peter F. Cowhey, Trade in Services, a Case for Open Markets, 1984. In: Revue Française d'Etudes Américaines, N°26, novembre 1985. Le paysage américain. p. 473
Molecular characterization of components of the nuclear pore complex and the nuclear import system in Saccharomyces cerevisiae
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Biology, 1995.Includes bibliographical references (193-226).by Jonathan David Joshua Loeb.Ph.D
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