29,083 research outputs found
Alternative Neo-Rimannian Approaches to Carl Nielsen
Abstract On the basis of songs or songlike Themes from three periods of Nielsen’s career I try to show how Nielsen’s harmonic progressions become simpler and yet displaying a more refined complexity. I do this on the basis of theories of the Danish scholar/composers Jörgen Jersild and Jan Maegaard, whose theories in various degree is based on Riemannian analysis. The two Danes thus represent an alternative Neo-Riemannian approach to harmonic analysis. This approach has been developed from 1970 to 1989, the very same years in which Ernö Lendvai, David Lewin, Deborah Stein and Harald Krebs wrote their respective groundbreaking works. Even though Jersild’s and Maegaard’s theories are developed independent of these writers, their content communicates with the content of these writer’s theories. And even though a theory of foreground harmonic progressions like Jersild’s is seemingly as opposed as possible to a Schenkerian middleground based harmonic approach they actually in some regards do have something in common, just as they in other regards supplement each other perfectly. I try through the analyses of Nielsen’s music – plus a few other examples (Schumann, Liszt and Wolf) – to show how the theories of these above mentioned many writers, plus others, may be integrated into the two Danish theories.In discussing analytical theories the text is especially conversant with two recent books on Nielsen, Anne-Marie Reynolds’ The Voice of Carl Nielsen (2010) and Daniel Grimley’s Carl Nielsen and the Idea of Modernism (2011), as the two main analyses refer to analyses in Reynolds and Grimley respectively.<br/
Alternative Neo-Riemannian Approaches to Carl Nielsen
On the basis of songs or songlike themes from three periods of Nielsen’s career I try to show how Nielsen’s harmonic progressions become simpler while displaying a more refined complexity. I do this on the basis of the theories of the Danish scholar/composers Jorgen Jersild and Jan Maegaard which are, in various degrees, based on Riemannian analysis. The two Danes thus represent an alternative neo-Riemannian approach to harmonic analysis. This approach was developed from 1970 to 1989, the very same years in which Erno Lendvai, David Lewin, Deborah Stein and Harald Krebs wrote their respective groundbreaking works. Even though Jersild’s and Maegaard’s theories were developed independently of these writers, their content communicates with the content of their theories. And even though a theory of foreground harmonic progressions like Jersild’s is seemingly as opposed as possible to a Schenkerian middleground-based harmonic approach, they do actually, in some regards, have something in common, just as in other regards they supplement each other perfectly. I try, through the analyses of Nielsen’s music plus a few other examples (Schumann, Liszt and Wolf), to show how the theories of these above mentioned many writers and others, may be integrated into the two Danish theories. In discussing analytical theories the text is especially conversant with two recent books on Nielsen, Anne-Marie Reynolds’ The Voice of Carl Nielsen (2010) and Daniel Grimley’s Carl Nielsen and the Idea of Modernism (2011), as the two main analyses refer to analyses in Reynolds and Grimley respectively.</jats:p
Macoma Leach, 1819 (Mollusca: Bivalvia: Tellinidae): the unavailability of Limecola Brown, 1844, and Limicola Leach, 1852
Nielsen, Jan Kresten (2021): Macoma Leach, 1819 (Mollusca: Bivalvia: Tellinidae): the unavailability of Limecola Brown, 1844, and Limicola Leach, 1852. Zootaxa 5052 (4): 579-584, DOI: https://doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.5052.4.
Anmeldelse af Henrik Steffensen, Lars Bunch, Jan-Christian Nielsen & Thomas Booker: Transaktioner i selskaber - selskabsret, regnskab og skat (2014)
Artiklen anmelder et juridisk værk - Henrik Steffensen, Lars Bunch, Jan-Christian Nielsen & Thomas Booker: Transaktioner i selskaber - selskabsret, regnskab og skat (2014
Laimosemion anitae Nielsen & Hoetmer & Vandenkerkhove 2023, new species
<i>Laimosemion anitae,</i> new species urn:lsid:zoobank.org:act: 1D204775-4B43-43B1-885C-E4568D31C7FC <p> <b>Holotype.</b> Brazil, Acre, Mâncio Lima, stream tributary of Igarapé Japiim (itself a tributary of rio Moa), rio Juruá basin, 7°34’15.5”S, 72°57’31.5”W; Jan Willem Hoetmer & Eric Vandekerkhove, 5 Feb 2018.</p> <p> <b>Paratypes.</b> All from Brazil, Acre state. ZUEC 17366, 2 males, 18.8–21.1 mm SL, 4 females, 21.7–22.5 mm SL (1 male c&s), collected with the holotype. ZUEC 17367, 1 male, 24.3 mm SL, 3 females 21.7–22.5 mm SL; Brazil, Cruzeiro do Sul, Igarapé Preto (trib. rio Moa), rio Juruá basin, 7°34’53.0”S, 72°45’35.0”W; Jan Willem Hoetmer & Eric Vandekerkhove, 5 Feb 2018.</p> <p> <b>Diagnosis.</b> <i>Laimosemion anitae</i> is distinguished from all specie of the subgenus <i>Owiyeye</i> by an unique color pattern in males, namely an overall color of trunk and head orange-brown, sides of body with brown background and four thin light blue stripes extending from the opercular region to the caudal peduncle (vs. sides of body orange, with four to five irregular longitudinal rows of blue dots on flanks in <i>L. leticia</i>, a metallic blue band in <i>L. gili</i>, sides of body light brown, with longitudinal rows of red, dark brown and light blue dots in <i>L. uatuman</i>, sides of body light metallic yellowish green with three horizontal rows of red dots between humeral region and caudal peduncle in <i>L. romeri</i>, sides of body pale purple anteriorly, pale green posteriorly in <i>L. uakti</i> and <i>L. amanapira</i>, sides of body iridescent blue and with five or six continuous red lines in <i>L. mahdiaensis</i>, sides of body pale purplish grey in <i>L. jauaperi</i>, sides of body brownish grey in <i>L. ubim</i>, bluish from midbody to caudal peduncle, grading into greenish-yellow at upper and lower portions of the caudal fin, with a thin orange stripe at the upper and lower border of the caudal fin in <i>L. carolinae</i>, cluster of red spots aligned beginning at the posterior edge of the gill cover and running dorsally along the sides and then covering most of the caudal peduncle in <i>L. foliiscola</i>. Additionally, males of <i>L. anitae</i> can be diagnosed from the species belonging to the subgenus <i>Owiyeye</i> by presenting a short predorsal length (60.0–70.1% SL vs. 70.4–79.1% SL), lower pectoral fin length (8.5–10.5% SL vs. 12.7–21.6% SL), lower head length (17.7–18.6% SL vs. 19.8–27.8% SL), lower number of vertebrae (26 vs. 27-37), higher number of longitudinal series of scales (35 vs. 29–33 in the remaining species of the subgenus <i>Owiyeye</i> except <i>L. amanapira</i> which presents 48–49), 11th vertebra presenting a short and incomplete spine (vs. long and complete spine). Females of <i>Laimosemion anitae</i> differ from the females of the remaining species belonging to the subgenus <i>Owiyeye</i> by presenting a shorter pectoral fin length (13.2–14.1% SL vs. 14.5–21.5% SL), shorter pelvic fin length (5.3–5.4% SL vs. 5.7–15.4% SL), and shorter head length (18.4–19.5 % SL vs. 21.0–27.0 % SL).</p> <p> <b>Etymology.</b> In honor to Anita Hoetmer, wife of discoverer of the new species, Jan Willer Hoetmer.</p>Published as part of <i>Nielsen, Dalton Tavares Bressane, Hoetmer, Jan Willem & Vandenkerkhove, Eric, 2023, Validation of Anablepsoides katukina Nielsen, Hoetmer & Vandenkerkhove, Anablepsoides falconi Nielsen, Hoetmer & Vandenkerkhove, and Laimosemion anitae Nielsen, Hoetmer & Vandenkerkhove (Cyprinodontiformes: Rivulidae) from western Amazon basin, Acre state, Brazil, pp. 298-300 in Zootaxa 5323 (2)</i> on pages 299-300, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.5323.2.10, <a href="http://zenodo.org/record/8204097">http://zenodo.org/record/8204097</a>
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