Electronic and Experimental Music: Technology, Music, and Culture provides a comprehensive history of electronic music, covering key composers, genres, and techniques used in analog and digital synthesis. This textbook has been extensively revised with the needs of students and instructors in mind. The reader-friendly style, logical organization, and pedagogical features of the fifth edition allow easy access to key ideas, milestones, and concepts. New to this edition: • A companion website, featuring key examples of electronic music, both historical and contemporary. • Listening Guides providing a moment-by-moment annotated exploration of key works of electronic music. • A new chapter—Contemporary Practices in Composing Electronic Music. • Updated presentation of classic electronic music in the United Kingdom, Italy, Latin America, and Asia, covering the history of electronic music globally. • An expanded discussion of early experiments with jazz and electronic music, and the roots of electronic rock. • Additional accounts of the vastly under-reported contributions of women composers in the field. • More photos, scores, and illustrations throughout. The companion website features a number of student and instructor resources, such as additional Listening Guides, links to streaming audio examples and online video resources, PowerPoint slides, and interactive quizzes.
First published in 2006. This guide is an A to Z trade reference aimed at music students, technophiles and audio-video computer users. The world of music technology has exploded over the last decades thanks to introductions of new digital formats. At the same time there has been a renaissance in analog high fidelity equipment and resurgent interest in turntables, long playing records and vintage stereo systems. Music students, collectors and consumers will appreciate the availability of a guide to all things musical in the technological universe.
Set on a mythical island, The Isle of Is charts a journey of discovery in which the reader is the main character in the story of their own awakening. Throughout, international spiritual teachers Thom Cronkhite and Caroline Cottom PhD lead the reader into a place of peace, joy, and connection to all things - the experience of awakening to who and what they really are. This brilliantly creative book + CD is suited for a wide range of spiritual seekers, regardless of religion, gender, level of spiritual development, or age. Most striking is the metaphor of the isalnd. With its fantastic creatures, glorious scenery, and delightful story, The Isle of Is engages the senses, heart, and imagination. The book fills a need for spiritual material families can explore together. Also ideal for small group study, it cuts across religious lines as a simple tool for reaching universal truths.
With all the attention non-traditional churches have received, Dr. Rainer reminds us that most churches in America today are still based on traditional models. He sees not only their survival, but possibilities for their profound renewal and revival.
In a book that is part inspiration and part "straight talk from the heart", one of America's top Christian pop singers talks about morality, spirituality, and how she keeps her Christian values intact in today's complex world.
This first entry of a brand-new series introduces world-weary bounty hunter Martin Keller, who rides into the town of Cimarron looking for the men who killed his family and is torn between his vow of vengeance and the love of a young widow. Original.
MASTERFULLY RESEARCHED AND WRITTEN, THE CHILDREN OF FIRST MAN IS A FEAST OF A NOVEL. James Alexander Thom's sweeping saga of Welsh colonization in prehistoric America is loaded with wonderful characters and events, some so poignant I had to stop reading now and then to reflect." --Linda Lay Shuler Author of She Who Remembers With its beautifully written and deeply felt descriptions of the feelings the first white settlers and Native Americans had for each other, THE CHILDREN OF FIRST MAN tells the fascinating story of a European people gradually absorbed into the Amerindian culture until their literacy was lost and their Christian religion submerged in the legend of a Welsh Prince named Madoc, the First Man. Sweeping from the blood-soaked castles of medieval Wales to the landmark expedition of Lewis and Clark, from the hushed beauty of virgin wilderness to Mandan villages of domed earthen lodges, THE CHILDREN OF FIRST MAN is a triumph of the storyteller's art. "TERRIFICALLY ENTERTAINING...A highly imaginative novel that combines an old legend with historical fact to create an epic tale of America starting some three-hundred years before Columbus arrived." --Booklist
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