The Musical Mind, published in 1985, was written by the relatively unknown John Sloboda. It made ground-breaking inroads in raising crucial questions relating to music's status as a form of human expression and has become the seminal text in the field of music psychology. The scope of that book was impressive: from music perception to production, embracing topics as diverse as music's origin and the circumstances that encourage its skill acquisition. Musical structure, grouping, and perceptual processing, including memory, were key areas where John Sloboda had made early empirical…mehr
The Musical Mind, published in 1985, was written by the relatively unknown John Sloboda. It made ground-breaking inroads in raising crucial questions relating to music's status as a form of human expression and has become the seminal text in the field of music psychology. The scope of that book was impressive: from music perception to production, embracing topics as diverse as music's origin and the circumstances that encourage its skill acquisition. Musical structure, grouping, and perceptual processing, including memory, were key areas where John Sloboda had made early empirical investigations. Discussion of emotional responses and creative processes were far more inductively written, based on his own personal experiences. The Musical Mind laid a research agenda in asking those crucial 'how' and 'why' questions that have since occupied a growing body of researchers from all over the world. Following a quarter of a century after that seminal work, Music and the Mind celebrates the life and work of John Sloboda whilst taking stock of where the field of music psychology stands 25 years after The Musical Mind first appeared. It reviews key areas of current research in the field, written by world-leading authors, each making a significant and original academic contribution. Offering a timely review of the field of music psychology in the 21st Century, the contributors to Music and the Mind also reflect on how the field has been significantly stimulated by the influential work of John Sloboda. This book is fascinating reading for students and researchers in music psychology and musicology, as well as music professionals.
Irène Deliège obtained her qualifications at the Royal Conservatory of Brussels. After a twenty year career as a music teacher, she retrained in psychology and obtained her PhD in 1991 from the University of Liège where she was responsible for the Unit of Research in Psychology of Music. A founding member of ESCOM, she has acted since its inception as permanent secretary and Editor of the Journal MUSICÆ SCIENTIÆ. She is the author of several articles and co-edited books dedicated to music perception. Jane Davidson is the current Callaway/Tunely Chair of Music at the University of Western Australia. She has published extensively within psychology of music with research topics including expressive body movement, collaborative performance, music learning and ability, and singing. Her first academic appointment was at University of Keele between 1991-1993, where she worked as a post-doctoral fellow with John Sloboda and Michael Howe on an innovatory study of the biographical determinants of musical abilities. This led to more than 20 joint peer-reviewed publications.
Inhaltsangabe
* Prelude * John Sloboda and his contribution * 1: Michel Imberty: Music, linguistics and cognition * 2: Eric Fillenz Clarke: 'What are the important questions?' A reflection * Motivating Musical Lives * 3: Susan O'Neill: Developing a young musician's growth mindset: the role of motivation, self-theories and resiliency. * 4: Alexandra Lamont: Negotiating Music in the Real World: development, motivation, process and effect * 5: Jane Davidson: Musical Participation: Expectations, Experiences and Outcomes * Music and Emotion * 6: Alf Gabrielsson: How do Strong Experiences with Music (SEM) relate to experiences in everyday listening to music? * 7: Patrik N. Juslin: Music and Emotion: Seven Questions, Seven Answers * Sloboda's Recall Paradigm * 8: Mario Baroni, Rossana Dalmonte and Roberto Caterina: Perception of melody. An empirical approach * 9: Daniel Muellensiefen and Geraint A. Wiggins: Sloboda's recall paradigm for melodic memory: A new, computational perspective * Musical Achievement and Expertise * 10: Frederick A. Seddon: Musical encounters of the temporary kind * 11: Antonia Ivaldi: Routes to Adolescent Musical Expertise * 12: Reinhard Kopiez: The musical child prodigy (Wunderkind) in music history: A historiometric analysis * 13: Adam Ockelford: : Evidence from a Savant of how Atonal Music is Processed in Cognition' * Examining Musical Performance * 14: Nicholas J. Cook: Off the record: performance, history, and musical logic * 15: Andreas Lehmann: Expressive Variants in the Opening Robert Schumann's Arlequin (from Carnaval, op. 9): 54 Pianists' Interpretations of a Metrical Ambiguity * 16: Geoff Luck: Quantifying the beat-inducing properties of conductors' temporal gestures, and conductor-musician synchronization * 17: Jane Ginsborg and Roger Chaffin: Performance cues in singing: Evidence from practice and recall * Music and cultural integration * 18: Arild Bergh: Emotions in motion: Transforming conflict with the help of music * 19: Richard Parncutt and Angelika Dorfer: The role of music in the integration of cultural minorities * Postlude
* Prelude * John Sloboda and his contribution * 1: Michel Imberty: Music, linguistics and cognition * 2: Eric Fillenz Clarke: 'What are the important questions?' A reflection * Motivating Musical Lives * 3: Susan O'Neill: Developing a young musician's growth mindset: the role of motivation, self-theories and resiliency. * 4: Alexandra Lamont: Negotiating Music in the Real World: development, motivation, process and effect * 5: Jane Davidson: Musical Participation: Expectations, Experiences and Outcomes * Music and Emotion * 6: Alf Gabrielsson: How do Strong Experiences with Music (SEM) relate to experiences in everyday listening to music? * 7: Patrik N. Juslin: Music and Emotion: Seven Questions, Seven Answers * Sloboda's Recall Paradigm * 8: Mario Baroni, Rossana Dalmonte and Roberto Caterina: Perception of melody. An empirical approach * 9: Daniel Muellensiefen and Geraint A. Wiggins: Sloboda's recall paradigm for melodic memory: A new, computational perspective * Musical Achievement and Expertise * 10: Frederick A. Seddon: Musical encounters of the temporary kind * 11: Antonia Ivaldi: Routes to Adolescent Musical Expertise * 12: Reinhard Kopiez: The musical child prodigy (Wunderkind) in music history: A historiometric analysis * 13: Adam Ockelford: : Evidence from a Savant of how Atonal Music is Processed in Cognition' * Examining Musical Performance * 14: Nicholas J. Cook: Off the record: performance, history, and musical logic * 15: Andreas Lehmann: Expressive Variants in the Opening Robert Schumann's Arlequin (from Carnaval, op. 9): 54 Pianists' Interpretations of a Metrical Ambiguity * 16: Geoff Luck: Quantifying the beat-inducing properties of conductors' temporal gestures, and conductor-musician synchronization * 17: Jane Ginsborg and Roger Chaffin: Performance cues in singing: Evidence from practice and recall * Music and cultural integration * 18: Arild Bergh: Emotions in motion: Transforming conflict with the help of music * 19: Richard Parncutt and Angelika Dorfer: The role of music in the integration of cultural minorities * Postlude
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