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Author | Carew, Francis | ||||
Title | The Guitar Voice of Randy Rhoads | Type | Book Whole | ||
Year | 2018 | Publication ![]() |
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Volume | Issue | Pages | 186 | ||
Keywords | Communication and the arts; Classical guitar; Guitar voice; Heavy metal; Music history; Musonia music; Osbourne, Ozzy; Rhoads, Randy | ||||
Abstract | Randy Rhoads was an influential rock guitarist whose synthesis of musical influences had an impact on heavy metal. He developed a classically influenced guitar style that inspired new developments in the guitar’s virtuosic technique and harmonic and melodic language. The sound of heavy metal can be traced directly to his guitar style. Yet no definitive studies have been conducted on his guitar voice, synthesis of musical influences, or contribution to heavy metal music. This thesis is the first study to define the musical influences that make up Rhoads’s innovative guitar voice and playing style. It examines his early childhood, formal training, and influences, honing his skills in Quiet Riot, mastering his skills on Blizzard of Ozz , and mastering his skills on Diary of a Madman . It provides a look at his guitar voice through his adaptation, synthesis, and implementation of musical influences by conducting a detailed musical analysis of the formal, harmonic, rhythmic, and melodic aspects of the songs on Blizzard of Ozz and Diary of a Madman. The examination of his guitar voice and playing style is provided by the following materials: CDs, DVDs, books, scholarly journals, master’s theses and doctoral dissertations, and transcriptions of songs on Blizzard of Ozz and Diary of a Madman. The aim of this thesis is to demonstrate that Rhoads’s guitar voice and playing style are classically influenced and a synthesis of different musical styles. It advocates that his playing style pushed the hard rock music envelope create a new approach to guitar playing that led to a more refined version of the music. It suggests that Rhoads’s musical approach and mindset in the 1980s: classical-style virtuosity, harmony and melody, and acoustic guitar was important to the development of the heavy metal sound, therefore placing him in the historical annals of popular music. |
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Corporate Author | Thesis | Master's thesis | |||
Publisher | Wayne State University | Place of Publication | Ann Arbor | Editor | |
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ISSN | ISBN | 978-0-438-01846-4 | Medium | ||
Area | Expedition | Conference | |||
Notes | Approved | no | |||
Call Number | INTech @ brianhickam2019 @ | Serial | 2207 | ||
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Author | Pomacosi, Yelitza | ||||
Title | Entre música y política: El rock de la Nueva Ola en La Paz | Type | Book Whole | ||
Year | 2024 | Publication ![]() |
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Volume | Issue | Pages | |||
Keywords | Bolivia; Music history; Politics; Nueva Ola (New wave) | ||||
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Publisher | La Paz | Place of Publication | Rincón Ediciones | Editor | |
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Notes | Approved | no | |||
Call Number | UCM-CAM @ amaranta.saguar.garcia @ | Serial | 2685 | ||
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Author | Walch, Florian | ||||
Title | Extreme Metal Across the Digital Divide: Music, Technology, Genre | Type | Book Whole | ||
Year | 2023 | Publication ![]() |
Abbreviated Journal | ||
Volume | Issue | Pages | 301 | ||
Keywords | analog; analysis; digital; extreme metal; genre; media; music history; music theory | ||||
Abstract | This dissertation examines how the analog-digital transition influenced the development of extreme metal, interpreting its present obsession with fine sub-generic distinctions and “old-school” revivals of analog aesthetics as a means of coping with an uneasy dependence on digital media. While extreme metal’s values developed in analog networks, its transcendence of aural and bodily limits required digital prostheses. The digital divide in accessing these contested technologies structured extreme metal’s system of subgenres, which—like the remembered inconveniences of the past—memorialize now-lost resistances. This dissertation’s arc is conceptual and chronological. Its introduction and conclusion frame its inquiry with present concerns, while the inner chapters are case studies that progress from undifferentiated analog beginnings in the 1980s to sub-generic crystallization up to the arrival of the digital audio workstation in the mid-1990s. Using archival materials, newly conducted interviews, and close readings of musical records, these case studies put vernacular theories into dialog with discourses drawn from the musicology of record production, music theory, and critical theory. Ultimately, these constellations aim to articulate a constitutive relationship between what it means to analyze, make, and enjoy popular music. This dissertation’s contributions are twofold. First, it provides models for the analysis of popular music grounded in the historically conditioned values of an aesthetic community—and how these values are adapted to disruptions. Second, this dissertation argues that (sub-)genre, as the promise of being able to repeat (increasingly narrow) aesthetic experiences, requires technologies that make this repetition possible—at least in fantasy. The Introduction uses ethnographic vignettes to establish the contemporary importance of sub-genre and nostalgia. Chapter 1 asks why pioneering musicians can claim to have heard extreme metal before it existed, by manipulating the time-axis of existing records on tape or vinyl players. This fetish-like objectification of creativity reflects a disavowal of subjective creativity. Chapter 2 analyzes death metal drumming’s labor theory of value, demonstrating why digital drum sample replacement was both essential and intolerable for the development of the prized blast beat, which was valued as concrete time, but measured as abstract time. An Interlude examines how moral panics around backmasking let horror-inspired album introductions transmit different messages to insiders and outsiders. Chapter 3 reconstructs the digital-analog assemblage Morrisound Studios used to create the signature hyper-real performance associated with death metal and explores how its aural trace made the digital divide audible. Chapter 4 argues that the death metal production aesthetic undermined the groove-based forms of grindcore, examining how former grindcore bands re-record their own songs in a death metal idiom. Chapter 5 contests the notion that black metal was only a return to an imagined analog past, analyzing it as a post-digital style that used the devaluation of human performance it critiqued in death metal to incorporate influences from electronic dance music. The Postlude returns to the present and considers what is at stake when resistances are lost to remediation. (source: Uchicago.edu) |
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Corporate Author | Thesis | Ph.D. thesis | |||
Publisher | The University of Texas at San Antoniohicago | Place of Publication | Chicago, Illinois | Editor | |
Language | English | Summary Language | Original Title | ||
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Notes | Approved | no | |||
Call Number | INTech @ brianhickam2019 @ | Serial | 2604 | ||
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Author | Beccasino, Ángel | ||||
Title | M-19, el heavy metal latinoamericano | Type | Book Whole | ||
Year | 1989 | Publication ![]() |
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Volume | Issue | Pages | |||
Keywords | Latinamerica; Music History | ||||
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Publisher | Fondo Editorial Santodomingo | Place of Publication | Bogotá | Editor | |
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Notes | Approved | no | |||
Call Number | UCM-CAM @ amaranta.saguar.garcia @ | Serial | 2588 | ||
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Author | Tapia, Reynaldo; Mendoza, Boris (eds) | ||||
Title | El Tejido de las cuerdas disonantes del metal en Bolivia: Análisis descriptivo e histórico del under boliviano | Type | Book Whole | ||
Year | 2022 | Publication ![]() |
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Volume | Issue | Pages | |||
Keywords | Bolivia; Music History; Sociology | ||||
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Publisher | Ediciones Jichha | Place of Publication | La Paz | Editor | Tapia, Reynaldo; Mendoza, Boris |
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Notes | Approved | no | |||
Call Number | UCM-CAM @ amaranta.saguar.garcia @ | Serial | 2480 | ||
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Author | Herrera Díaz, Francisco Augusto | ||||
Title | Metal colombiano: los sonidos de un país en guerra | Type | Book Whole | ||
Year | 2017 | Publication ![]() |
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Volume | Issue | Pages | |||
Keywords | Colombia; Music History; War; Semiotics | ||||
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Corporate Author | Thesis | Bachelor's thesis | |||
Publisher | Pontificia Universidad Javeriana | Place of Publication | Bogotá | Editor | |
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Notes | Approved | no | |||
Call Number | UCM-CAM @ amaranta.saguar.garcia @ | Serial | 2472 | ||
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Author | Skeech, Michael | ||||
Title | The Biology of Heavy Metal. Evolutionary Links Between Science and Culture | Type | Book Whole | ||
Year | 2022 | Publication ![]() |
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Volume | Issue | Pages | |||
Keywords | Music history | ||||
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Corporate Author | Thesis | Doctoral thesis | |||
Publisher | University of Salford | Place of Publication | Salford | Editor | |
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Notes | Approved | no | |||
Call Number | UCM-CAM @ amaranta.saguar.garcia @ | Serial | 2307 | ||
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Author | Barajas, Jhon Edison | ||||
Title | Historia del power metal colombiano: un documental para la creación de un panorama histórico e identitario del power metal | Type | Book Chapter | ||
Year | 2021 | Publication ![]() |
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Volume | Issue | Pages | |||
Keywords | Power Metal; Colombia; Identity; Music history | ||||
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Corporate Author | Thesis | Bachelor's thesis | |||
Publisher | Corporación Universitaria Minuto de Dios | Place of Publication | Bogotá | Editor | |
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Notes | Approved | no | |||
Call Number | UCM-CAM @ amaranta.saguar.garcia @ | Serial | 2273 | ||
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Author | Sikes, Laura | ||||
Title | In the Groove: American Rock Criticism, 1966-1978 | Type | Book Whole | ||
Year | 2017 | Publication ![]() |
Abbreviated Journal | ||
Volume | Issue | Pages | 390 | ||
Keywords | American literature; Communication and the arts; Counterculture; Group identity; Journalism; Literature and linguistics; Music criticism; Music history; Nineteen sixties; Political discourse; Rock journalism; Rock music; Rolling Stone (magazine); United States history | ||||
Abstract | Rock and roll music was a national youth obsession for more than ten years before the first rock critics began writing seriously about the form. Rock was dismissed by adult cultural authorities as empty, degraded, and even dangerous. However, to its fans, rock was an important form of personal expression, a source of group identity, and a mode of political discourse. Rock critics understood its cultural and political power. In their work, they explained its importance to the American public. In 1966, the first rock critic, Richard Goldstein, began writing about rock and roll in a weekly column in the Village Voice called “Pop Eye.” In it, he asserted that rock and roll was an art that deserved the same recognition and protections afforded to other art forms. By 1967, The New Yorker hired Ellen Willis to write about rock in a regular column called “Rock, Etc.” She brought an intellectual sophistication to the genre that would resound long after her career as a rock critic ended. Later in 1967, Rolling Stone debuted; it would become the most visible and influential source of rock criticism for the next fifty years. Editor Jann Wenner’s tastes and approach would affect the way rock was perceived in his own time and for decades after. Finally, in 1968, Lester Bangs debuted onto the scene, writing artful reviews for publications like Creem and Rolling Stone, explaining the changes that were taking place as rock music splintered into subgenres like punk and heavy metal. The quality of these rock critics’ thought and the influence of their writing makes rock criticism an important and under-studied branch of Sixties literature. Each of the rock critics addressed in this dissertation explained to the public what rock music meant and why it mattered. By placing rock in its social, political, and cultural context, they demonstrated that it was far from the empty form cultural authorities thought it was. Their work permanently changed perceptions of popular music, proving that it was substantial enough to stand up to the same kind of critical treatment as other art forms. |
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Corporate Author | Thesis | Ph.D. thesis | |||
Publisher | University of Rochester | Place of Publication | Ann Arbor | Editor | |
Language | Summary Language | Original Title | |||
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ISSN | ISBN | 978-0-355-39567-9 | Medium | ||
Area | Expedition | Conference | |||
Notes | Approved | no | |||
Call Number | INTech @ brianhickam2019 @ | Serial | 2208 | ||
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Author | Simms, Bekah | ||||
Title | Foreverdark: For Amplified Cello Soloist and Chamber Orchestra | Type | Book Whole | ||
Year | 2019 | Publication ![]() |
Abbreviated Journal | ||
Volume | Issue | Pages | 64 | ||
Keywords | Bathory; Cello; Concerto; Heavy metal; Musical composition; Music history; Music theory | ||||
Abstract | Foreverdark is a single movement, ten-minute concertino (short concerto) for amplified cello soloist with live electronic processing and chamber orchestra. The exact instrumentation consists of violoncello solo, flute, clarinet, oboe, bassoon, trumpet in Bb, horn in F, tenor trombone, percussion, piano, harp, violin 1, violin 2, viola, violoncello, and double bass; each part is played by a single player. The compositional style is a continuation and deeper exploration of the composer’s current compositional interests, namely the integration of quotation and popular music style signals within more broadly art music formats. By amplifying and separating the cello soloist from the ensemble, the player’s position alludes to that of a “lead guitarist;” subsequently, much of their melodic material (and that of the orchestra around them) is sourced from a variety of heavy metal riffs, most of them from bands the composer listened to as a teenager. The piece’s title, “Foreverdark,” both references the song with a similar name (Foreverdark Woods) by Viking metal artist Bathory as well as the composer’s long and somewhat nostalgic relationship to the metal genre itself. In addition to heavy metal-sourced melodic and rhythmic motifs, “Foreverdark” also contains some material bordering on a folk music aesthetic. Surprisingly, metal-turned-folk is a common stylistic shift in for some of the bands quoted within the work. | ||||
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Corporate Author | Thesis | Doctoral thesis | |||
Publisher | University of Toronto (Canada) | Place of Publication | Ann Arbor | Editor | |
Language | Summary Language | Original Title | |||
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Series Volume | Series Issue | Edition | |||
ISSN | ISBN | 9781085778831 | Medium | ||
Area | Expedition | Conference | |||
Notes | Approved | no | |||
Call Number | INTech @ brianhickam2019 @ | Serial | 2201 | ||
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