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E-grāmata: Musical Imaginations: Multidisciplinary Perspectives on Creativity, Performance and Perception [Oxford Scholarship Online E-books]

Edited by (Professor of Education, Roehampton University, UK), Edited by (Professor of Music Psychology and Improvisation, School of Life Sciences, Gl), Edited by (Professor of Social Psychology, College of Humanities and Social Science, University of Edinburgh, UK)
  • Formāts: 498 pages
  • Izdošanas datums: 05-Jan-2012
  • Izdevniecība: Oxford University Press
  • ISBN-13: 9780199568086
  • Oxford Scholarship Online E-books
  • Cena pašlaik nav zināma
  • Formāts: 498 pages
  • Izdošanas datums: 05-Jan-2012
  • Izdevniecība: Oxford University Press
  • ISBN-13: 9780199568086
Musical imagination and creativity are amongst the most abstract and complex aspects of musical behaviour. This book is a wide ranging, multidisciplinary review of the latest theory and research on musical creativity, performance and perception by some of the most eminent scholars in their respective disciplines.

Musical imagination and creativity are amongst the most abstract and complex aspects of musical behaviour, though, until recently, they have been difficult to subject to empirical enquiry. However, music psychology and some allied disciplines have now developed, both theoretically and methodologically, to the point where some of these topics are now firmly within our grasp. The study of creativity and imagination is growing rapidly in disciplines including psychology, sociology, neuroscience, and education. The inter- and multidisciplinary study of music, and developments in music psychology in particular, mean that studies of musical imagination and creativity in action are now distinctly possible

'Musical Imaginations' is a wide ranging, multidisciplinary review of the latest theory and research on musical creativity, performance and perception by some of the most eminent scholars in their respective disciplines. The topics addressed in this book include the investigation of creativity and imagination in music and emotion, composition and improvisation, performance and performance traditions, listening strategies, different musical genres and cultural belief systems, social collaboration, identity formation, and the development of psychologically-based strategies and interventions for the enhancement of performing musicians.

With creativity now a topic of significant interest, this book will be valuable to all those in the fields of psychology, sociology, neuroscience, education, as well as to musicians themselves - dealing with practical as well as theoretical issues in music therapy, performance and education.






The study of creativity and imagination is growing rapidly in disciplines including psychology, sociology, neuroscience, and education. The inter- and multidisciplinary study of music, and developments in music psychology in particular, mean that studies of musical imagination and creativity in action are now distinctly possible. This book undertakes a multidisciplinary review of these developments. It contains a wide range of contributions by some of the most eminent scholars in their respective disciplines, representing a comprehensive account of the state of the art of theory and research on musical creativity, performance and perception.
Contributors xi
1 Explaining musical imaginations: Creativity, performance, and perception
1(16)
David J. Hargreaves
Raymond MacDonald
Dorothy Miell
Part 1 Perspectives from musicology, sociology, and ethnomusicology
2 Creativity in performance
17(14)
Eric F. Clarke
3 Imagination feeds memory: Exploring evidence from a musical savant using zygonic theory
31(31)
Adam Ockelford
4 Creativity as a social fact
62(11)
Simon Frith
5 Musical creativity as social agency: Composer Paul Hindemith
73(14)
Ian Sutherland
Tia DeNora
6 Imagining creativity: An ethnomusicological perspective on how belief systems encourage or inhibit creative activities in music
87(20)
Juniper Hill
Part 2 Perspectives from cognitive, social, and developmental psychology
7 Musical materials or metaphorical models? A psychological investigation of what inspires composers
107(17)
Shira Lee Katz
Howard Gardner
8 Spreading activation and dissociation: A cognitive mechanism for creative processing in music
124(17)
Emery Schubert
9 Composers' creative process: The role of life-events, emotion and reason
141(15)
Vladimir J. Konecni
10 Imagination and creativity in music listening
156(17)
David J. Hargreaves
Jonathan James Hargreaves
Adrian C. North
11 Creativity in singing: Universality and sensitive developmental periods?
173(20)
Annabel J. Cohen
Part 3 Perspectives from socio-cultural psychology
12 Digital tools and discourse in music: The ecology of composition
193(13)
Goran Folkestad
13 Troubling the creative imaginary: Some possibilities of ecological thinking for music and learning
206(14)
Margaret S. Barrett
14 Organ improvisation: Edition, extemporization, expansion, and instant composition
220(13)
Karin Johansson
15 Communication, collaboration, and creativity: How musicians negotiate a collective `sound'
233(9)
Karen Littleton
Neil Mercer
16 Improvisation as a creative process within contemporary music
242(17)
Raymond MacDonald
Graeme Wilson
Dorothy Miell
Part 4 Perspectives from neuroscience
17 Communicative musicality: The human impulse to create and share music
259(26)
Colwyn Trevarthen
18 Musicianship-how and where in the brain?
285(11)
Mari Tervaniemi
19 Recreating speech through singing for stroke patients with non-fluent aphasia
296(17)
Bradley W. Vines
20 Shared affective motion experience (SAME) and creative, interactive music therapy
313(19)
Istvan Molnar-Szakacs
Vanya Green Assuied
Katie Overy
21 Enhancing imaginative expression in the performing arts with EEG-neurofeedback
332(19)
John Gruzelier
22 Musical imagery and imagination: The function, measurement, and application of imagery skills for performance
351(18)
Terry Clark
Aaron Williamon
Aleksandar Aksentijevic
Part 5 Perspectives from education, psychiatry, and therapy
23 The call to create: Flow experience in music learning and teaching
369(16)
Lori A. Custodero
24 Musical creativity, biography, genre, and learning
385(14)
Graham F. Welch
25 Music, music therapy, and schizophrenia
399(15)
Denise Grocke
David J. Castle
26 Creativity in improvisational, psychodynamic music therapy
414(15)
Jaakko Erkkila
Esa Ala-Ruona
Marko Punkanen
Jorg Fachner
27 Developing creative improvisation skills in music therapy: The tools for imaginative music-making
429(22)
Anthony Wigram
Part 6 Afterword
28 Beyond creativity?
451(10)
Nicholas Cook
Author Index 461(10)
Subject Index 471
David Hargreaves is Professor of Education and Froebel Research Fellow at Roehampton University, and Visiting Professor at the Inter-University Institute of Macau, and the University of Gothenburg, Sweden, where he was awarded an honorary doctorate in 2004. He has been Editor of Psychology of Music, Chair of the Research Commission of the International Society for Music Education (ISME), and is a Fellow of the British Psychological Society, His books, in psychology, education, the arts, and music have been translated into 15 languages. He has appeared on BBC TV and radio as a jazz pianist and composer, and is organist at his local village church, but really ought to do more jazz playing than he currently has time for.



Dorothy Miell is Vice Principal at the University of Edinburgh and Head of the College of Humanities and Social Science within the University. Previously she was Professor of Psychology and Dean of Social Sciences at The Open University where she was a member of the multidisciplinary Music Research Group. Starting with her doctoral research on communication patterns in developing relationships she has developed an increasing interest in studying how people collaborate on creative activities, working across boundaries between Music, Education, Social and Developmental Psychology and with colleagues in the UK and internationally. She is on the editorial boards of the Journal of Thinking Skills and Creativity, Psychology of Music, and the Journal of Social and Personal Relationships.

Raymond MacDonald is Professor of Music Psychology and Improvisation at Glasgow Caledonian University. After completing his PhD at the University of Glasgow, investigating therapeutic applications of music, he worked as Artistic Director for a music company, Sounds of Progress, specialising in working with people who have special needs. His ongoing research focuses on issues relating to improvisation, musical communication, music therapy, music education and musical identities. He has co-edited two texts with Dorothy Miell and David Hargreaves, Musical Identities (2002) and Musical Communication (2005) and is currently working on two new books, Music Health and Wellbeing and Musical Imaginations. He is currently Editor of the journal Psychology of Music and Associate Editor for The International Journal of Music Education, Jazz Research Journal and Research Studies in Music Education. As a composer and saxophonist he has recorded over 50 CDs and has toured and broadcast worldwide.