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improvisation |
Also found in: Wikipedia | 0.03 sec. |
improvisationCreation of music in real time. Improvisation usually involves some preparation beforehand, particularly when there is more than one performer. Despite the central place of notated music in the Western tradition, improvisation has often played a role, from the earliest organum through the use of continuo (partially improvised accompaniment played on a bass line) in the 17th and 18th centuries. It has taken forms such as creation of a melody over a bass line for dancing, elaborate ornamentation added to a repeated section in an aria, keyboard variations on popular songs, concerto cadenzas, and free solo fantasias. Perhaps at its lowest ebb in the 19th century, improvisation returned to concert music in “experimental” compositions and in “authentic” performances of older music. Its most important contemporary Western form is jazz. It is also a defining feature of the raga. |
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| With an intrusive adaptation of the squash court building to the south of the site, his approach seemed to break every rule set by Jacobsen, and flew in the face of Banham's observation that the site held no room for improvization. Swiss writer Jean-Jacques Odier notes that even though the English see the French as intellectual, `there's often with us a background of improvization, bricolage (`do-it-yourself') is the French word, a belief that things will come out right in the end'. ``It was nice working with a bunch of people, the improvization, being on stage,'' he recalls. |
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