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    Improvisation through Dalcroze-inspired activities in beginner student jazz ensembles : a hermeneutic phenomenology

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    Table of contents (210.5Kb)
    Chapter 1 (156.8Kb)
    Chapter 2 (324.9Kb)
    Chapter 3 (434.3Kb)
    Chapter 4 (454.3Kb)
    Chapter 5 (406.3Kb)
    Bibliography & appendix (5.888Mb)
    Date
    2014
    Author
    Davel, Dewald Hattingh
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    Abstract
    This dissertation investigated the meanings students from beginner jazz ensembles ascribe to learning jazz improvisation through Dalcroze-inspired activities. Over the course of ten weeks, students from three respective beginner jazz ensembles were exposed to Dalcroze-inspired activities as the medium for learning to improvise. The sessions were held on a weekly basis, facilitated by the researcher. Hermeneutic phenomenology guided the research procedures. In-depth interviews, personal reflections, participant reflection essays as well as video recordings were the methods of data collection. Through the use of Atlas.ti 7, the data were organized and analysed by means of coding and categorisation, which led to the identification of five themes. The five themes that emerged from the data analysis were: feeling the music in my body, supporting development as a jazz musician, building character, building relationships, and stimulating and motivating learning. This study provides an understanding of the connection between jazz improvisation and Dalcroze Eurhythmics as well as how students experience learning jazz improvisation through Dalcrozeinspired activities. Through this understanding this study proposes a more holistic approach to jazz improvisation teaching that can inform further research and application of Dalcroze Eurhythmics in jazz pedagogy.
    URI
    http://hdl.handle.net/10394/14230
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    • Humanities [2696]

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