LEBENSLIEDER: Daybreak: Version for Chamber Ensemble

Allbwn ymchwil: Ffurf annhestunolCyfansoddiad

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LEBENSLIEDER: Daybreak: Version for Chamber Ensemble. Lewis, Andrew (Arall). 2018. CE Composers Edition.

Allbwn ymchwil: Ffurf annhestunolCyfansoddiad

HarvardHarvard

Lewis, A, LEBENSLIEDER: Daybreak: Version for Chamber Ensemble, 2018, Cyfansoddiad, CE Composers Edition.

APA

Lewis, A. (2018). LEBENSLIEDER: Daybreak: Version for Chamber Ensemble. Cyfansoddiad, CE Composers Edition.

CBE

Lewis A. 2018. LEBENSLIEDER: Daybreak: Version for Chamber Ensemble. CE Composers Edition. [Cyfansoddiad].

MLA

Lewis, Andrew, LEBENSLIEDER: Daybreak: Version for Chamber Ensemble, CE Composers Edition, Cyfansoddiad, 2018

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Author

RIS

TY - ADVS

T1 - LEBENSLIEDER: Daybreak

T2 - Version for Chamber Ensemble

A2 - Lewis, Andrew

PY - 2018

Y1 - 2018

N2 - 'Lebenslieder' is a song-symphony for orchestra or chamber ensemble with electronics. The vocal part consists of extracts from recorded interviews with people with dementia and their partners who care for them. Their voices are translated directly into orchestral material, bringing the experience of living with dementia into the concert hall, breaking the silence that often surrounds the topic, and giving voice to the real-life, day-to-day experience of what is fast becoming the defining medical condition of our age.'Daybreak', the opening movement of 'Lebenslieder', concerns the moment that those with dementia, or those close to them, first started to notice something was different: the 'dawning' of the realisation that there may be a 'problem'. It also considers the subsequent reactions of family, colleagues and friends, as the reality of dementia is brought into the full light of day. The composition of 'Lebenslieder' was funded by The Leverhulme Trust as part of a Leverhulme Research Fellowship in 2017. It was undertaken in co-operation with Professor Bob Woods of Bangor University, and the ACTIFCare research project, funded in the UK by the ESRC. Special thanks to Hannah Jelley (Research Project Support Officer, Bangor University), and to all the participants for sharing their thoughts and experiences: John Alderson, Sandra Alderson, Colin Davies, Judy Futter, Eric Jones, Gwen B Mayer and two anonymous contributors.

AB - 'Lebenslieder' is a song-symphony for orchestra or chamber ensemble with electronics. The vocal part consists of extracts from recorded interviews with people with dementia and their partners who care for them. Their voices are translated directly into orchestral material, bringing the experience of living with dementia into the concert hall, breaking the silence that often surrounds the topic, and giving voice to the real-life, day-to-day experience of what is fast becoming the defining medical condition of our age.'Daybreak', the opening movement of 'Lebenslieder', concerns the moment that those with dementia, or those close to them, first started to notice something was different: the 'dawning' of the realisation that there may be a 'problem'. It also considers the subsequent reactions of family, colleagues and friends, as the reality of dementia is brought into the full light of day. The composition of 'Lebenslieder' was funded by The Leverhulme Trust as part of a Leverhulme Research Fellowship in 2017. It was undertaken in co-operation with Professor Bob Woods of Bangor University, and the ACTIFCare research project, funded in the UK by the ESRC. Special thanks to Hannah Jelley (Research Project Support Officer, Bangor University), and to all the participants for sharing their thoughts and experiences: John Alderson, Sandra Alderson, Colin Davies, Judy Futter, Eric Jones, Gwen B Mayer and two anonymous contributors.

KW - music

KW - music composition

KW - orchestral music

KW - instrumental music

KW - electronic music

UR - https://composersedition.com/andrew-lewis-lebenslieder-daybreak

M3 - Composition

PB - CE Composers Edition

ER -