Churcher, Gareth (2025) Site-Specific Composition for Brass and Voice: A practice-research enquiry into the creative methods deployed to respond to the challenges and opportunities of producing site-specific participatory music performances in Cornwall. PhD thesis, Falmouth University.
Site-Specific Composition for Brass and Voice: A practice-research enquiry into the creative methods deplo ... (20MB) |
Type of Research: | Thesis |
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Creators: | Churcher, Gareth |
Description: | This research enquiry explores a range of appropriate creative methods to produce site-specific participatory music performances in Cornwall. Using a practice-research approach, research questions were identified, compositional and performance strategies were tested, developed and implemented through five pieces. The research question identified is as follows:- What are the creative methods (compositional, rehearsal, direction and performance) deployed to address the challenges and opportunities of producing site-specific community-focused music performances in Cornwall? From planning to performance, each piece as part of the overall enquiry raised and identified a set of challenges, issues and opportunities throughout the various stages of the process within each piece. A practice-research (Nelson: 2013) methodology was used to offer appropriate solutions for each of the research pieces. Through reflective practice, each piece's outcomes relevant to the research question informed the next research piece. An iterative process was followed in each case so that creative methods could be evolved and adapted to offer solutions for the proceeding piece and in response to the overarching research question. Throughout the research the brass band is used as the primary musical ensemble with added vocal elements. Many of the site-specific pieces required performances that involved working within large, often outdoor physical spaces. It was therefore an informed choice to work with instruments that were resilient to weather, portable and acoustically directional. Each of the five pieces presented a public performance and produced multiple forms of documentation: musical scores, video, audio recordings and were accompanied by complementary writing. The findings are summarised in response to the research question and appropriate sitespecific compositional and performance solutions are offered. It is intended that other artists exploring the field of site-specific participatory music performance can draw upon and use the insights offered by this thesis and project portfolio. It may be that creative practitioners in other artforms, such as visual arts, dance or site-specific sound installation, may find the outcomes useful. It could allow them to develop strategies relevant to their specific practice and thus permeate the insight into a wider field of arts practice. |
Date: | June 2025 |
Date Deposited: | 22 Aug 2025 12:59 |
Last Modified: | 22 Aug 2025 12:59 |
Item ID: | 24611 |
URI: | https://ualresearchonline.arts.ac.uk/id/eprint/24611 |
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