ASU Electronic Theses and Dissertations
This collection includes most of the ASU Theses and Dissertations from 2011 to present. ASU Theses and Dissertations are available in downloadable PDF format; however, a small percentage of items are under embargo. Information about the dissertations/theses includes degree information, committee members, an abstract, supporting data or media.
In addition to the electronic theses found in the ASU Digital Repository, ASU Theses and Dissertations can be found in the ASU Library Catalog.
Dissertations and Theses granted by Arizona State University are archived and made available through a joint effort of the ASU Graduate College and the ASU Libraries. For more information or questions about this collection contact or visit the Digital Repository ETD Library Guide or contact the ASU Graduate College at gradformat@asu.edu.
- Fitzpatrick, Carole
- 11 Arizona State University
- 9 Dreyfoos, Dale
- 6 Ryan, Russell
- 4 Holbrook, Amy
- 4 Mills, Robert
- 3 Campbell, Andrew
- more
- 2 May, Judy
- 2 Norton, Kay
- 2 Oldani, Robert
- 2 Rogers, Rodney
- 1 Allen, Jennifer
- 1 Barefield, Robert
- 1 Briggs, Andrew Nathan
- 1 Carpenter, Ellon
- 1 Flores, Andrea
- 1 Ginger, Kerry Anne
- 1 Glenn, Melissa Walker
- 1 Gordon, Stefan
- 1 Hamilton, Robert
- 1 Mclain, Christi Marie
- 1 Mook, Richard
- 1 Nixon, Thomas
- 1 Peterman, Jeremy P.
- 1 Pritchard, Melissa
- 1 Reber, William
- 1 Rocklein, Robyn Michele
- 1 Ruhleder, Kathleen
- 1 Ryan, Russell R
- 1 Schildkret, David
- Doctoral Dissertation
- 1 Sound
- 11 Public
- 10 Music
- 2 Handel
- 2 Performing arts
- 1 "Eric Hermannson's Soul"
- 1 Alfredo Casella
- 1 American
- 1 Charles
- more
- 1 Classical literature
- 1 Composition
- 1 Daniel Catan
- 1 Florencia en el Amazonas
- 1 Freud
- 1 Gender
- 1 Gender studies
- 1 Gluck
- 1 India
- 1 Italian Music
- 1 Ives
- 1 Latin America
- 1 Libby Larsen
- 1 Magical Realism
- 1 McClary
- 1 Mezzo-soprano
- 1 Misogyny
- 1 Modernism
- 1 Music education
- 1 Musical Performances
- 1 Opera
- 1 Ornamentation
- 1 Perform
- 1 Performance Practice
- 1 Schoenberg
- 1 Singers
- 1 Song Cycle
- 1 Songs
- 1 Strauss
- 1 The Barber of Seville
- 1 Theater history
- 1 Trafficking
- 1 Vocal Categories
- 1 Vocal Music
- 1 Wagner
- 1 Willa Cather
- 1 Women's Studies
- 1 Zwischenfach
- 1 aria
- 1 bel canto
- 1 largo al factotum
- 1 myth
- 1 opera
- 1 orchestral reduction
- 1 ornaments
- 1 piano
- 1 virtue
- Language in Trauma: A Pilot Study of Pause Frequency as a Predictor of Cognitive Change Due to Post Traumatic Stress Disorder
- Subvert City: The Interventions of an Anarchist in Occupy Phoenix, 2011-2012
- Exploring the Impact of Augmented Reality on Collaborative Decision-Making in Small Teams
- Towards a National Cinema: An Analysis of Caliwood Films by Luis Ospina and Carlos Mayolo and Their Fundamental Contribution to Colombian Film
- 国家集中采购试点政策对制药企业和制药产业的影响评估
In My Dreams is a song cycle for mezzo-soprano, narrator, and piano, based on the poetry of survivors of childhood sex trafficking. It was created to raise awareness of trafficking through music and poetry through the expression of individual dreams and voices. In My Dreams recounts the devastating loss of childhood and celebrates empowering words of survival. The poetry was collected in poetry workshops held in Calcutta and Delhi India in January 2009. After the poems were selected, translated, and edited, composer Dr. Gerard Yun set them to music. This document outlines the process of creating and performing this unique …
- Contributors
- Glenn, Melissa Walker, Fitzpatrick, Carole, Pritchard, Melissa, et al.
- Created Date
- 2010
Numerous orchestral reductions for piano are plagued by cumbersome passages that impede pianists from delivering phrases with flow and elegance. The vocal works of George Frideric Handel (1685–1759) and Richard Wagner (1813–1883) are among the more unwieldy of these. While arrangers of the piano vocal scores by these two composers admirably include as much orchestration as possible, their efforts often result in writing that is not idiomatic for the piano. The frustrating difficulties in the orchestral reductions of Handel’s “Empio, dirò, tu sei” (Giulio Cesare), his Messiah chorus “For unto us a child is born” as well as Wagner’s aria …
- Contributors
- Peterman, Jeremy P., Campbell, Andrew, Fitzpatrick, Carole, et al.
- Created Date
- 2012
Arnold Schoenberg's 1908-09 song cycle, Das Buch der hängenden Gärten [The Book of the Hanging Gardens], opus 15, represents one of his most decisive early steps into the realm of musical modernism. In the midst of personal and artistic crises, Schoenberg set texts by Stefan George in a style he called "pantonality," and described his composition as radically new. Though stylistically progressive, however, Schoenberg's musical achievement had certain ideologically conservative roots: the composer numbered among turn-of-the-century Viennese artists and thinkers whose opposition to the conventional and the popular--in favor of artistic autonomy and creativity--concealed a reactionary misogyny. A critical reading …
- Contributors
- Ginger, Kerry Anne, Fitzpatrick, Carole, Dreyfoos, Dale, et al.
- Created Date
- 2012
This doctoral project involves a multi-disciplined analysis concerning Agamemnon's daughters (Iphigenia, Electra, and Chrysothemis) and how these women's gender and virtues were depicted as compared with ideal Greek women in antiquity. Three composers in three different eras adapted the literary and musical depictions of these women based on the composer's society, culture, audience expectations, musical climate and personal goals. George Friedrich Handel's Oreste (1734), Christoph Willibald von Gluck's Iphigénie en Tauride (1779) and Richard Strauss's Elektra (1909) are the main operas used for this analysis. The Mycenaean House of Atreus, a dynasty which the ancient Greeks traced back to the …
- Contributors
- Rocklein, Robyn Michele, Fitzpatrick, Carole, Campbell, Andrew, et al.
- Created Date
- 2012
The performance of Charles Ives's art songs can be challenging to even the most experienced singers, but to beginning singers, they may be even more so, due to such twentieth-century aspects as polytonality, polyrhythm, tone clusters, aleatoric elements, and quarter tones. However, Ives used previously existing material, often familiar hymn tunes, as the foundation for many of his art songs. If beginning students first are exposed to this borrowed material, such as a simple hymn tune, which should be well within even the most experienced singer's comfort range, they can then learn this tune first, as a more simplistic reference …
- Contributors
- Ruhleder, Kathleen, Fitzpatrick, Carole, Dreyfoos, Dale, et al.
- Created Date
- 2012
Zwischen in the German language means `between,' and over the past century, as operatic voices have evolved in both range and size, the voice classification of Zwischenfach has become much more relevant - particularly to the female voice. Identifying whether nineteenth century composers recognized the growing opportunities for vocal drama, size, and range in singers and therefore wrote roles for `between' singers; or conversely whether, singers began to challenge and develop their voices to sing the new influx of romantic, verismo and grand repertoire is difficult to determine. Whichever the case, teachers and students should not be surprised about the …
- Contributors
- Allen, Jennifer, Norton, Kay, Fitzpatrick, Carole, et al.
- Created Date
- 2012
Libby Larsen is one of the most performed and acclaimed composers today. She is a spirited, compelling, and sensitive composer whose music enhances the poetry of America's most prominent authors. Notable among her works are song cycles for soprano based on the poetry of female writers, among them novelist and poet Willa Cather (1873-1947). Larsen has produced two song cycles on works from Cather's substantial output of fiction: one based on Cather's short story, "Eric Hermannson's Soul," titled Margaret Songs: Three Songs from Willa Cather (1996); and later, My Antonia (2000), based on Cather's novel of the same title. In …
- Contributors
- Mclain, Christi Marie, Fitzpatrick, Carole, Dreyfoos, Dale, et al.
- Created Date
- 2013
Although opera is the last musical genre one typically associates with Latin America, Mexican composer Daniel Catán (1949-2011) found surprising success across the United States and overseas with his opera Florencia en el Amazonas (1996). Catán blends colorful music with literary elements to create a representation of Latin American culture through language, drama, scenery, and music. Among these elements is realism mágico (magical realism), a significant characteristic of Latin American literature. Indeed, the plot of the opera is influenced by Gabriel García Márquez's novel, El amor en los tiempos del cólera (Love in the Time of Cholera, 1985), as well …
- Contributors
- Flores, Andrea, Fitzpatrick, Carole, Dreyfoos, Dale, et al.
- Created Date
- 2013
From the time it was written, the aria "Largo al factotum" from Rossini's Il barbiere di Siviglia has been performed and ornamented in many different ways. The present study is an inventory and analysis of ornaments sung in 33 recordings from 1900 to 2011 and the major differences that they exhibit one from another. The singers in this study are baritones with international careers, who have performed the role of Figaro either at the Metropolitan Opera (New York) or at La Scala (Milan). The study identifies and tracks some of the changes in the ornamentation of the aria by noting …
- Contributors
- Briggs, Andrew Nathan, Mills, Robert, Oldani, Robert, et al.
- Created Date
- 2014
The Sonata for Violin and Piano in E-flat Major, Op. 18 (1888), was the last major work of chamber music by Richard Strauss (1864-1949). Although for only two instruments, the Sonata reflects Strauss's growing interest in symphonic writing both in his tone poems and orchestral songs, anticipating his style of orchestration and his expressive use of tone colors. This study examines instances of orchestral writing in the piano and makes suggestions for their performance. An overview of Strauss's compositions, from his early chamber music to the `heroic' symphonic works, places the Sonata in context. An analytical description of each of …
- Contributors
- Nixon, Thomas, Ryan, Russell R, Campbell, Andrew, et al.
- Created Date
- 2014