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.
- 364 Arizona State University
- 77 Rogers, Rodney
- 55 Norton, Kay
- 53 Ryan, Russell
- 42 Campbell, Andrew
- 40 Holbrook, Amy
- 37 Feisst, Sabine
- more
- 34 Hill, Gary
- 33 Rockmaker, Jody
- 32 Spring, Robert
- 31 Dreyfoos, Dale
- 27 Schuring, Martin
- 25 Gardner, Joshua
- 24 Hackbarth, Glenn
- 23 Micklich, Albie
- 23 Swoboda, Deanna
- 21 Koonce, Frank
- 20 Demars, James
- 19 Oldani, Robert
- 18 DeMars, James
- 17 Carpenter, Ellon
- 17 Landschoot, Thomas
- 17 Reber, William
- 16 Hamilton, Robert
- 16 Rotaru, Catalin
- 16 Solis, Theodore
- 15 Britton, David
- 15 Saucier, Catherine
- 15 Swartz, Jonathan
- 14 Bailey, Wayne
- 14 Jiang, Danwen
- 14 Levy, Benjamin
- 14 Russell, Timothy
- 14 Suzuki, Kotoka
- 13 Doan, Jerry
- 13 Rio, Robin
- 12 Caslor, Jason
- 12 FitzPatrick, Carole
- 12 Kocour, Michael
- 12 Pagano, Caio
- 12 Schmidt, Margaret
- 11 Ericson, John
- 11 Hill, Gary W
- 11 Mills, Robert
- 11 Schildkret, David
- 11 Sullivan, Jill
- 10 Fitzpatrick, Carole
- 10 Kopta, Anne
- 10 Tobias, Evan
- 9 Cosand, Walter
- 9 Creviston, Christopher
- 9 Marshall, Kimberly
- 9 McLin, Katherine
- 9 Meir, Baruch
- 9 Solis, Ted
- 9 Spring, Robert S
- 9 Stauffer, Sandra
- 8 Hickman, David
- 7 Buck, Nancy
- 7 Bush, Jeffrey
- 7 Gardner, Joshua T
- 7 Mclin, Katherine
- 6 Buck, Elizabeth
- 6 Crowe, Barbara
- 6 May, Judy
- 6 Mcallister, Timothy
- 6 Pilafian, J. Samuel
- 6 Sunkett, Mark
- 5 Ericson, John Q
- 5 Gentry, Gregory
- 5 Humphreys, Jere
- 5 Humphreys, Jere T
- 4 Crowe, Barbara J
- 4 DeMaris, Brian
- 4 Pilafian, Samuel
- 4 Schmelz, Peter
- 4 Smith, Jeffrey
- 4 Stover, Christopher
- 4 Wells, Christopher
- 4 Yeo, Douglas
- 3 Belgrave, Melita
- 3 Coleman, Grisha
- 3 Elgar Kopta, Anne
- 3 Hickman, David R
- 3 Ingalls, Todd
- 3 Little, Bliss
- 3 Meyer Thompson, Janice
- 3 Mook, Richard
- 3 Oldani, Robert W.
- 3 Paine, Garth
- 3 Pilafian, Sam
- 3 Stauffer, Sandra L
- 3 Turaga, Pavan
- 2 Bailey, Wayne A
- 2 Cook, Perry R
- 2 Crowe, Barbara J.
- 2 Dori, Gil
- 2 Edwards, Brad
- 2 Etezady, Roshanne
- 2 Feisst, Sabine M
- 364 application/pdf
- 24 audio/mpeg
- 17 audio/x-wav
- 8 application/zip
- 4 video/mp4
- 2 audio/mp4
- 2 video/x-ms-asf
- more
- 1 application/vnd.ms-excel
- 1 audio/x-aiff
- 1 audio/x-ms-wma
- 1 video/x-msvideo
- 315 Doctoral Dissertation
- 49 Masters Thesis
- 45 Sound
- 7 Moving Image
- 364 Public
- Music
- 62 Performing arts
- 41 Music education
- 17 Piano
- 17 music
- 16 Pedagogy
- 14 Clarinet
- more
- 12 Performance
- 11 Musical composition
- 10 Music Education
- 9 Performing arts education
- 9 Violin
- 9 composition
- 9 piano
- 8 Composition
- 8 Fine arts
- 8 History
- 8 Jazz
- 8 Opera
- 8 Recording
- 8 performance
- 7 Education
- 7 Guitar
- 7 Organ
- 7 Sonata
- 7 Trombone
- 7 Trumpet
- 6 Concerto
- 6 Improvisation
- 6 Orchestra
- 6 Saxophone
- 6 music therapy
- 5 Band
- 5 Composer
- 5 Literature
- 5 Music Therapy
- 5 Music history
- 5 Percussion
- 5 Performance Guide
- 5 Solo
- 5 Transcription
- 5 chamber music
- 5 clarinet
- 4 Acoustics
- 4 Analysis
- 4 Baroque
- 4 Bassoon
- 4 Chen Yi
- 4 Commission
- 4 Conductor
- 4 Double Bass
- 4 Electronics
- 4 Latin American studies
- 4 Multimedia
- 4 Musical Performances
- 4 New Music
- 4 Performing Arts
- 4 cello
- 4 violin
- 3 Arizona
- 3 Arrangement
- 3 Bach
- 3 Biographies
- 3 Brazil
- 3 Chamber Music
- 3 Children
- 3 Choral
- 3 Dance
- 3 Debussy
- 3 Entrepreneurship
- 3 Euphonium
- 3 French Horn
- 3 Horn
- 3 Instrumental
- 3 Religion
- 3 Russian
- 3 Russian history
- 3 Sonatas
- 3 Special education
- 3 Symphony
- 3 Technology
- 3 Telemann
- 3 Vocal
- 3 Voice
- 3 Wind Ensemble
- 3 composer
- 3 education
- 3 guitar
- 3 jazz
- 3 music education
- 3 recording
- 3 saxophone
- 3 sound
- 3 teaching
- 3 transcription
- 3 wind ensemble
- 2 American
- 2 American studies
- 2 Arranging
- 2 Art Song
- Dwarf Galaxies as Laboratories of Protogalaxy Physics: Canonical Star Formation Laws at Low Metallicity
- Evolutionary Genetics of CORL Proteins
- Social Skills and Executive Functioning in Children with PCDH-19
- Deep Domain Fusion for Adaptive Image Classification
- Software Defined Pulse-Doppler Radar for Over-The-Air Applications: The Joint Radar-Communications Experiment
The purpose of this project was to create a beginner-level oboe method book that provides equal attention to both the instrumental and musical concepts necessary for a beginner oboist. The existing literature for beginning oboe students focuses on two specific settings: full band classrooms, where students are playing and learning the instruments together, and private lesson settings, where one or a group of oboe students are focused on learning to play the oboe. Books written for band settings typically focus on teaching the students how to function as a part of the band, with extensive coverage of musical concepts; conversely, …
- Contributors
- Aikens, William, Schuring, Martin, Gardner, Joshua, et al.
- Created Date
- 2014
The marimba has garnered increased attention in percussion performance over the past thirty years. Literature for beginners through professionals in a multitude of styles have been written. With the ever-growing number of marimbists since the 1980's there has been a high demand for new works. Numerous pieces were created through commissions: composers contracted to write music by individuals, institutions, and consortia. Three primary types of marimba solo music were written: unaccompanied solos, concerti, and marimba solos with electronic accompaniment. Since electronic music is relatively new in marimba performance, there is very little information published regarding this topic. Only a handful …
- Contributors
- Chen, Yi-Chia, Smith, J.B., Bush, Jeffery, et al.
- Created Date
- 2011
Despite the wealth of folk music traditions in Portugal and the importance of the clarinet in the music of bandas filarmonicas, it is uncommon to find works featuring the clarinet using Portuguese folk music elements. In the interest of expanding this type of repertoire, three new works were commissioned from three different composers. The resulting works are Seres Imaginarios 3 by Luis Cardoso; Delirio Barroco by Tiago Derrica; and Memória by Pedro Faria Gomes. In an effort to submit these new works for inclusion into mainstream performance literature, the author has recorded these works on compact disc. This document includes …
- Contributors
- Ferreira, Wesley, Spring, Robert S, Bailey, Wayne, et al.
- Created Date
- 2013
New music is often created as a product of commissions resulting in a collaborative effort between the performer and the composer. This performer-composer relationship represents an important component of the role of the artist in expanding the repertoire of the instrument. Belgian composer, Norbert Goddaer (b. 1933), has written numerous works for clarinet that are the result of such collaborations. Mr. Goddaer's works for clarinet are well-crafted and audience-friendly, and are thus good programming choices for students and professionals alike. His clarinet works have been performed worldwide in artist recitals, conferences for organizations such as the International Clarinet Association, The …
- Contributors
- Clasen, Kevin, Spring, Robert S, Gardner, Joshua T, et al.
- Created Date
- 2012
One of the most notable composers of the twentieth century, Krzysztof Penderecki played a vital role in the development of new sonorities and compositional movements in the latter half of the century. Penderecki wrote two sonatas for violin and piano, one in his student days in 1953 and the second in the twilight of his career in 1999. Given the almost fifty years that separate the two works, these sonatas provide valuable insight to Penderecki’s development as a composer over the course of his career as well as give evidence that his own unique compositional style was in place at …
- Contributors
- Ramchandani, Micah David, McLin, Katherine, DeMars, James, et al.
- Created Date
- 2016
This research paper focuses on selected recordings of the Etudes of Claude Debussy. It provides a comparative study of these recordings. There are some dissertations on the topic of Debussy’s Etudes. Most of them are about performance-related aspects such as fingerings, pedaling, or technical guidelines. Some of the dissertations examine compositional analyses, discussing harmony, texture, rhythmic structure, motivic development, etc. There also is a dissertation that makes a comparative study of the etude genre in Chopin and Debussy. Since there is no research yet on the recordings of Debussy’s Etudes, this may be a meaningful contribution to research. Debussy’s Douze …
- Contributors
- Jiang, Yuan, Cosand, Walter, Rogers, Rodney, et al.
- Created Date
- 2018
Music therapy literature provides evidence that the use of music is very effective in improving daily living skills for people with Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD) all over the world. However, each country may have and use their preferred music therapy approaches and interventions for clients with ASD because of cultural differences although music therapy comes from the same origin. The aim of this research was to discover the cultural differences between American and Korean parents of children with ASD by comparing two countries in various categories, such as care systems, benefits and challenges in raising children with ASD, and therapeutic …
- Contributors
- Bae, Jiye, Rio, Robin, Crowe, Barbara, et al.
- Created Date
- 2016
This study presents a conductor's guide to the Carpathian Concerto by Myroslav Skoryk. As a Deputy Head of the National Composers Association of Ukraine, a professor at the Tchaikovsky National Academy of Music and the Music Artistic Director of the National Opera of Ukraine, Skoryk continues to be active as a composer, teacher, and conductor. The Carpathian Concerto was composed in 1972 and was inspired by the culture and folklore of the west region of Ukraine, the Carpathian Mountains. Over the years the Carpathian Concerto has become standard repertoire for many symphony orchestras in the Ukraine. The author, himself from …
- Contributors
- Ivanov, Lev, Russell, Timothy, Hill, Gary, et al.
- Created Date
- 2012
This handbook is aimed to develop a violist’s technique as they move from Georg Philipp Telemann’s Concerto for Viola, Strings, and Basso Continuo in G Major, TWV 51: G9 and begin the Carl Stamitz's Viola Concerto in D Major, Op. 1. Ten etudes and related exercises introduce and highlight various techniques, providing a comprehensive and methodical transition from one concerto to the next. These etudes are based on fragments of the Stamitz Concerto in an effort to directly relate technical development with performance skills. Dissertation/Thesis
- Contributors
- CHIEN, SHAO-CHUAN SYLVIA, Buck, Nancy, Rockmaker, Jody, et al.
- Created Date
- 2018
The College Band Directors National Association (CBDNA) began holding national conferences in 1941, and the organization's six divisions have held biennial conferences on alternating years beginning in 1950. The CBDNA Statement of Purpose specifies, "CBDNA is committed to serving as a dynamic hub connecting individuals to communities, ideas and resources." The regional and national conferences are one of the strongest means to that end. This study presents a history and documentation of the events of the College Band Directors National Association Western/Northwestern Divisional Conference held in Reno, Nevada from 1990 to 2016. The events leading up to the first conference …
- Contributors
- Martin, Stephen, Stauffer, Sandra, Hill, Gary W., et al.
- Created Date
- 2016
ABSTRACT The Orpheus Male Chorus of Phoenix occupies and maintains an historical place in the musical and civic history of the City of Phoenix and the State of Arizona. Organized in November, 1929, the Orpheus Male Chorus of Phoenix (OMC) is the only performing arts organization in Phoenix that can claim eighty-one years of continuous performance. The chorus gained popularity locally, nationally, and internationally in its first five decades. The breadth of the chorus's recognition began to decline in the latter part of the 20th century, but the chorus still retains a loyal following of audience members. This study focuses …
- Contributors
- Butler Ii, Robert Charles, Schildkret, David, Holbrook, Amy, 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
Although one finds much scholarship on nineteenth-century music in America, one finds relatively little about music in the post-Civil-War frontier west. Generalities concerning small frontier towns of regional importance remain to be discovered. This paper aims to contribute to scholarship by chronicling musical life in the early years of two such towns in northern Arizona territory: Prescott and Flagstaff. Prescott, adjacent to Fort Whipple, was founded in 1864 to serve as capital of the new territory. Primarily home to soldiers and miners, the town was subject to many challenges of frontier life. Flagstaff, ninety miles to the north-northwest, was founded …
- Contributors
- Johnson, Amber, Oldani, Robert W., Holbrook, Amy, et al.
- Created Date
- 2011
Jazz continues, into its second century, as one of the most important musics taught in public middle and high schools. Even so, research related to how students learn, especially in their earliest interactions with jazz culture, is limited. Weaving together interviews and observations of junior and senior high school jazz players and teachers, private studio instructors, current university students majoring in jazz, and university and college jazz faculty, I developed a composite sketch of a secondary school student learning to play jazz. Using arts-based educational research methods, including the use of narrative inquiry and literary non-fiction, the status of current …
- Contributors
- Kelly, Keith Brenden, Stauffer, Sandra, Tobias, Evan, et al.
- Created Date
- 2013
A New Home is a multi-movement musical composition written for a chamber orchestra of flute, oboe, clarinet in B-flat, bassoon, horn in F, trumpet in C, trombone, bass trombone, percussion (1), pianoforte, and strings. The duration of the entire piece is approximately fourteen minutes (movement 1: four minutes; mvt. 2: four minutes and thirty seconds; mvt. 3: five minutes and thirty seconds). As an exercise in compositional experimentation, some of the musical techniques explored throughout the piece are harmonic planing or parallelism, ostinati, modality, chromatic dissonance, thematic transformation, mixed meter, and syncopation, as well as issues of orchestral blend, balance, …
- Contributors
- Jones, Zachary William, Rogers, Rodney, Feisst, Sabine, et al.
- Created Date
- 2016
Every collaborative pianist encounters unrealistic and unsuccessful piano reductions of orchestral and operatic compositions on a regular basis. In some cases, the reductions were realized by the composers themselves, and therefore may contain all the notes from the full score, but might not be realistic piano reductions. Other times, the reductions may have been made by an editor who might arrange the piano part according to their own physical abilities, experience, or taste, but might ignore essential elements of the original orchestration. Alexander Glazunov’s Concerto for Violin and Orchestra, Op. 82 is frequently performed by students and professional violinists alike. …
- Contributors
- Kim, Olga, Campbell, Andrew, Ryan, Russell, et al.
- Created Date
- 2019
Playing an orchestral reduction is not always the most joyous of times for pianists. As pianists, we have to express a reduced idea of all the instruments and orchestral textures that are in the full score. However, in many cases, there are often omissions, errors or discrepancies in the existing published reductions. These reductions are made by a variety of people: editors, conductors, pianists, but rarely by the composer, and often do not reflect the composer's true intentions. While many reductions are technically playable, including the reduction of the Sibelius Violin Concerto that will form the basis of this paper, …
- Contributors
- Lee, Sehee, Campbell, Andrew, Rogers, Rodney, et al.
- Created Date
- 2011
The study and performance of J.S. Bach’s music has long been essential for every string musician. A transcription of the Flute Partita in A minor, BWV 1013, is an excellent addition to the double bass repertoire. This paper includes a performance guide that discusses the technical and musical considerations of each movement, and a new transcription for double bass. Chapter 1 introduces the goals of the paper. Chapter 2 is an overview of the transcription that covers the reasoning behind the bowings, fingerings, note alterations, ornamentation, articulation, and interpretation included in the transcription. Chapters 3 through 6 discuss these technical …
- Contributors
- Wang, Chunyang, Rotaru, Catalin, Landschoot, Thomas, et al.
- Created Date
- 2018
The introduction of a new instrumental piece—specifically Taiwanese—into the cello repertoire is as exciting as it is important. Currently, the majority of works for cello and piano include predominantly Western compositions that is repeatedly taught and performed. Reflections, by Taiwanese composer Ming-Hsiu Yen (Ms. Yen) is a response to this saturation. It is a piece that is both demanding for the performers and entertaining for the audience. Brilliantly written by a composer who has intimate familiarity with both the cello and piano, it is highly suitable for scholarly study and performance. This document details ensemble issues, interpretative suggestions for both …
- Contributors
- Tseng, Yu-Ting, Landschoot, Thomas, Rogers, Rodney, et al.
- Created Date
- 2016
Johann Sebastian Bach's violin Sonata I in G minor, BWV 1001, is a significant and widely performed work that exists in numerous editions and also as transcriptions or arrangements for various other instruments, including the guitar. A pedagogical guitar performance edition of this sonata, however, has yet to be published. Therefore, the core of my project is a transcription and pedagogical edition of this work for guitar. The transcription is supported by an analysis, performance and pedagogical practice guide, and a recording. The analysis and graphing of phrase structures illuminate Bach's use of compositional devices and the architectural function of …
- Contributors
- Felice, Joseph Philip, Koonce, Frank, Feisst, Sabine, et al.
- Created Date
- 2013