Search results
- Not only is the meaning of an improvisation shaped by the social context but the progress of the improvisation, the structure and the content is also influenced by the setting in which it is being performed. This is also true of the baby and parent interaction.
academic.oup.com/book/36922/chapter/322190887
People also ask
Is improvisation based on context?
What is improvisation in music?
What are the key features of improvisation?
Is improvisation a social and creative process?
Is improvisation a linguistic theory?
How is improvisation understood by musicians and psychologists?
Jun 1, 2017 · Improvisation is an articulated multidimensional activity based on an extemporaneous creative performance. Practicing improvisation, participants expand sophisticated skills such as sensory and perceptual encoding, memory storage and recall, motor control, and performance monitoring.
Nov 23, 2020 · Our theory sheds light on how individual orientations and their variation over time influence the perception of the structural context in which improvisation takes place, resulting in four different trajectories of improvisation development.
- Pier Vittorio Mannucci, Davide C. Orazi, Kristine de Valck
- 2020
We suggest that understandings of ‘authenticity’ in improvisation are dependent on context, and that improvisation is present in many different forms of music, and is practised and experienced in ways shaped by these musical and cultural contexts.
Improvisation, in music, the extemporaneous composition or free performance of a musical passage, usually in a manner conforming to certain stylistic norms but unfettered by the prescriptive features of a specific musical text. Music originated as improvisation and is still extensively improvised.
- The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
Jul 4, 2016 · This review article examines the concept of improvisation from two perspectives: First, we account for findings in the traditions of rhetoric, music and theatre referring to these findings as “roots” of improvisation in professions.
In The Philosophy of Improvisation, Gary Peters proposes unpacking improvisation and looking beyond these typical constructions. While understanding improvisation as a potentially emancipatory and subversive practice, he also sees improvisation as a way of connecting with the past.