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Det lägsta priset vi sett för boken sedan Booki började mäta.
Billigaste butiken ligger under de övriga butikernas medianpris just nu — en jämförelse mellan butiker, inte ett prisfall över tid.
Butiken med lägst pris i prislistan på boksidan just nu.
"The Irish frame drum that we know as 'bodhrán' first entered modern-day Irish consciousness in 1959 with John B. Keane's use of a tambourine in his play Sive at the Abbey Theatre, Dublin. From 1960 onwards, it gained tremendous visibility in the traditional music revival through Seán Ó Riada's Radio Éireann ensemble Ceoltóirí Chualann, then by the Chieftains, and, later, by the Bothy Band, Planxty, Christy Moore and De Dannan. By the end of the century, tens of thousands of bodhráns had been made and dispersed worldwide, and the instrument was a staple in traditional music promoted by Comhaltas Ceoltóirí Éireann. Today the drum holds a remarkable symbolic presence not only in Irish music, but also in tourism and in sport, to the extent that it rivals the harp as a national emblem. To date there has been no coherent picture of how the bodhrán could appear so suddenly in the twentieth century. Its name is certainly old - a word once used for a device which was created millennia ago as an agricultural tool, a container and tray. But as a percussion form with the sophistication that we know it today its traceable history is short, beginning sporadically only in the earlier 1800s, and mostly happening since c.1960, shaped by ingenious stylists, most of whom are indeed still performing among us. Beating Time explores this history for the first time. It radically acknowledges not only the influence of the music trade and British military bands, but that of the touring ensembles that were the roots of today's popular music - the American 'blackface' minstrels. The study also examines the use of tambourines on the 'Wren', and the morphing of this into accompaniment and solo playing in today's 'listening' traditional music. Perhaps most remarkable is the unspoken re-branding of the tambourine as 'bodhrán', and its kindling, liberation and validation of the percussion impulse in traditional music. Rather than mythicising the bodhrán as the oldest Irish music instrument, this book points to the idea that it should perhaps be celebrated for being the newest. Its rapid emergence and transformation is as remarkable and astonishing an ascent in universal popularity and international acceptance as has been the worldwide rise of the guitar in all music."--Publisher's website.
Avvakta – priset är högt
2 kr dyrare
Varierar något
Författare
Fintan Vallely
Förlag
Cork University Press
Utgivningsår
2025
Sidantal
349
Språk
Engelska
Fysiska detaljer
color illustrations, music
Dewey
786.95
ISBN
9781782050469
Amazon
Bokbörsen
Just nu listar 1 butik den här boken. Vi uppdaterar priserna flera gånger per dag — bevaka priset så meddelar vi dig när fler butiker eller ett lägre pris dyker upp.
Vi har hittat boken hos 1 butik med verifierat pris — en partnerbutik som vi får provision från när du klickar på ”Visa hos butik”. Vissa butiker visas som extern länk utan pris — priset ser du först hos butiken. Priset för dig är detsamma. Frakt kan tillkomma och varierar mellan butiker och leveranssätt — kontrollera alltid aktuellt pris och leveransvillkor hos butiken innan du slutför köpet.
Skriver du om boken på en blogg eller sajt? .
Priset har nyligen gått ner jämfört med butikens eget tidigare pris.
Det lägsta priset vi sett för boken sedan Booki började mäta.
Billigaste butiken ligger under de övriga butikernas medianpris just nu — en jämförelse mellan butiker, inte ett prisfall över tid.
Butiken med lägst pris i prislistan på boksidan just nu.
"The Irish frame drum that we know as 'bodhrán' first entered modern-day Irish consciousness in 1959 with John B. Keane's use of a tambourine in his play Sive at the Abbey Theatre, Dublin. From 1960 onwards, it gained tremendous visibility in the traditional music revival through Seán Ó Riada's Radio Éireann ensemble Ceoltóirí Chualann, then by the Chieftains, and, later, by the Bothy Band, Planxty, Christy Moore and De Dannan. By the end of the century, tens of thousands of bodhráns had been made and dispersed worldwide, and the instrument was a staple in traditional music promoted by Comhaltas Ceoltóirí Éireann. Today the drum holds a remarkable symbolic presence not only in Irish music, but also in tourism and in sport, to the extent that it rivals the harp as a national emblem. To date there has been no coherent picture of how the bodhrán could appear so suddenly in the twentieth century. Its name is certainly old - a word once used for a device which was created millennia ago as an agricultural tool, a container and tray. But as a percussion form with the sophistication that we know it today its traceable history is short, beginning sporadically only in the earlier 1800s, and mostly happening since c.1960, shaped by ingenious stylists, most of whom are indeed still performing among us. Beating Time explores this history for the first time. It radically acknowledges not only the influence of the music trade and British military bands, but that of the touring ensembles that were the roots of today's popular music - the American 'blackface' minstrels. The study also examines the use of tambourines on the 'Wren', and the morphing of this into accompaniment and solo playing in today's 'listening' traditional music. Perhaps most remarkable is the unspoken re-branding of the tambourine as 'bodhrán', and its kindling, liberation and validation of the percussion impulse in traditional music. Rather than mythicising the bodhrán as the oldest Irish music instrument, this book points to the idea that it should perhaps be celebrated for being the newest. Its rapid emergence and transformation is as remarkable and astonishing an ascent in universal popularity and international acceptance as has been the worldwide rise of the guitar in all music."--Publisher's website.
Avvakta – priset är högt
2 kr dyrare
Varierar något
Författare
Fintan Vallely
Förlag
Cork University Press
Utgivningsår
2025
Sidantal
349
Språk
Engelska
Fysiska detaljer
color illustrations, music
Dewey
786.95
ISBN
9781782050469
the story of the Irish bodhrán
Just nu listar 1 butik den här boken. Bevaka priset så meddelar vi dig när fler butiker eller ett lägre pris dyker upp.
ISBN 9781782050469 jämförs hos alla butiker
"The Irish frame drum that we know as 'bodhrán' first entered modern-day Irish consciousness in 1959 with John B. Keane's use of a tambourine in his play Sive at the Abbey Theatre, Dublin. From 1960 onwards, it gained tremendous visibility in the traditional music revival through Seán Ó Riada's Radio Éireann ensemble Ceoltóirí Chualann, then by the Chieftains, and, later, by the Bothy Band, Planxty, Christy Moore and De Dannan. By the end of the century, tens of thousands of bodhráns had been made and dispersed worldwide, and the instrument was a staple in traditional music promoted by Comhaltas Ceoltóirí Éireann. Today the drum holds a remarkable symbolic presence not only in Irish music, but also in tourism and in sport, to the extent that it rivals the harp as a national emblem. To date there has been no coherent picture of how the bodhrán could appear so suddenly in the twentieth century. Its name is certainly old - a word once used for a device which was created millennia ago as an agricultural tool, a container and tray. But as a percussion form with the sophistication that we know it today its traceable history is short, beginning sporadically only in the earlier 1800s, and mostly happening since c.1960, shaped by ingenious stylists, most of whom are indeed still performing among us. Beating Time explores this history for the first time. It radically acknowledges not only the influence of the music trade and British military bands, but that of the touring ensembles that were the roots of today's popular music - the American 'blackface' minstrels. The study also examines the use of tambourines on the 'Wren', and the morphing of this into accompaniment and solo playing in today's 'listening' traditional music. Perhaps most remarkable is the unspoken re-branding of the tambourine as 'bodhrán', and its kindling, liberation and validation of the percussion impulse in traditional music. Rather than mythicising the bodhrán as the oldest Irish music instrument, this book points to the idea that it should perhaps be celebrated for being the newest. Its rapid emergence and transformation is as remarkable and astonishing an ascent in universal popularity and international acceptance as has been the worldwide rise of the guitar in all music."--Publisher's website.
Avvakta – priset är högt
2 kr dyrare
Varierar något
Författare
Fintan Vallely
Förlag
Cork University Press
Utgivningsår
2025
Sidantal
349
Språk
Engelska
ISBN
9781782050469
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