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Updated: Mon, 10/07/2024 - 21:42

From Saturday, Oct. 5 through Tuesday, Oct. 8, the Downtown and Macdonald Campuses will be open only to ƻԺ students, employees and essential visitors. Many classes will be held online. Remote work required where possible. See Campus Public Safety website for details.


Du samedi 5 octobre au mardi 8 octobre, le campus du centre-ville et le campus Macdonald ne seront accessibles qu’aux étudiants et aux membres du personnel de l’Université ƻԺ, ainsi qu’aux visiteurs essentiels. De nombreux cours auront lieu en ligne. Le personnel devra travailler à distance, si possible. Voir le site Web de la Direction de la protection et de la prévention pour plus de détails.

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Colloque doctoral (musique) : Emanuelle Majeau-Bettez

Vendredi, 30 septembre, 2022 16:30à18:30
Strathcona Music Building C-201, 555 rue Sherbrooke Ouest, Montreal, QC, H3A 1E3, CA
Prix: 
Entrée libre

Le colloque doctoral est gratuit et ouvert à tous.

La présentation sera en anglais.

Colloque doctoral: Emanuelle Majeau-Bettez


TITLE:

Through Time and Space: Éliane Radigue’s Relationship to Sound

ABSTRACT:

Composer Éliane Radigue is the only French composer of her generation who is regularly cited as a pioneer of synthesizer-based electronic music. Over the six decades of her career, Radigue has been dedicated to building a body of work in which natural microbeats between frequencies replace rhythmic, or other more traditional forms of, sound organization. A significant component of my dissertation consists in documenting the electronic phase of Radigue’s career as well as her more recent collaborations with instrumentalists. However, in this presentation I show how, in my research, the record of Radigue’s life as a composer is part of a larger argument that reconsiders canonical events in the history of contemporary music through Radigue’s perspective. Analyzing the history of contemporary music through the frame offered by Radigue’s six-decade-long career offers many advantages. First, it is an opportunity to highlight the very different meanings that the notion of “composer” has taken on since the post-World War II era and, most importantly, it calls for an analysis of these conceptual shifts in terms of the gender conventions of the time. Second, I argue that Radigue’s sound, and particularly the listening mode embedded within her compositional method, continues to open a space that enables different artistic approaches.

BIOGRAPHY:

Emanuelle Majeau-Bettez is a PhD candidate in Musicologywith option in Gender and Women’s Studies atƻԺ, where she is supervised by David Brackett.Her research focuses on the electronic phase of Éliane Radigue's career as well as on the composer's present collaborations with instrumentalists. Among other publications, Emanuelle is the author of the thematic dossier on Éliane Radigue, published on the Ircam's documentation database B.R.A.H.M.S. She is a member of the editorial board ofCircuit, musiques contemporainesand she participates in the MICA (Musical Improvisation and Collective Action, Ircam) and ACTOR (Analysis, Creation and Teaching of Orchestration) research projects.

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