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E-raamat: Global Percussion Innovations: The Australian Perspective

(Monash University, Australia)
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First emerging in North America and Europe in the late 1920s, contemporary percussion practices have transitioned from the fringes of contemporary music to the forefront over the past 90 years. In the 1960s contemporary percussion practices reached Australian shores and a new generation of artists added their voices to this narrative. The role of Australian activity is not yet embedded in the wider narrative of international contemporary percussion, nor is the significance of developments in contemporary percussion practices fully realised in the context of Australian music history. In this monograph, political, social and cultural influences on this art form will be examined for the first time in a historical survey of contemporary percussion music in Australia over a 50-year period, from 1960 to 2010. The rise of the percussion ensemble in the twentieth century to a standard chamber music ensemble is now recognised as one of the major advances in western art music practice internationally. A focus will be placed on ensemble activity via definitive documentation and analysis of ensembles that are amongst the most pioneering and longest established of Australian contemporary music organisations, including the Australian Percussion Ensemble, Synergy Percussion, Adelaide Percussions, Nova Ensemble, Tetrafide Percussion, Taikoz, Clocked Out and Speak Percussion amongst others. Closing with a discussion of influences and identity, this historical narrative will expand our understanding of the impact of Australian contributions to the international contemporary music scene while simultaneously examining how developments in contemporary percussion have contributed to Australias cultural identity.
List of figures
ix
List of tables
x
List of musical examples
xi
List of abbreviations
xii
Acknowledgements xiii
Introduction 1(10)
Contemporary percussion: a brief international history
5(6)
1 Contemporary percussion in Australia: the 1960s and 1970s
11(16)
Professional training for Australian percussionists
14(4)
Les Percussions de Strasbourg
18(9)
2 The emergence of Australian contemporary percussion: 1970s Melbourne
27(24)
The Australian Percussion Ensemble (1972--1977)
27(13)
The Victorian College of the Arts
40(7)
Speak Percussion
47(4)
3 Contemporary percussion ensembles in Sydney
51(46)
The Sydney Percussion (est. 1974)
52(6)
The Sydney Conservatorium of Music
58(2)
Synergy Percussion in the 1980s
60(4)
A wave of new Australian percussion repertoire
64(6)
Beyond Australian shores
70(3)
Interdisciplinary collaboration
73(2)
Forty years of Synergy Percussion
75(4)
Taikoz
79(4)
Graeme Leak
83(9)
Solo percussion in the 1990s
92(5)
4 Contemporary percussion in Adelaide
97(11)
Ryszard Pusz and Adelaide Percussions (1978--2000)
97(5)
Experimental percussion in 1990s Adelaide
102(3)
Adelaide since 2000
105(3)
5 Percussion in Western Australia
108(19)
The University of Western Australia Conservatorium of Music
109(2)
The Paul Sarcich Percussion Ensemble (1977--1980)
111(1)
Nova Ensemble (est. 1983)
112(6)
AC/PVC (1987--1990)
118(4)
The Western Australian Academy of Performing Arts
122(1)
Tetrafide Percussion (1996--2014)
123(2)
Western Australia since 2000
125(2)
6 Percussion in Brisbane, Canberra and Hobart
127(9)
Hobart
128(1)
Drumwheel (1991--1996)
129(1)
Canberra
129(1)
Brisbane
130(2)
Vanessa Tomlinson and Clocked Out (1999--present)
132(4)
7 The question of identity: looking back, looking out, looking in, looking forward
136(24)
Looking back
138(3)
Looking out
141(1)
Europe and North America
141(2)
Asia and Africa
143(5)
Looking in
148(1)
Landscape and place
148(3)
Influences from urban Australia
151(1)
Approach and community
152(3)
Looking forward
155(5)
Bibliography 160(9)
Index 169
Louise Devenishs artistic practice lies at the nexus of performance, research and education in percussion. Key projects include APRA AMC award-winning solo series Music for One Percussionist, The Sound Collectors duo, Australias leading percussion group Speak Percussion (Vic) and acclaimed electroacoustic sextet Decibel (WA), with whom she regularly performs at major festivals throughout Australasia, Europe, North America and the UK. A passionate advocate of new and Australian music, Louise has commissioned over 50 works for percussion, released solo album music for percussion and electronics (Tall Poppies) and published in Contemporary Music Review, Percussive Notes and Musicology Australia. Louise is Head of Percussion at the University of Western Australia Conservatorium of Music and is a Churchill Fellow.