KC Research Portal

About this portal
Master students at the Royal Conservatoire use the online Research Catalogue for the communication with their supervisor, for the development and formulation of their research proposal, for their work-in-progress, and for the final documentation and publication of their research.
contact person(s):
Kathryn Cok 
,
Koncon Master Coordinator 
,
Casper Schipper 
url:
https://www.researchcatalogue.net/view/517228/1588065
Recent Issues
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3. Internal publication
Research published in this issue are only for internal circulation within the Royal Conservatoire, The Hague.
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2. Royal Conservatoire Investigations
Royal Conservatoire Investigations
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1. Master Research Projects
All research in KC
Recent Activities
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Document the Sound Projection of Aus Licht
(2020)
author(s): Marko Uzunovski
published in: KC Research Portal
This thesis is the outcome of the research component of our Masters’ study Aus Licht - Sound projection.
The aim of this research was to document the available information that would come to the fore while working with a group of experienced Stockhausen collaborators, each of them a specialist in sound reinforcement and sound system engineering.
This information is captured in three case studies that contextualise a set of keywords that were collected and defined during the 20 months of preparations and rehearsals (September 2017 to May 2019 in Licht aan Zee Studio in The Hague), as well as the concert period (May 2019 to June 2019 in De Gashouder in Amsterdam).
One case study was written collaboratively and two case studies were written individually by each of the sound projectionists involved in this research project. Each case study details one work or part of the whole program. The thesis is concluded by reflective statements by each of the collaborators.
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The art of auditioning
(2020)
author(s): Janet Krause
published in: KC Research Portal
ABSTRACT
Main subject: Violin
Research Supervisors: Kathryn Cok
Martine van der Loo
Title of Research: The Art of Auditioning
Research Question: What aspects should be considered in preparation for a successful violin audition?
Summary of Results:
An orchestral audition, and specifically to this paper, a violin audition, is possibly the least musically satisfying experience of one’s life. However, it is a necessary part of the path leading to a fulfilling life as an orchestral musician. The preparation for an audition certainly has specific aspects which need to be considered. This paper discusses these aspects, based in large part on my experiences as a Principal in The Hague Philharmonic and as a committee member at auditions for many years. As a violin and chamber music teacher as well as the teacher of the orchestral classes at the conservatoires in The Hague and Amsterdam, I have collected a wealth of experience training students to be successful at auditions. Besides the aspects of how to apply for an orchestral audition, which repertoire needs to be prepared, (including many orchestral excerpts which I have bowed and provided with fingerings myself), how to prepare effectively and what to expect on the actual audition day, there is a large section devoted to the research I have performed concerning mental and physical preparation. Developing mental skills to withstand the stress associated with auditions is an important part of audition preparation. Finally, I have researched, by means of a series of questions online and live and Skype interviews, how experts and candidates experience auditions. This has put me in contact with leaders of orchestras from around the world. How the two groups have responded to similar questions has put me in the position to draw some conclusions as to what committees expect at auditions and how this differs from the candidates’ viewpoints. In analyzing this research, and recognizing similarities in what I written from my own research and personal experience, I am able to draw some conclusions and make recommendations about how candidates could prepare better and be more successful at auditions.
Biography:
Janet Krause is Principal Second Violinist in The Hague Philharmonic and also a violin, chamber music and orchestral studies teacher at The Royal Conservatoire in The Hague. She is also teaching orchestral studies at the Conservatoire in Amsterdam. Born in Canada, she completed her Bachelor of Music in Performance at the University of Toronto, having studied with Lorand Fenyves. Moving to the Netherlands, she completed her solo-diploma at the Conservatory in Amsterdam, studying with Davina van Wely. She was a member of the Salzburger Solisten for many years and. primarius of the Dufy Quartet. Presently she is also Principal of the Solistes Européens in Luxembourg.
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Creating open form scores for improvising musicians
(2019)
author(s): Cynthie van Eijden
published in: KC Research Portal
Abstract
This research aims to explore and develop an updated approach to "open form" in music. "Open form" is traditionally referred to as "aleatoric music": a score is provided but the composer has left some choices open. The term "aleatoric" music implies that chance determines how to fill the open spaces. The renewed approach in this research however aims to provide a score in which a performer as an improviser or co-composer is invited to shape the music according to his own opinion. The score provides a plan and context for improvised content and, in doing so, invites the performer to co-create the piece.
The research developed in three phases. In the first phase, improvisation was used as a learning tool in music theory classes. Different approaches to improvisation were studied and practiced. In the second phase, one group of musicians evolved from an improvisation course and went on a tour of five concerts. For them an open form score was created in order to provide context to the improvisations of the musicians. This composition is called View from a high mountain, a composition in six parts that allows improvisation at several moments. In the third phase, findings from the outcome and performance of View from a high mountain caused a renewal of the approach in the classroom. Through this renewal the boundary between education and musical production became a thinner line that allowed several cross-overs. Instead of a handbook containing a method or exercises or a new open form score The Improvisation Tree was created. The Improvisation Tree is a model that can be used as a help for creating, analyzing, categorizing and comparing open form scores.
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Historically Inspired Improvisation - Improvising on basis of 19th-century music making
(2019)
author(s): Bert Mooiman
published in: KC Research Portal
The average modern classical musician, the performer of music from the common practice era, tends to perform from scores only, and to treat a score like a text that should be converted into sound as precisely as possible. This is usually a one way process: without a score there will be no music. As a result of this attitude the musical languages of the common practice period have become dead languages, more or less like Latin and Ancient Greek, which are (with very few exceptions) no longer spoken actively but only translated into modern languages. More and more musicians become aware of the artistic limitations of this approach. In order to become, like musicians from the past, creative performers who are able to enter into a living relationship with the music, learning how to improvise seems to be a valuable means.
The Royal Conservatoire in The Hague (The Netherlands) invests in ‘classical’ improvisation. An environment has been created which fosters the idea that improvisation is important for classical musicians, and a lot of experience has been gathered in teaching improvisation to those students.
But what precisely do we mean with the word improvisation? And how exactly do we argue that improvisation is important for the new generations of conservatoire students? Improvisation by classical musicians is often referred to as ‘classical improvisation’ or ‘improvisation in a classical style’. These terms are not without problems, though. I would like to propose the notion of ‘historically inspired improvisation’ instead, indicating improvisation which uses thorough knowledge about music making in the past as a source of inspiration. ‘H.I.I.’ doesn’t necessarily aim for style imitations; rather, it works the other way around: integrating what we can use from historical music practices into our own creative music making. In this way, improvisation has the potential to fertilize all our ‘musicking’ (Chr. Small) – even when we play from scores.
In my essay, a recorded student improvisation will be taken as a starting point. I will analyse and comment upon this recording, developing the idea of musical ‘loci communes’ which enables us to connect improvisation with the interpretation of a score. It is interesting to compare such insights with original treatises on improvisation, especially Carl Czerny’s Anleitung zum Fantasieren auf dem Pianoforte (1829). Czerny turns out to presume skills that are no longer self-evident to musicians of today, while on the other hand issues which are nowadays important are not addressed in his text at all. Drawing upon the theory of loci communes, I will work out an example of how I think Czerny’s book can still be a valuable source of inspiration today.
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In search of new dimensions: pieces for electronically processed double bass.
(2019)
author(s): Julián Sarmiento Escobar
Limited publication. Only visible to members of the portal : KC Research Portal
Name: Julián Sarmiento
Main Subject: Classical Double Bass
Research Supervisor: Karst de Jong
Title of Research: In search of new dimensions: Pieces for electronically enhanced Double Bass
Research Question: How can I develop an artistic product, which includes the electronically enhanced double bass and allows me to interact with topics relevant to today?
Summary of Results:
Since the start of this project, the goal was to discover and explore the paths of creative processes. On the road, I found a lot of overwhelming challenges that showed me how complicated it is to create a coherent, relevant and interesting artistic product. However, I learned that making decisions at the right moment opens the door to a huge amount of other possibilities.
A group of short pieces was created. They are based on field recordings of songs and chants of the Original Indigenous Peoples of Colombia, done by León Cobo. These pieces have been created together with Mári Máko and they are our views on specific sound aspects of these recordings, and also the result of a research in how to electronically enhance the Double Bass.
I believe that the exploration of this material can raise the awareness of the music and original practices that took place in Colombia before the Hispanic colonization.
Biography:
Julián Sarmiento was born in Bogotá, Colombia. He studied double bass in Bogota for several years and in 2010 he entered the Colombia National Symphony. In 2012 he moved to the Netherlands, where he is currently in his last year of his Master's degree at the Royal Conservatoire of The Hague, studying with Jean-Paul Everts. At the same time he became an academist in the Residentie Orkest in The Hague and also plays regularly with Het Ballet Orkest in Amsterdam.
One of Julián's most important activities is in the field of contemporary or modern music. In Colombia, he played in the Als Eco Ensemble, nationally one of the most important ensembles of modern music. In The Netherlands, he is regularly invited to play in the Insomnio Ensemble. Since 2015, is a member of the ensemble But What About.
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Interpreting pedal indications in R.Schumann’s Kreisleriana, op.16
(2019)
author(s): Gabriele Zemaityte
Limited publication. Only visible to members of the portal : KC Research Portal
This research paper will tackle the difficulty of interpreting pedalling notations in R. Schumann’s piano works of period 1829-1838, with main focus on Kreisleriana op.16. Was Schumann being consistent with the way he notated pedal? Should the pedal markings be executed literally or were they used in order to indicate other musical aspects? What were the different methods of applying the pedal in Schumann’s works? With main focus being Kreisleriana, op.16, references will also be taken from other works of the same decade, such as Papillon, op.2 and Davidsbuendlertaenze, op.6 as they provide great examples of Schumann’s tendencies in pedalling notation.