Elder Conservatorium of Music
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The Elder Conservatorium of Music - Australia's oldest tertiary music school - has played a leading role in the musical life of the nation for more than 100 years. With a distinguished history and a reputation for innovation, the Elder Conservatorium numbers among its staff and graduates many nationally and internationally renowned performers, composers, scholars, educators, and administrators.
The Elder Hall Concerts series consists of ELDERHALL Lunchtimes and ELDERHALL Evenings. Over the coming months we will add a selection of digital copies of past performances of these concerts where copyright permits.
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Elder Conservatorium of Music
THE UNIVERSITY OF ADELAIDE
SA 5005
AUSTRALIA
Email
Tel:
+61 8 8313 5995
Fax:
+61 8 8313 4423
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Item Restricted 10 Minutes to Midnight: Survival in the atomic age(Alphaville (Nuclear Futures) & QUT Precincts, 2015) Crea, T.; Dement, L.; Boylan, J.; Mollison, N.; Harrald, L.; Marwick, D.; Kawano, Y.; Brown, P.; Barkley, E.10 Minutes to Midnight is the culmination of community-based arts projects with atomic survivor communities including: Pitantjatjara Anangu in Yalata and Oak Valley, communities who were relocated from traditional Maralinga Tjarutja lands prior to the tests; and nuclear veteran and descendant networks in Australia and Britain. The creative works fit within a long tradition of artists and communities responding to 'the bomb'. Featured are original projection installations, digital artwork, contemporary photo media, sound design, sculpture, film and rare archival material. As well as exploring the horrors of the atomic age, the exhibition embodies humanitarian messages of hope, celebrating the resilient communities and individuals who continue to pursue recognition and justice, and courageously share their stories for the benefit of future generations. The timing of the exhibition coincides with the 70-year anniversary of the Hiroshima and Nagasaki atomic bombings - the beginning of the atomic age.Item Restricted 1959: The Twin Precipice(2019) Ferguson, M.S.Item Restricted 2014 New England Sings(2014) Shaw, J.; Jarman, P.; Peterson, J.; Kats-Chernin, E.; Gordon, C.; Mead, H.; Masson, S.Item Metadata only 3 cues for the film 'Disgrace'(G Schirmer (Australia) Pty Ltd, 2007) Koehne, G.Item Metadata only 35th International Viola Congress(2007) Crellin, K.; Saffir, R.; Crellin, Keith Thomas; Saffir, RuthItem Metadata only 502 Days of Self: A musical composition for terpsichora (an instrument of pressure sensitive floor boards) and AI modelling(TENOR International Conference on Technologies for Music Notation and Representation, 2023) Sanadzadeh, I.; Pitman, D.Item Metadata only 7th Australasian Piano Pedagogy Conference(2005) Smith, R.; Smith, Rodney LeonItem Metadata only 9 Inventions for string orchestra(AMC, 2009) Polglase, J.; Polglase, John DrewExtent : 32 p. : 30 mins.Item Restricted 'A Flutter in the Orchestras': The Ballets Russes and the Australian Orchestral Situation in the 1930s(Wakefield Press, 2011) Carroll, M.; Carroll, M.Item Restricted À la manière de…M.R.(2016) Whittington, S.Item Restricted A New Race to the Moon (Sea of Tranquility 2)(sittingquietlylistening / praxis ARTSPACE, 2019) Harrald, L.A.Program Note: Reflecting on the 50th anniversary of the Apollo 11 moon landings and a love of old maps, "A New Race to the Moon" is a semi-improvised work for saxophone and multi-agent orchestra that is derived from the physical features of the moon as documented through maps created in the 1960s. Exploring themes of landscape, technology and human presence through artistic process, the interactions between human and virtual performers enable each performance to be both unique and recognisable.Item Metadata only A political soft shoe shuffle(Australian Dance Council, 2006) Carroll, M.Item Metadata only A preliminary snapshot of the academic achievement and self-concept of music and non-music school students(AARME, 2002) Rosevear, J.; Australian Association for Research in Music Education. Conference (24th : 2002 : Adelaide, S. Aust.); Rosevear, J.; Callaghan, D.Item Metadata only A Satie Celebration(2003) Whittington, S.; Cuddeford, J.; Tiver, G.; Whittington, Stephen Charles; Cuddeford, James; Tiver, Guila JeannetteItem Metadata only A world of rhythm(Queensland Art Gallery, 2006) Whittington, S.; Seear, L.; Raffel, S.Item Metadata only A.J. Ellis and his 'Contributions to Methodology'(Florian Noetzel: Heinrichshofen, 1998) Kalisch, Volker; Elder Conservatorium of MusicItem Restricted Aaron Pelle's Archipelago, conducted by Luke Dollman(University of Adelaide, 2020) Dollman, L.Item Metadata only Aboriginal Music: The German Connection(Florian Noetzel: Heinrichshofen, 1998) Ellis, Catherine; Elder Conservatorium of MusicItem Metadata only Academic achievement and music: What's the connection?(Australian Society for Music Education, 2007) Rosevear, J.; Australian Society for Music Education National Conference (16th : 2007 : Perth, W.A); Stanberg, A.; McIntosh, J.; Faulkner, R.The relationship between music and general academic achievement is an issue which continues to receive wide interest, especially in the mass media. This paper explores some of the background to such interest, including discussion of the legend of the ‘Mozart effect’ and the slogan, ‘Music makes you smarter’. The paper reports on a study which, in part, explored whether students who study music in secondary school achieved more highly in other subjects. Data were collected via a researcher-designed survey, with 282 participants from three high schools in metropolitan Adelaide. The survey explored the extent and nature of involvement in musical activity, both at school and outside school, as well as reasons for success in school subjects and other activities. Results of the survey showed that those students studying music at school achieved at a higher level in four core academic subjects. It was also apparent that the students perceived enjoyment to be an important factor in being successful in school subjects.Item Metadata only Accompanying the dreaming: determinants of didjeridu style in traditional and contemporary Yolngu song(John Libbey, 1997) Knopoff, S.