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In visual art, mixed media describes artwork in which more than one medium or material has been employed. [1] [2] Assemblages, collages, and sculpture are three common examples of art using different media. Materials used to create mixed media art include, but are not limited to, paint, cloth, paper, wood and found objects. [citation needed]
The term Mixed music describes music combining acoustic instruments and fixed-media electronics (e.g concrete sounds, sound-file playback etc) [1] and/or real-time electronic instrumental transformations; in other words, music which combines acoustic-instrumental and electronic sounds sources, not including electrically amplified instruments, such as the electric guitar and electronic ...
Early music groups with a mix of one or more instruments, and including one or more vocalists. Pages in category "Mixed early music groups" The following 27 pages are in this category, out of 27 total.
Sheet music for popular tunes dating as far back as 1865. Items are scanned at 600 dpi and saved as a TIFF files. Mississippi State University: CHASE research project, University of Leeds, UK: 19th- and early 20th-century performing editions of string music 2,000 AHRC-funded research project containing music files viewable on-site or as downloads.
For example, on DVD-Audio or Super Audio CD, a separate stereo mix can be included along with the surround mix. [18] Alternatively, the program can be automatically downmixed by the end consumer's audio system. For example, a DVD player or sound card may downmix a surround sound program to stereo for playback through two speakers. [19] [20]
In music history, however, there are examples of famous composers using the modular method unaware: Charles Gounod (1818–1893) composed his famous Ave Maria by adding a melody to the I Prelude in C major from Das Wohltemperierte Klavier by J. S. Bach (1685–1750). Neither one of the two composers willingly adopted the modular method of ...
In the modern music industry, a mixtape is a musical project, typically with looser constraints than that of an album or extended play.Unlike the traditional album or extended play, mixtapes are labeled as laid-back projects that allow artists more creative freedom and less commercial pressure. [2]
The earliest documented example of the English word 'consort' in a musical sense is in George Gascoigne’s The Princelye Pleasures (1576). [1] Only from the mid-17th century has there been a clear distinction made between a ‘whole’, or ‘closed’ consort, that is, all instruments of the same family (for example, a set of viols played together) and a ‘mixed’, or ‘broken’ consort ...