Noise orders : jazz, improvisation, and architecture /

In Noise Orders, David Brown locates jazz music within the broad aesthetic, political, and theoretical upheavals of our time, asserting that modern architecture can be strongly influenced by jazz improvisation. Comparing artists and architects with individuals and groups in jazz-including Piet Mondr...

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Détails bibliographiques
Auteur principal: Brown, David, 1965-
Format: Licensed eBooks
Langue:anglais
Publié: Minneapolis : University of Minnesota Press ©2006.
Accès en ligne:https://www.jstor.org/stable/10.5749/j.ctttv04g
Table des matières:
  • Compositional imperatives: Mondrian and boogie-woogie
  • What is the body supposed to be doing? John Cage and Rahsaan Roland Kirk
  • Now's the time: temporalities of Louis Armstrong and Le Corbusier
  • Function, flexibility, and improvisation: the AACM and Mies Van Der Rohe
  • Diagrams, conduction, and the contemporary city.