Items where Subject is "Music"
  • ASJC Scopus Subject Areas (4299)
  • Arts and Humanities(all) (316)
  • Music (13)
    Number of items at this level: 13.
    Article
  • The Computer and the Controller: Dismantling Performance and Pedagogic Barriers to Music Composition. (2022) Alex Baxter
  • Players, Characters, and the Gamer's Dilemma. (2019) Craig Caddick Bourne and Emily Caddick Bourne
  • Temporal Dynamism in Country-of-Origin Effect: The Malleability of Italians’ Perceptions Regarding the British Sixties. (2019) Sue Halliday, Jonathan Morris, Cesare Amatulli, Matteo de Angelo and Floriana Mulazzi
  • So many lifetimes locked inside: reflecting on the use of music and songs to enhance learning through emotional and social connection in Trainee Clinical Psychologists. (2018) Saskia Keville, Katherine Nutt, Isabel Brunton, Carly Keyes and Erasmo Tacconelli
  • ‘Innovation in the Arts in Therapy’: A Special Issue. (2023) Gary Nash
  • Placing art at the centre of art-based practice and research. (2023) Gary Nash
  • Working Alongside: Communicating visual empathy within collaborative art therapy. (2023) Gary Nash and Michiyo Zentner
  • A general procedure to measure the pacing of body movements timed to music and metronome in younger and older adults. (2021) Dawn C. Rose, Laurent Ott, Ségolène Guérin, Lucy Annett, Peter Lovatt and Yvonne Delevoye-Turrell
  • Music in our minds and bodies matters. (2017) Dawn C. Rose, Pamela Heaton and Alice Jones Bartoli
  • Thesis
  • Immersivity in Music Performance with Original Compositions. (2023) Kyriacos Michael
  • Other
  • Authentically Badly Crafted by Professional Amateurs : Lo-fi aesthetics in noise and words. (2021) Roberto Filoseta
  • Mitochondrial DNA, a Powerful Tool to Decipher Ancient Human Civilization from Domestication to Music, and to Uncover Historical Murder Cases. (2019) Maxime Merheb, Rachel Matar, Rawad Hodeify, Shoib Sarwar Siddiqui, Cijo George Vazhappilly, John Marton, Syed Azharuddin and Hussain Al Zouabi
  • The side effects of music: : If playing in a drum circle increases oxytocin and learning an instrument decreases aggression, what else might be possible? (2017) Dawn C. Rose