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improvisation
(redirected from improvisor)

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improvisation

Creating a play, a poem, or any other imaginative work, without preparation. The term is used in GCSE English for the unprepared piece of drama most students undertake as part of their assessment in the Speaking and Listening section of their examination. The word has already been twisted from its original meaning in this context, and the term ‘prepared improvisation’ is being used to show that some preparation time has been allowed.

improvisation

Creating music ‘on the spot’ as it is being performed. It is a principal means of artistic expression among oral cultures, including popular music and jazz in the West. It is based on standard models, including song form (ABA), modes, raga, or scales of specific significance, and on standard rhythms, or familiar melodies combining modal and rhythmic components.

A composer/performer creates a fresh and personal interpretation of a model at each performance, one showing understanding of the stylistic history of the original, and bringing an experienced artistry to bear on expression and decoration. Successful improvisation relies on the awareness of an audience, knowing the prototype, and freely responding to refinements of artistic variation. Organists are taught improvisation as a technique and it was the norm amongst composers from the Renaissance to mid-Romantic period. Improvisation was also the principal technique of silent film accompaniment.



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Guest and members of his regular crew of improvisors -- Catherine O'Hara, Harry Shearer, Eugene Levy (who co-wrote this story outline with Guest), Parker Posey, Fred Willard and more -- play talent-challenged people making or orbiting around a woebegone indie film.
Trained in Italy, he began with law studies in Bologna and Padua but soon abandoned jurisprudence in favor of song, emulating the improvisors Serafino dall' Aquilano and Il Chariteo.
Yokoshi, a riveting performer, peeks into the imperial courts of Asia, while Heggen, a master improvisor from Holland, gives us a glimpse into the royal courts of Europe.
 
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