Thomas Tapper
Thomas Tapper (28 January 1864 – 24 February 1958) was a musician, composer, lecturer, writer, and editor, born in Canton, Massachusetts and studied music at the American College of Musicians. He wrote many books on music, mostly for children and young adults. His most famous being Lives of Great Composers picture book series.[1] He also wrote the First Year Series for musical instruction, which included First Year Musical Theory, First Year Counterpoint, First Year Harmony, Second Year harmony, First Year Analysis, and First Year Melody Writing. He was the editor of "The Musician," and promoted rural music and community music.[2] Tapper also promoted rote learning in the rote-note controversy of the late 19th Century music education.[3]
Notes
- "Biography of Thomas Tapper". Music Of Yesterday. Retrieved 29 October 2015.
- Lee, W. L. (2007). A New Look at a Significant Cultural Moment. Journal of Historical Research in Music Education. Link: https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/pdf/10.1177/153660060702800203
- Volk, Terese M. (1993). "Factors Influencing Music Educators in the "Rote-Note" Controversy, 1865–1900". The Bulletin of Historical Research in Music Education. 15: 31–43. doi:10.1177/153660069301500103.
gollark: They quite like the idea, so I can probably have a few raspberry pis and speakers for this.
gollark: Well, I wanted to automatically play per-person theme music upon entry of people to the computer science department at school.
gollark: It's not particularly evil, since it will only be used to identify opting-in things.
gollark: But I skimmed a paper on it and apparently the randomization can be workarounded in some cases by sending RTS frames with the device's "hardcoded" MAC address and seeing if you get a CTS frame back.
gollark: This would have been doable by just checking the MAC address against a list several years ago, but evil beeoids also did this so now phones and such have randomization.
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