"Composition" is often classed as the creation and recording of music
via a medium by which others can interpret it (i.e., paper or sound).
Many cultures use at least part of the concept of preconceiving musical
material, or composition, as held in western classical music.
Even when music is notated precisely, there are still many decisions
that a performer has to make. The process of a performer deciding how to
perform music that has been previously composed and notated is termed
interpretation. Different performers' interpretations of the same music
can vary widely. Composers and song writers who present their own music
are interpreting, just as much as those who perform the music of others
or folk music. The standard body of choices and techniques present at a
given time and a given place is referred to as performance practice,
whereas interpretation is generally used to mean either individual
choices of a performer, or an aspect of music that is not clear, and
therefore has a "standard" interpretation.
In some musical genres, such as jazz and blues, even more freedom is
given to the performer to engage in improvisation on a basic melodic,
harmonic, or rhythmic framework. The greatest latitude is given to the
performer in a style of performing called free improvisation, which is material that is spontaneously "thought of" (imagined) while being performed, not preconceived. Improvised music usually follows stylistic or genre conventions and even "fully composed" includes some freely chosen material.
Composition does not always mean the use of notation, or the known sole
authorship of one individual. Music can also be determined by
describing a "process" that creates musical sounds. Examples of this
range from wind chimes, through computer programs that select sounds.
Music from random elements is called Aleatoric music, and is associated with such composers as John Cage, Morton Feldman, and Witold Lutosławski.
Music can be composed for repeated performance or it can be
improvised: composed on the spot. The music can be performed entirely
from memory, from a written system of musical notation, or some
combination of both. Study of composition has traditionally been
dominated by examination of methods and practice of Western classical
music, but the definition of composition is broad enough to include
spontaneously improvised works like those of free jazz performers and African drummers such as the Ewe drummers.
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