Andrew Goodwin
(born in Hillingdon, Middlesex) was Director of Music and Organist at Bangor Cathedral for 37 years.
After living in Oxford and then in the West Midlands, Goodwin studied at the University of Liverpool and was subsequently a postgraduate student at the University of Wales Bangor; he obtained degrees in Music at both Liverpool and Bangor, and is also a Fellow of the Royal College of Organists.
He was Director of Music and Organist at Bangor Cathedral for 37 years, a period when the Welsh singer Aled Jones was a member of his choir and he relinquished his position in the Cathedral on Saturday 31 October 2009. In 2001, he was presented with the Archbishop of Wales' Award for Church Music in recognition of his work. He has regularly been involved with television and radio broadcasts, not only with the Cathedral Choir, but also as a soloist and accompanist. In addition he has served as a member of the Broadcasting Council for Wales' Music Advisory Panel, and has travelled widely both as a recitalist and as a music examiner.
Andrew Goodwin’s Theory
Summary of Goodwins points
the meaning of the song is illustrated through use of images, particularly through voyeurism, close-ups of the main artists, and use of mis-en-scene.
and the meaning of the song is constantly "drummed into" our vision because its repeated over and over again, which could be a result of the beat, or the same images being shown again and again, or the mis-en-scene could be constant throughout.
My example which supports this theory
i chose "do it like a dude" by Jessie J, because the message of women being able to operate at the same level and act like men is constant through the use of mis-en-scene, and the images we see of women acting like men at clubs, which completely supports this theory!
the meaning of the song is illustrated through use of images, particularly through voyeurism, close-ups of the main artists, and use of mis-en-scene.
and the meaning of the song is constantly "drummed into" our vision because its repeated over and over again, which could be a result of the beat, or the same images being shown again and again, or the mis-en-scene could be constant throughout.
My example which supports this theory
i chose "do it like a dude" by Jessie J, because the message of women being able to operate at the same level and act like men is constant through the use of mis-en-scene, and the images we see of women acting like men at clubs, which completely supports this theory!
I think you may have the wrong Andrew Goodwin in your introduction! You're after the media theorist, not a church organist!
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