0 a piece of art, music, literature, etc. that intentionally copies the style of someone else's work or is intentionally in various styles, or the practice of making art in either of these ways: --
Bruce not only had a high social status within the group, he also had piano skills and produced an upbeat pastiche blues tune.
This makes for an interesting ideological pastiche.
The semi-formal approach also focuses on re-creating given models, but these teachers are more -exible about teaching students notation, and use a wider range of styles for pastiche models.
The perceived level of coherence tends to be impeded by the centrifugal force of each connoted event, leading to a sense of incoherence that is typical of the pastiche.
Because it's conscious, it can sometimes be a little more clumsy perhaps, or it can evoke pastiche, or you feel the inverted commas going up: 'here's the folk bit'.
Asplund's search to combine modern and classical has been misinterpreted as indecisiveness or conservatism and been misused to justify pastiche.
There are signs of creative application and independent thinking which extend beyond mere pastiche.
This performance, however, is less parody than fragmentary pastiche.