Originally posted by verismissimo
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E flat major
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Totally agree with the 1st post about preferring Elgar's 2nd Symphony to the First. It honestly moves me like no other work apart from Mahler 2. It's easily my favourite British symphony, and a special experience I had while on holiday recently sealed that fact for me.
On the subject of the key of E flat major, to me it evokes a grand, broad, open space. Like being on a clifftop or the summit of a mountain and taking in the vast expanse around you.
Nice to have a thread which discusses this sort of thing. I happen to have "perfect" pitch, so I find the subject of how certain keys evoke certain moods very interesting.
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Originally posted by maestro267 View PostTotally agree with the 1st post about preferring Elgar's 2nd Symphony to the First. It honestly moves me like no other work apart from Mahler 2. It's easily my favourite British symphony, and a special experience I had while on holiday recently sealed that fact for me.
On the subject of the key of E flat major, to me it evokes a grand, broad, open space. Like being on a clifftop or the summit of a mountain and taking in the vast expanse around you.
Nice to have a thread which discusses this sort of thing. I happen to have "perfect" pitch, so I find the subject of how certain keys evoke certain moods very interesting.
Might sound an odd question, but is it ever a problem or irritation...or is it only ever useful?
And as a side issue, is it known what proportion of people have PP?
Can't understand the Elgar 2 better than 1 thing though !!I will not be pushed, filed, stamped, indexed, briefed, debriefed or numbered. My life is my own.
I am not a number, I am a free man.
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Originally posted by EdgeleyRob View PostHaving had no musical education,the key a work is in makes no difference to me,it's just part of the title of the piece I suppose.
I do like the sound of the words 'in C sharp minor' though, no idea why.
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Originally posted by Pabmusic View PostThe keys of many of George Butterworth's Shropshire Lad songs were altered between the early performances and publication. It was clearly GSKB's doing, since the original (in Eton College library) and the publisher's fair copy (in the Bodleian) are both in his hand. An example is The lads in their hundreds, which went up a semitone from F to F-sharp. These were presumably for the singer's convenience, but it's not really obvious.
My sense of perfect pitch is now rather less perfect than it was even five years ago, and that is also something that (if I think about it) I find has a distressing effect on my listening.
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Originally posted by Pabmusic View PostThe keys of many of George Butterworth's Shropshire Lad songs were altered between the early performances and publication. It was clearly GSKB's doing, since the original (in Eton College library) and the publisher's fair copy (in the Bodleian) are both in his hand. An example is The lads in their hundreds, which went up a semitone from F to F-sharp. These were presumably for the singer's convenience, but it's not really obvious.
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Originally posted by Dave2002 View PostMsg 35.
I recall reading that Benjamin Britten had a similar problem, so that later in life he heard everything a semitone out. Not sure which way, though.
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Originally posted by cloughie View PostBaritones and tenors need different keys but does this, on the basis of effect of keys on the mood of music make a difference, to the final sound.
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Originally posted by EdgeleyRob View PostNot sure what it means but it just looks so beautiful Apparently it's E Major as well C sharp minor sounds so much better.
bit of very basic theory, copy of Sibelius (ironically !) software, off you go !!
I like the simplicity of Bb Major!(which as I recall is sod to play in a contary motion scale).
Edit, I do agree that musical notation does look very beautiful. I should really try to listen to more music while following the score....expense ! Mind you there are some great bargains in the charity shops., if you are happy to buy what they happen to have. Oxfam tend to have the best selection.I will not be pushed, filed, stamped, indexed, briefed, debriefed or numbered. My life is my own.
I am not a number, I am a free man.
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Originally posted by Eine Alpensinfonie View PostHaving perfect pitch must be as much a curse as a gift, though very useful.
many people have "relative pitch" , when I used to sing in a church choir I could tell with fairly exact precision what a played note was
but this is simply a physiological memory not the supposed "perfect pitch" that some profess to have
A colleague who is a real expert on temperament was telling me that he did an experiment with a room full of music college students who played orchestral instruments asking them to imagine an oboe playing a tuning A then to hum the note, which turned out to be A on the piano
but this isn't "perfect pitch" either ........
I think some of this arises as a result of the confusion between the three terms we normally use
pitch
frequency
and
note
If I had "perfect pitch" what would it be tuned to ?
A =442
A=440 ?
A=436
etc etc
and at what age would it have been set ?
If I was born with HIPP "perfect pitch" would the LSO sound "out of tune" ?
When I was a student we had a lecturer who was a very accomplished musician and academic who claimed to have "perfect pitch" and therefore he found that Indian music all sounded "out of tune" which was more a pose on his part.
It is interesting that many people who claim this do so as a kind of status game (a bit like the oboists who insist that they play their A as 440 precisely and don't need to tuning meter ............ watch the harpist then !!!) and i'm sure there's a fascinating study to be done about it.
There are very obvious timbral differences between pitches and keys but as most of our music in the West adheres to the Pitch/Time paradigm we tend to be a bit deficient in ways of describing them. In electroacoustic music Smalley's writings on Spectral Morphology can tell us many things about this but this is sadly seen as too niche for most discussions about Classical music.
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