Originally posted by Suffolkcoastal
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Writing A Symphony - How Do They Do It?
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Thropplenoggin
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I find the whole composition process in earlier centuries quite bewildering. Many composers seem to have been constantly on the move, performing in cities and cathedrals etc all over Europe, lurching around in coaches, hanging onto multiple sheets of manuscript paper (most of which had to be lined beforehand) arranging concerts, trying to get paid, arranging for multiple orchestral copies to be made, talking to publishers, editing, letter-writing, having tempestuous affairs, being dragged out for the evening by friends to go to the local tavern, attempting to sober up the morning after, families and in several cases, lots of children, salons and music societies to attend, lessons to give, persuading impresarios and orchestras to play their music, severe illness and short lives in some cases - it's really quite bewildering how they managed any composition at all let alone producing multiple symphonies, masses of masses, choral works, string quartets, songs, overtures...
Exhausting just to think about it !
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Originally posted by Dave2002 View PostThey wouldn't have had to worry about virus checkers, disc defragmentaion, slow internet, poor router connectivity etc. Maybe that accounts for their speed!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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Thropplenoggin
Originally posted by Eine Alpensinfonie View Post"pre music software" it took longer, but on sheets of manuscript paper you have a better overview and I think you are more creative.
I do most of my orchestration using the 1995 version of Sibelius 7. But when I want subtlety, back I go to the paper with the telegraph wires.
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Originally posted by Thropplenoggin View PostFascinating insights, SC. Have any been recorded or Prommed?
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I wrote a symphony last year
the ability to imagine a sound you can't hear isn't that extraordinary
certainly using a computer to produce the score was much easier than what I used to do before
but I always think about how Feldman said that he composed
"start at the top left and end at the bottom right"
composing something on a large scale (the piece I wrote last year was about 25 minutes ) requires an understanding of how one bit relates to another BUT isn't radically different to making several short pieces.........
My Symphony was a mixture of techniques
a movement as a single stretch of music
one as a series of short episodes
and another as another long slowly developing series of strands that come together
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Originally posted by MrGongGong View Post...the ability to imagine a sound you can't hear isn't that extraordinary
certainly using a computer to produce the score was much easier than what I used to do before
but I always think about how Feldman said that he composed
"start at the top left and end at the bottom right"
composing something on a large scale (the piece I wrote last year was about 25 minutes ) requires an understanding of how one bit relates to another BUT isn't radically different to making several short pieces...
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Originally posted by Pabmusic View PostTo me, music is as natural a language to use as English. Just as I don't usually have to think hard to construct a coherent sentence, I don't have to think hard to imagine music. In fact, it's easier than ever because I can easily hear the finished product (computers!) whereas in the past it was all handwritten, generally without use of a piano.
Though when I write music for instruments as opposed to electroacoustic or things with live electronics I find that I am always dissatisfied with the computer playback and it can make the voicing of instruments harder to get right. Which is rather counter intuitive.
This book is interesting if you are interested in Sonic Phenomena such as the effect of imagining a sound you can't hear etc
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Originally posted by Pabmusic View PostLittle do you realise that Elgar, far-sighted that he was, wrote just to annoy you.
If I was being cynical my answer to the "why" question would be
Student finance
MOT
Mortgage
Tax bill
etc etc
but the real reasons WHY people write music are much more interesting ...........
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Originally posted by Pabmusic View PostThis has the feel of a new thread about it - pieces that make you wonder why the composer bothered.
HS
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