Originally posted by Joseph K
View Post
What Are You Practising / Composing Now?
Collapse
X
-
-
-
Originally posted by Suffolkcoastal View PostYes I have uploaded the Symphony Richard
Comment
-
-
As for me, I had the first rehearsal of my mediaeval songs yesterday. Although in many ways, for obvious reasons, these pieces are much less complex than my own work, they do employ various techniques that the predominantly "classical music"-oriented ensemble were unfamiliar with, so that the strings had to be coaxed into pushing their sul ponticello further than they normally would, as well as playing without any vibrato, and the winds into playing the (microtonal) trill fingerings I'd notated. It will be all right on the night though (sandwiched between Ravel and Birtwistle).
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by RichardB View PostSo I hear! I enjoyed listening to that, although it would have been nice to be able to make the score smaller on the screen so as to get a better overview of it - sometimes all I can see is bars with rests in them! My favourite moments are those where the texture thins out to reveal solo instruments emerging from the counterpoint, like the english horn solo just before 26'. I have a feeling that some features of the music, like the general harmonic atmosphere and the tendency towards long stretches of perpetuum mobile, as in the final movement (I recall a similar kind of thing in one of Koechlin's orchestral pieces, although the resemblance ends there!), have points of reference in the Anglo-American symphonic tradition(s) of the 20th century that I'm not sufficiently familiar with to pick up on. Anyway, congratulations on producing such a substantial work. I'm particularly attracted to the way its overall form and proportions don't follow a received idea of balance but have the confidence to go their own way.
I can see that it's a print only version - but if the "don't show empty staves" is set for every page other than the first it might be easier for some of us to follow - and also take up a lot less space or paper.
Maybe Continuous View would also help - though I'm not sure if that works in the online version for uploads.
Well done!
Comment
-
-
I might have a go at playing Bluesette on a piano using only a lead sheet. Aimee Nolte gives some suggestions as to how to do it here - https://youtu.be/wjq9F_EFtOA.
I have come to realise that perhaps many jazz pianists do not use fully written out scores, so a rather different approach needed compared with trying to play Mozart, Beethoven or Bartók from more conventional notation.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by Joseph K View PostAny idea yet when the performance will be streamed?
Comment
-
-
Thank you for your kind comments Richard and for taking the time to listen to the Symphony, I wonder how you feel it compares with the first two symphonies? There may be a work around for viewing the score more easily via youtube, however at the moment anything longer than abou 25 minutes can't be uploaded from Musescore to youtube, will keep trying though.
Dave did you get a chance to listen all the way through?
Comment
-
-
I've decided to share what I've been scratching my head about for the past few weeks or more - some three-part first species counterpoint exercises. Trying to figure out lines that tick all the boxes and follow all the rules is like some fiendish form of musical sudoku (though I'm guessing, never having done sudoku). I'm still certainly not happy with all of these. The middle one, where the cantus firmus appears in the middle part, predictably - since this is the hardest permutation to write - fails mainly owing to the lacklustre bassline. Aspects of the top one like the simultaneous leaps near the beginning I think are a bit of a no-no but I'll have to refer back to the text to confirm or deny this. I am pleased with the bassline on the bottom exercise, though the middle part suffers that problem of meandering around the same pitches, and in fact this whole exercise could do with being transposed down a fifth.
Of course, I have spent a long time practising the examples given in the text (which is Salzer & Schachter's Counterpoint in Composition) by which I mean singing one part and playing the others on my keyboard, and it's been very good for my ears and ability to internally read music (and practice reading alto clef).
Comment
-
Comment