Originally posted by Tapiola
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What Are You Practising / Composing Now?
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Originally posted by Dave2002 View PostRe msg 666 (number of the beast) - bars 17-20 seem to have a different number of beats to the rest. Looks like 9/8 if I try counting.
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostPerhaps what is confusing you is that these bars go into two parts. They don't have a different number of beats from the others.
Is this style of notation common?
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Originally posted by Dave2002 View PostOne question - how do you know which note(s) to alter? As a composer/performer one might know one's own work, but otherwise? Or is that completely up to the performer?
Further than this - is there an assumption that the performer is actually improvising something of his/her own on top of the chords, so it's only really an outline?
I always assumed that with jazz at least there would be some form of melodic outline initially, but then the performer would develop that with later repetitions etc.
2) Yes that's the idea of chord symbols, to be interpreted by an improvisor as something to improvise over.
3) There is a melodic outline.
Originally posted by Dave2002 View PostAh - so JK has (perhaps - I think) written out the chord specified above. Is the intention that the chord should fill the whole bar, or just the first half. Looks like a dotted whole note (crotchet) to me.
Is this style of notation common?
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Originally posted by Joseph K View PostYou're talking about bars 17-20? Those chords appear on the second half of the bar, they're dotted crotchets (quarter notes). It's common to have two parts sharing the same stave, yes, and my intention - so I thought - was made clear by the use of a dotted crotchet rest before the chord, beneath the upper part.
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Originally posted by Joseph K View PostThanks Dave, that's mostly correct, just a few mistakes here and there.
You won't be able to send me any PMs for a while - as my inbox and send box need attention - again. I'll try to get those fixed by the end of the week.
It was quite an interesting exercise - and threw up and highlighted a few problems with notation entry, which hopefully I'll fix, and be aware of for the future.
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That was nice of you, Dave.
Speaking of guitars: what I'm doing at the moment is this. Some of you will have come across a couple of "electronic" compositions I made last year based on recordings of more or less improvised materials from various instrumentalists and a singer. I decided last November or so to extend this idea in the form of an album consisting of six "duo" pieces, each based on a specially recorded contribution by a different instrumentalist. I chose people I'd worked with at various times but probably none of whom had ever worked together: Australian lap steel guitarist Daryl Buckley, American flautist Anne La Berge, Canadian clarinettist Lori Freedman, Serbian cellist Ivana Grahovac, French percussionist LĂȘ Quan Ninh, and English guitarist John Russell, who sadly didn't live long enough to record his contribution. I gave no instructions to the players apart from that they should each record for 10-20 minutes, either in one stretch or several shorter ones, with close miking in a dry space, and that they shouldn't necessarily think about the kind of music they would expect me to make from what they do. I'm now working on the lap steel piece, in which there's already quite some effects-pedal action so Daryl's material sounds quite "electronic" to begin with. The composition involves not only editing and multitracking but also various degrees of processing, as well as electronic sounds of my own. I've had so much academic business to concentrate on in the last few weeks that it's been going very slowly, until today which has been a "no reading of emails" day (I'm on a coffee break now) which had the desired effect of allowing the work to develop very nicely, well I think so anyway.
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Originally posted by Dave2002 View PostI can correct those, or send you the file - though I think you have said you have too many other things to do rather than mess with music notation.
You won't be able to send me any PMs for a while - as my inbox and send box need attention - again. I'll try to get those fixed by the end of the week.
It was quite an interesting exercise - and threw up and highlighted a few problems with notation entry, which hopefully I'll fix, and be aware of for the future.
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostThat was nice of you, Dave.
Speaking of guitars: what I'm doing at the moment is this. Some of you will have come across a couple of "electronic" compositions I made last year based on recordings of more or less improvised materials from various instrumentalists and a singer. I decided last November or so to extend this idea in the form of an album consisting of six "duo" pieces, each based on a specially recorded contribution by a different instrumentalist. I chose people I'd worked with at various times but probably none of whom had ever worked together: Australian lap steel guitarist Daryl Buckley, American flautist Anne La Berge, Canadian clarinettist Lori Freedman, Serbian cellist Ivana Grahovac, French percussionist LĂȘ Quan Ninh, and English guitarist John Russell, who sadly didn't live long enough to record his contribution. I gave no instructions to the players apart from that they should each record for 10-20 minutes, either in one stretch or several shorter ones, with close miking in a dry space, and that they shouldn't necessarily think about the kind of music they would expect me to make from what they do. I'm now working on the lap steel piece, in which there's already quite some effects-pedal action so Daryl's material sounds quite "electronic" to begin with. The composition involves not only editing and multitracking but also various degrees of processing, as well as electronic sounds of my own. I've had so much academic business to concentrate on in the last few weeks that it's been going very slowly, until today which has been a "no reading of emails" day (I'm on a coffee break now) which had the desired effect of allowing the work to develop very nicely, well I think so anyway.
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Originally posted by Joseph K View PostEDIT: and alt is short for altered https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Altered_chord
Often several of the notes in an altered chord seem to be very close together, so more like a tone cluster. Perhaps the intended effect is also somewhat indeterminate, or merely percussively discordant - at least in piano music.
I suppose if a composer or arranger really wanted a more specific effect they'd write that down more explictly.
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Originally posted by Dave2002 View PostOften several of the notes in an altered chord seem to be very close together, so more like a tone cluster. Perhaps the intended effect is also somewhat indeterminate, or merely percussively discordant - at least in piano music.
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Originally posted by Dave2002 View PostAnother view of altered chords - https://music.stackexchange.com/ques...-altered-chord
Often several of the notes in an altered chord seem to be very close together, so more like a tone cluster. Perhaps the intended effect is also somewhat indeterminate, or merely percussively discordant - at least in piano music.
I suppose if a composer or arranger really wanted a more specific effect they'd write that down more explictly.
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