mercia, having had a look this morning what you say seems perfectly correct. I found this "Chopin put all preludes into an order of tonalities, however with a difference; in the Well Tempered Clavier all tonalities rise chromatically, while Chopin put his preludes into an order that follows the circle of tonalities. It is known that Chopin studied thoroughly the works of Bach before writing his preludes" Like you, tuning, temperament and tonalities are a mystery. No doubt Angle knows all about them.
Alphabet associations - I
Collapse
This topic is closed.
X
This is a sticky topic.
X
X
-
Anna
-
Anna
Originally posted by merciaI didn't mean to interrupt your answering of the question Anna, I just had nothing better to do at 5:10 this morning
Comment
-
Anna
Could be woven into the answer I guess Dave. Also, there is a lovely childrens book by Eric Carle called The Bad-Tempered Ladybird! Or tempered steel maybe
Angle said to carry on with a U (I see I also set the last U) so here goes. An easy one.
Which U is found in the following:
An comic opera, an Aria of which Mozart used for a set of Variations, later used by Tchaikovsky
An re-working of the Opera 11 years later by a different composer
An 80s tv series with music by Ron Grainer, (a quote by Oscar Wilde could also be brought in)
Edit: Obviously the Opera title is in translation, not yer actual French!Last edited by Guest; 17-06-11, 12:12.
Comment
-
LIke Mercia, I have my own time zone but it is out of synch at the other end, as I think is quite well-known here and everywhere else. Woe betide the person who phones before 11am!
I might have been a bit clever with the Chopin bit of T but :
"Well tempered" means that the twelve notes per octave of the standard keyboard are tuned in such a way that it is possible to play music in most major or minor keys and it will not sound perceptibly out of tune. In most tuning systems used before 1700, one or more intervals on the twelve-note keyboard were so far from any pure interval that they were unusable in harmony and were called a "wolf"
J. S. Bach wrote The Well-Tempered Clavier to demonstrate the musical possibilities of well temperament, where in some keys the consonances are even more degraded than in equal temperament
An equal temperament is a musical temperament, or a system of tuning, in which every pair of adjacent notes has an identical frequency ratio. As pitch is perceived roughly as the logarithm of frequency, this means that the perceived "distance" from every note to its nearest neighbor is the same for every note in the system.
We now live in a world where Bach will probably be played on a well tempered instrument. Medieval music may be performed using a Pythagorean scale. And, Chopin will probably be played on an equal tempered piano.
Comment
-
-
Anna
Oh, thanks Angle. Very clearly explained, I'm now wondering if you were a music teacher and/or musician?
Comment
-
Anna
Originally posted by antongould View PostIs there an answer in here?
Edit: cross posting with Dave (one of the only faults with this MB I find)
Comment
-
Anna
Originally posted by antongould View PostSo Unexpected
As Dave who obviously should have the V says Mr. Trainer wrote the music for Tales of the Unexpected.
The Opera is I think The Unexpected Encounter by Gluck?
Wilde said "To expect the unexpected shows a thoroughly modern intellect.." but then he said so much!
Comment
-
Anna
Originally posted by antongould View PostJust got it I think the Unexpected Encounter by Uncle Jo in 1775 - sorry Anna I got an F in French O Level!
La rencontre imprévue (The Unexpected Encounter), also known as Les pèlerins de la Mecque (The Pilgrims to Mecca) is a comédie mêlée d’ariettes, a form of opéra comique, by Gluck, first performed at the Burgtheater, Vienna on January 7, 1764. The libretto was by Louis Hurtaut Dancourt
In 1784 Mozart wrote a set of variations for piano (K.455) on the aria “Unser dummer Pöbel meint” from this opera. In 1887 the variations were orchestrated by Tchaikovsky as the final movement of his orchestral Suite No.4 “Mozartiana”.
The Haydn Opera in 3 acts ‘Unexpected Encounter’ as previously set by Gluck was performed in 1775 using the same libretto. Rarely performed it was first staged in the UK at the Camden Festival in 1966. The first complete recording was made by Philips in 1980
Roald Dahl wrote Tales of the Unexpected with music by Ron Grainer and the Oscar quote was spot on.
So, you obviously have the V
It's a bit odd at the moment with so many of the regulars being away due to work, family, holidays.
Comment
Comment