Monarcheon Posted September 10, 2016 Posted September 10, 2016 The 50th in my sketch series. Working with basic tone rows (kind of ineffectively, but it works) and compound time signatures in this one. It sounds pretty minimal, until the slower parts. Enjoy! You're also probably wondering why I used the treble octave up clef instead of an 8va... well... I got lazy. Haha, sorry. It's just a sketch, after all. MP3 Play / pause JavaScript is required. 0:00 0:00 volume > next menu Sketch No. 50 > next Quote
Luis Hernández Posted September 10, 2016 Posted September 10, 2016 Very very nice. 1. You've been clever using irregular time signatures, and avoiding the "repeated tuplet effect", which is tiring. 2. Charming harmonies, and fresh. The result is impressionistic, perhaps? One question: Is it wrong using here the treble octave up clef? I think that if it affects the whole piece it is clear. If I had written this, I would have omitted the time signatures, even the bars. It's nearly "ametrics". Well, call it sketch, but I think it's a work well defined and done. Greetings! 1 Quote
Emiliano Manna Posted September 11, 2016 Posted September 11, 2016 Very nice. Reminds me of George Perle in his mixture of quasi-tonal and serial styles. Quote
Ken320 Posted September 12, 2016 Posted September 12, 2016 I liked it as well. It has an impressionist overall mood, but maybe by way of Messiaen? I think the bar lines are very useful to the pianist who needs signposts. The early bars are just 4/4 with a kind of syncopation. But it gets more complex later on, like 9/16 + 4/16, so it really helps to have the measure dissected and delineated. So I disagree with Luis there. 1 Quote
fishyfry Posted September 13, 2016 Posted September 13, 2016 Great work! To me it's quite chilling, perhaps an unconscious association because there has been a good bit of horror movie music similar to the triplets at the beginning. I like pieces that integrate a tone row in a not entirely serial context. I definitely hear Messiaen, as Ken pointed out. I also agree about the importance of the bar lines and time signatures. In my mind, a piece would lack those features only if it had no real rhythm or pulse, but I could be thinking incorrectly. 1 Quote
Monarcheon Posted September 13, 2016 Author Posted September 13, 2016 51 minutes ago, fishyfry said: I definitely hear Messiaen 21 hours ago, Ken320 said: It has an impressionist overall mood, but maybe by way of Messiaen? I wasn't actually very familiar with him, so I looked him up, and what I heard I liked very much; I'm flattered! Thank you all for your comments! 1 Quote
Ravels Radical Rivalry Posted September 20, 2016 Posted September 20, 2016 On September 12, 2016 at 8:42 PM, Monarcheon said: I wasn't actually very familiar with him, so I looked him up, and what I heard I liked very much; I'm flattered! Thank you all for your comments! Oh Messiaen is a god. Last movement of Quartet for the End of Time (my favorite thing he ever wrote), Turangalila Symphony, his piano preludes, Éclairs sur l'au-dele, Oraison (one of my other favorite things), O Sacrum Vivium, etc. I am glad you went and checked out some of his stuff. He is just such a unique individual in the world of composition. Quote
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