user45829 Posted May 23, 2018 Posted May 23, 2018 Inspired by the second movement of. Messiaen's Quatuor pour la fin du temps, as well as my first time writing anything remotely in a modern style. Ternary form with a break in the B section returning to temporary traditional harmonies. An experiment in dissonance, bitonality, chromaticism, and quintal harmonies. And yes the English is bad for a reason. Comments and critique welcome! MP3 Play / pause JavaScript is required. 0:00 0:00 volume > next menu Pencil Queue Reminiscent Snows > next PDF Pencil Queue Reminiscent Snows online vers 1 Quote
Luis Hernández Posted May 23, 2018 Posted May 23, 2018 Hi Great effort here. Using two pianos is ambitious. There are a lot of good ideas. Sometimes we may think that all the contemporary techniques go together well, however, it is important to know what systems make soft transitions to others, for example bitonality to quintal harmony, or whatever. Because if we use them one after the other with no care of that, the result is abrupt. It is also possible to superimpose harmonic systems (at the same time) in what is called harmonic layers. Quote
user45829 Posted May 24, 2018 Author Posted May 24, 2018 (edited) 16 hours ago, Luis Hernández said: Hi Great effort here. Using two pianos is ambitious. There are a lot of good ideas. Sometimes we may think that all the contemporary techniques go together well, however, it is important to know what systems make soft transitions to others, for example bitonality to quintal harmony, or whatever. Because if we use them one after the other with no care of that, the result is abrupt. It is also possible to superimpose harmonic systems (at the same time) in what is called harmonic layers. @Luis Hernández Thank you for your advice! Edited May 24, 2018 by Ilyankor Quote
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