Pacman12 Posted August 14, 2018 Posted August 14, 2018 (edited) https://musescore.com/user/28048203/scores/5196302 I still need more practice, but I felt this was decent! Edited August 15, 2018 by Pacman12 Quote
Luis Hernández Posted August 15, 2018 Posted August 15, 2018 I still wonder why many of us want to write this kind of fugues. The idea of counterpoint is very attractive in our minds. But to resemble classic counterpoint, we have to follow the basic rules. There are many collisions in the writing for example: First you have C+E+D, in strong point Second you hae D + B + C, idem Also there are parallels: here a fifth Controlling four voices is quite hard. I think that if one wants to start with fugues, do it with two voices. Quote
Pacman12 Posted August 15, 2018 Author Posted August 15, 2018 2 hours ago, Luis Hernández said: I still wonder why many of us want to write this kind of fugues. The idea of counterpoint is very attractive in our minds. But to resemble classic counterpoint, we have to follow the basic rules. There are many collisions in the writing for example: First you have C+E+D, in strong point Second you hae D + B + C, idem Also there are parallels: here a fifth Controlling four voices is quite hard. I think that if one wants to start with fugues, do it with two voices. What are the other types of fugues? Quote
Luis Hernández Posted August 15, 2018 Posted August 15, 2018 You can do a fugue with only two voices, it's easier to control. And with time, go for more voices. Quote
Alexblog Posted August 17, 2018 Posted August 17, 2018 He also looked at my own attempt to write a Fugue Report. Quote
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