Guillem82 Posted May 24, 2020 Posted May 24, 2020 (edited) Hello, Myself and Markus have been collaborating on a project centered on galant pedagogy. Here our first realizations on a Partimento by Francesco Durante (1684-1755). Partimenti are figured and unfigured basses used during Baroque and Classical period by the students who learn compositions to do realizations on based on a set of rules. All the information about history, rules and Partimenti can be found under the public domain: http://faculty-web.at.northwestern.edu/music/gjerdingen/partimenti/collections/index.htm We did a realization on following Durante's Partimento separately as a composition exercise: https://web.archive.org/web/20170401132027/http://faculty-web.at.northwestern.edu/music/gjerdingen/partimenti/collections/Durante/numerati/001DurNum/001DurNum.htm We appreciate your comments and invite anyone who want to join us to experience with galant style. Our previous collaborative work: All the best, Guillem & Markus Edited May 24, 2020 by Guillem82 MP3 Play / pause JavaScript is required. 0:00 0:00 volume > next menu Partimento no_1_Durante (by Guillem) Partimento no_1_Durante (by Markus) > next PDF Partimento no_1_Durante (by Guillem)Partimento no_1_Durante (by Markus) 2 Quote
ImprovisationAdventures Posted March 6, 2021 Posted March 6, 2021 Well done! I've just used partimento for the first time (Furno #1). Until that I improvised in classical style using the Richard Grayson method. This sound really more classical. I'm working on a way to make it easier to grasp. My idea is to share it on my yt channel and to explain what how to do it. I think people can learn it without knowing the Rule of the octave. I will add chord symbols on top of the bass line. I know this wasn't used in that time, but I think it makes it easier to grasp. Quote
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