Samuel_vangogh Posted January 31 Posted January 31 Hiii, this is the final version of one of my excercises for school, as it's in an impressionistic style I decided to give it a french name! It means "arriving boats at the quay" Ejercicio No 13 1.pdf MP3 Play / pause JavaScript is required. 0:00 0:00 volume > next menu Ejercicio No 13 1 > next PDF Ejercicio No 13 1 1 Quote
Henry Ng Tsz Kiu Posted February 1 Posted February 1 Hi @Samuel_vangogh, I really like the mixolydian used in the music. The counterpoint sounds nice, and the quartal chord as well. B. 19 sounds like English Renaissance music to me as well! I think you portray a great mysterious mood here. Maybe you can make the themes more apparent too, but that’s personal opinion since the less apparent theme definitely helps the mood. Thx for sharing! Henry 1 Quote
Samuel_vangogh Posted February 1 Author Posted February 1 Hi @Henry Ng Tsz Kiu Thank you for your comment! I'm pretty happy with the final result but I think I could have explored further the harmony and sounds of the piano. I wanted the music to sound homogeneous and the main melody to be fragmented so that it would not take up much of the spotlight, which is why I tried to make the counterpoint blend with the melody. Quote
PeterthePapercomPoser Posted 7 hours ago Posted 7 hours ago Hello @Samuel_vangogh! I like the vibe of this piece and as you've already stated above, I understand that your intent was to create a certain background mood? It's not too attention getting and serves that purpose well. Also about the counterpoint - the way you use it is well suited for your intent because the heterophonic/polyphonic textures tend to lose the focus of the melodic line. This would be more of a problem in a more deliberately thematic work like a sonata but I think it works well here. Thanks for sharing! 1 Quote
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