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PeterthePapercomPoser started following Mozart's Sonata for Piano nº 5: orchestral arrangement
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Hello I've recently decided to take orchestration seriously. Just as I did with counterpoint back in the day... Yes, although I study on my own, I have always been self-taught, at some point you need guidance from an expert. So I am taking a course in orchestration. It is really for a very small group (only four people), which means the feedback is very powerful, as each person's work is reviewed in depth. I've learned a lot about the classical style (paradigm: Mozart). Why and for what purpose each thing is used. And here I share my version (reviewed by my teacher) of the orchestration of the first movement of Mozart's Piano Sonata No. 5. Now I'm working on Mendelssohn.
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Hello This aria could very well be in a Baroque opera. It's a shame that the sounds are so strange. It sounds like it's from the 90s with the new age style, when they did covers of classics. It sounds like electronic music.
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A beautiful piece with particularly harmonious interest. It needs to be completed with dynamics and accents. With that, the fact that the accompaniment pattern does not vary would not be such a problem, as it is a little monotonous as it stands.
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Another very effective example of contemporary techniques. This mixture and intersection of modes reminds me of Bartók. The truth is that many people think that anything goes in these styles. You take two scales/modes at random and start writing things. That's not the case at all. It's mentally difficult (unless you have a lot of experience as a musician and composer) to imagine how two different modes can clash/converge simultaneously... And then you have to write with great care and attention. Chapter 2 of this book is very dense! Thank you for your exercises, which are making me reread all that material.
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TristanTheTristan started following bob stole my cookie
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TristanTheTristan started following PeterthePapercomPoser
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TristanTheTristan started following chopin
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PeterthePapercomPoser started following Persichetti Exercise 2 - 15 for Piano Four Hands
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I've returned to Chapter 2 of Persichetti's "20th Century Harmony" which is about Scale Materials, Polytonality and Polymodality. The prompt was "15. Create an original two-octave-scale harmonic texture in a scherzino for piano, four hands." I chose to use C major and C# Dorian as my composite two-octave-scale. Thanks for listening and I hope that you enjoy and let me know what you think!
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JorgeDavid started following Elegia in C Minor for String Quintet
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Fruit hunter started following List of Manually-Awardable Badges
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I don’t know if this exists yet or if it’s possible that you would make it exist, but this idea is called the. “ skull collector award.” it’s for collecting all possible specialty badges from compositions. (when I mean by specialty badges, I meant the manually awarded badges that you would usually get by writing a certain piece of music that excels in something). I feel that it will be more complete with the competition awards, but that would just make it impossible due to seasonality. This award would be permanently awarded to those who completed all possible badges before any updates meaning that if someone received the badge one day and the following day added three more other badges than they would still keep the award.
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PeterthePapercomPoser started following Piano Sonata no 3 / 3. Scherzo.Allegro vivace
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Hallo @PeterthePapercomPoser, I have created a PNG which could be used as basis for a badge. Some considerations: The original photo can be found at Wikimedia Commons under https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:20-07-06-Prora-RalfR-DJI_0120.jpg. Please check whether it can be used concerning the license conditions. I have nothing against a „Collossus of Prora“ badge, but I would remind that this building did not have the best reputation because of its „problematic“ history. Originally erected by the Nazis as a huge holiday resort for their „Kraft durch Freude“ (Strength Through Joy) project. After World War II it was used a long time as military barracks, first by the Soviet Army, than by the East German Volksarmee. Since the mid-1990s, it stood empty for a long time and was exposed to decay and vandalism. Now it is (at least partly) renovated and houses a hotel, apartments etc. A more detailed overview can be found at Wikipedia under https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prora.
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He Likes a Girl (based off Nxdia's, "She Likes a Boy.")
femboy_sharky replied to femboy_sharky's topic in Choral, Vocal
Okay, thank you for your information, I greatly appreciate it.
