Jacob Hall Posted September 1, 2016 Share Posted September 1, 2016 A short unaccompanied solo I wrote for one of my flutist friends. My basic train of thought when conducting this was to present a few themes, and then restate them in loose variation style, present a new theme, so on and so forth. When I presented it to her, her only complaint was my grouping sixteenth notes around a key change at measures 15 and 16. I hope some flutists and composers can offer advice and criticisms. MP3 Play / pause JavaScript is required. 0:00 0:00 volume > next menu serenade for flute > next PDF serenade_for_flute Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Monarcheon Posted September 1, 2016 Share Posted September 1, 2016 In measures 9 and 10, you should have your eighth note beamed to the 16th notes, then tied to the dotted half notes. This keeps the piece looking as if it's in 4/4. Your friend is right, in beaming the 16th notes; having them only in two without beaming them to the beat looks strange. From your section from m. 34 onwards, the beat becomes confused they way you've written it. Classical theory is one to say your beaming needs to make sense to the beats given in 4/4. If it's a conscious choice, then ignore me. The piece sounds pretty traditional, so I thought that may be decent advice. Here's the big one. I think you really underutilize the flute in this piece. I tried playing this briefly and it seems very reserved in how it was written; very to the beat, yeah? The flute's capable of gorgeous trills, nice runs, and hearing a flute player exaggerate dynamics is always great to hear. If your friend likes it the way it is though, don't worry about it too much. It certainly gets the point across. Your piece sounds very nice. The form you wanted to use was pleasantly executed! The beaming thing is just engraving but I just think you could add a lot more to make this so much more vivid. Cheers, and congrats! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Luis Hernández Posted September 1, 2016 Share Posted September 1, 2016 I agree with Monarcheon, mainly in the last point. If you use a flute as solo instruments, it's good to exploit its possibilities. OK, perhaps you prefer a plainer idiom for the flute. But there's something basic I think there is underused here: the lower register, even the medium register appear in a few measures. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Jacob Hall Posted September 2, 2016 Author Share Posted September 2, 2016 22 hours ago, Monarcheon said: In measures 9 and 10, you should have your eighth note beamed to the 16th notes, then tied to the dotted half notes. This keeps the piece looking as if it's in 4/4. Your friend is right, in beaming the 16th notes; having them only in two without beaming them to the beat looks strange. From your section from m. 34 onwards, the beat becomes confused they way you've written it. Classical theory is one to say your beaming needs to make sense to the beats given in 4/4. If it's a conscious choice, then ignore me. The piece sounds pretty traditional, so I thought that may be decent advice. Here's the big one. I think you really underutilize the flute in this piece. I tried playing this briefly and it seems very reserved in how it was written; very to the beat, yeah? The flute's capable of gorgeous trills, nice runs, and hearing a flute player exaggerate dynamics is always great to hear. If your friend likes it the way it is though, don't worry about it too much. It certainly gets the point across. Your piece sounds very nice. The form you wanted to use was pleasantly executed! The beaming thing is just engraving but I just think you could add a lot more to make this so much more vivid. Cheers, and congrats! Thank you for your response. I tried listening to a lot of flute literature before attempting this and I did think the end product was kind of basic for an unaccompanied solo. And also thanks for the engraving advice. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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