HoYin Cheung Posted July 13 Posted July 13 Hello all, I would like to share the second movement of my Symphony No.1. I belive this is a movement with more contrast than the first movement, and I wish you will enjoy it. In case you haven't listened to the first movement, here is the link: Symphony No.1 - First Movement - Orchestral and Large Ensemble Thank you for listening! HoYin PDF Symphony No.1 -Mov II 1 Quote
PeterthePapercomPoser Posted Thursday at 05:30 AM Posted Thursday at 05:30 AM Hi @HoYin Cheung! This one is quite contrapuntally complex! The motivic ideas and counterpoint are sound. And there is a clear hierarchy of importance and different elements are brought in and out of the foreground dynamically like a kaleidoscope. There is a natural ebb and flow and a sense of flourishing at every moment of the piece's duration. It is surprising how thematic the piece actually is once I listen again and pay attention, despite the challenging harmonic language and sometimes cacophonous orchestration, with elements seemingly chaotically interrupting each other. The reduction in instrumental forces towards the end really helps to bring the piece towards its conclusion. And it looks/sounds like your harp writing towards the end is quite possible and even easy for the harp to play! Looking back over the score, I notice that the 16th notes runs in measure 28 - 30 in the winds don't seem to be audible (at least I couldn't hear them). Presumably you rendered this score with NotePerformer? Thanks for sharing - I enjoyed it! 1 Quote
HoYin Cheung Posted 9 hours ago Author Posted 9 hours ago Hi @PeterthePapercomPoser Thank you for the comment! I hope this work is not too complicated and bitter to you. On 7/24/2025 at 1:30 PM, PeterthePapercomPoser said: This one is quite contrapuntally complex! The motivic ideas and counterpoint are sound. And there is a clear hierarchy of importance and different elements are brought in and out of the foreground dynamically like a kaleidoscope. There is a natural ebb and flow and a sense of flourishing at every moment of the piece's duration. It is surprising how thematic the piece actually is once I listen again and pay attention, despite the challenging harmonic language and sometimes cacophonous orchestration, with elements seemingly chaotically interrupting each other. Yes, my music is usually highly thematic and is usually evolving. This way of writing give me a balance (which I hope to achieve) where coherence between different passages while constantly giving changes/ energy to the music like a living creature - instead of very structured development. On 7/24/2025 at 1:30 PM, PeterthePapercomPoser said: The reduction in instrumental forces towards the end really helps to bring the piece towards its conclusion. And it looks/sounds like your harp writing towards the end is quite possible and even easy for the harp to play! It really does. After all those dramas, I just want some "peace" to settle the piece, and prepare the audience to the next movement. Another technical considerations is that, I realize there might be frequent pedal changes to play the written chords, but I don't want 2 harps to play there. So I wrote the passage in a minimal way. On 7/24/2025 at 1:30 PM, PeterthePapercomPoser said: Looking back over the score, I notice that the 16th notes runs in measure 28 - 30 in the winds don't seem to be audible (at least I couldn't hear them). Presumably you rendered this score with NotePerformer? Thanks for sharing - I enjoyed it! Yes, Dorico with NotePerformer. Any good suggestion to avoid that issue lol 1 Quote
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