Thatguy v2.0 Posted November 7 Posted November 7 Hello there! Before, I had the project in mind of writing 12 piano preludes, and that was just dandy. I don't know how consecutively I'll write more, but a few ideas have lingered lately so I figured I would dabble at it again. Here's a very short one in C, hope you enjoy! MP3 Play / pause JavaScript is required. 0:00 0:00 volume > next menu Prelude No.13 audio > next PDF Prelude No.13 - C - Full Score 2 Quote
HoYin Cheung Posted Saturday at 06:34 AM Posted Saturday at 06:34 AM Nostalgic vibe there. Do you think of the harmony first or melody? 3 Quote
Thatguy v2.0 Posted Monday at 03:50 PM Author Posted Monday at 03:50 PM On 11/8/2025 at 12:34 AM, HoYin Cheung said: Nostalgic vibe there. Do you think of the harmony first or melody? Thanks for checking this out! Depends on the idea, I don't have a formula. This time it was just about adding voices to an unchanging melody while keeping it very simple. Other times I build everything off of a harmonic progression. Sometimes a rhythmic cell is really interesting and it starts from there. But most importantly, I wish I had a better answer lol 1 Quote
Henry Ng Tsz Kiu Posted Tuesday at 01:01 AM Posted Tuesday at 01:01 AM Hey VInce, I like the simplistic style here and the smooth voice leading. I will make sure to try this on piano and record it. Henry 2 Quote
Thatguy v2.0 Posted Wednesday at 03:01 PM Author Posted Wednesday at 03:01 PM On 11/10/2025 at 7:01 PM, Henry Ng Tsz Kiu said: I will make sure to try this on piano and record it. Awesome Henry! I have a version with all the fingering if that helps 😛 Quote
Kvothe Posted Wednesday at 03:57 PM Posted Wednesday at 03:57 PM Morning @Thatguy v2.0 Here is mine review of the prelude: The overall structure is built is first on opening phrase. I love how you use this idea and expand on it. The anticipation of each chord of each phrase is nice resolution of the chromatic raising line. I think the implied harmonies: I-V/V-bII6-I. This now makes ask...why are we going from V/V to bII6? 🙂 The answer: this is not a typical resoultion of the seconary dom... 2 Quote
Thatguy v2.0 Posted Wednesday at 04:04 PM Author Posted Wednesday at 04:04 PM 5 minutes ago, Kvothe said: I think the implied harmonies: I-V/V-bII6-I. This now makes ask...why are we going from V/V to bII6? Which bars? 1 Quote
Kvothe Posted Wednesday at 05:07 PM Posted Wednesday at 05:07 PM 1 hour ago, Thatguy v2.0 said: Which bars? b2. I think. But b5 is not? 1 Quote
Thatguy v2.0 Posted Wednesday at 05:32 PM Author Posted Wednesday at 05:32 PM 15 minutes ago, Kvothe said: b2. I think. But b5 is not? Ah gotcha, thanks. The bII chord is throwing me off, you mean the Db one in b.9 (it has no 3rd)? Btw, I wrote this for two reasons, and one was tinkering with implied harmony. It's interesting to hear different interpretations of it. Thanks for checking this out 🙂 1 Quote
Kvothe Posted Wednesday at 05:37 PM Posted Wednesday at 05:37 PM 4 minutes ago, Thatguy v2.0 said: Ah gotcha, thanks. The bII chord is throwing me off, you mean the Db one in b.9 (it has no 3rd)? Btw, I wrote this for two reasons, and one was tinkering with implied harmony. It's interesting to hear different interpretations of it. Thanks for checking this out 🙂 You are welcome. 🙂 Quote
Henry Ng Tsz Kiu Posted yesterday at 01:24 AM Posted yesterday at 01:24 AM 10 hours ago, Thatguy v2.0 said: Awesome Henry! I have a version with all the fingering if that helps 😛 😆 I'm sure my big hands can get hold of them haha 1 Quote
PeterthePapercomPoser Posted 21 hours ago Posted 21 hours ago Hey Vince! Nice prelude! Does this mean you're just going to keep writing more of these periodically? It would be cool! I think the tonic 6/4 chord in the last bar makes me expect a V before resolving to the final chord. It's such a well worn norm in classical music to hear the I 6/4 either followed by a dominant or a cadenza. 13 hours ago, Kvothe said: I think the implied harmonies: I-V/V-bII6-I. This now makes ask...why are we going from V/V to bII6? 🙂 The answer: this is not a typical resoultion of the seconary dom... Considering that a V/V and bII6 are both pre-dominant function chords, I don't think it would be unusual to transition from one to the other, especially since the V/V can function as a tritone substitution of the bII. 12 hours ago, Kvothe said: b2. I think. But b5 is not? But there are no bII's in those bars. In bar 2, the implied chords are V/V, IV, ii7b5, with an anticipation of the return to the tonic in bar 3. Then in bar 5, there is a resolution to vi. The only place where a bII appears anywhere in this piece (as Vince mentioned) is in bar 9 beat 3 but it's in root position with the 3rd omitted. But thanks for sharing Vince! 2 Quote
Thatguy v2.0 Posted 1 hour ago Author Posted 1 hour ago 19 hours ago, PeterthePapercomPoser said: I think the tonic 6/4 chord in the last bar makes me expect a V before resolving to the final chord. No V for you sir Thanks for checking it out Peter! 😁 1 Quote
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