Frederic Gill Posted January 29 Posted January 29 (edited) Hi everyone. So far, I have studied with Percy Goetschius books and am practicing small 2-part inventions (about 1 minute long) as taught in his Elementary Counterpoint and Applied Counterpoint books. I wonder if there are other beginners working on this and willing to share our works. My goal is to use counterpoint with freedom, yet in a sensible way. I use Myriad Melody Assistant piano. Here is one example, with a motive from Handel (F maj). I apologize for the poor sound quality (I'll try to find a good alternative for my .myr files). Thanks! Edited January 29 by Frederic Gill MP3 Play / pause JavaScript is required. 0:00 0:00 volume > next menu AC - Exercise 13b 7a 20 S 2026 v3 UQ > next 1 Quote
muchen_ Posted January 29 Posted January 29 Welcome to the forums. Can you provide a score to your music? I'd be able to provide better feedback with a score. 1 Quote
Frederic Gill Posted January 29 Author Posted January 29 (edited) 12 hours ago, muchen_ said: Welcome to the forums. Can you provide a score to your music? I'd be able to provide better feedback with a score. I have made changes to measure 13, last note: C3 instead of C. Leave the C in Bass, for modulation. Edited January 29 by Frederic Gill made a change to measure 13, last note in Treble: a C#. Leave the C in Bass. PDF AC - Exercise 13b 7a 20 S 2026 v3 1 Quote
Luis Hernández Posted January 31 Posted January 31 Sounds good. The 13th bar is strange, but I see you've made a correction. I think there's some pretty good imitative treatment, characteristic of the Inventions. So many colours confuse me a bit. I suppose they highlight imitations or motifs, but as I'm colour blind, I can't tell. Best regards. 1 Quote
Frederic Gill Posted January 31 Author Posted January 31 (edited) 5 hours ago, Luis Hernández said: Sounds good. The 13th bar is strange, but I see you've made a correction. I think there's some pretty good imitative treatment, characteristic of the Inventions. So many colours confuse me a bit. I suppose they highlight imitations or motifs, but as I'm colour blind, I can't tell. Best regards. Thanks. Yes the colours in the pdf help working and recognizing the motives. I've put it in b&W (below) 😉. After over 1600 small exercises in melody, harmony and counterpoint (all with 6 Goetschius books) + 25 invention, I don't know what 'level' I am at. I've never had feedback until now! Edited January 31 by Frederic Gill PDF AC - Exercise 13b 7a 20 S 2026 v3 nb Quote
Fermata Posted 1 hour ago Posted 1 hour ago I don't think this theme was meant to be treated as the usual antecedent/consequent imitation at the octave, like in Bach’s two-part Inventions. The subject comes from a harpsichord suite by Sheeles (not by Händel); the ascending F–G–A–B is actually a codetta leading to the real answer a fifth above. As for your solution, it keeps hitting the octave far too often — you should avoid that, as it’s too harsh for two‑part counterpoint (and there are a few voice‑leading mistakes as well). The modulations to related keys could be prepared more effectively, for example by using simple sequences built from fragments of the theme. Introducing the inversion was a good idea; it adds a bit of variety. Quote
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