Posted on

Composition: Chamber

Greetings friends!  It has been about two months since I have posted something and much of that has to do with life, the universe, and not getting a good a proper recording done.  It is also coupled with that I am trying to get a recording from another organ and space as I have been becoming increasingly frustrated with the instrument in the Monastery Church.  I have attempted to be as kind as possible about it, but the Möller is a Möller and has limited potential, one that I feel has been realized by the Evening Improvisations.

And now for something completely different…  Earlier this year I ran an improvisation session with a bunch of young students.  It was a blast!  I think there are some fine tuning elements that I will include next time I do it, but the real success of the night was one particular piece I titled, “To be determined…”  It was modeled after modern pop ballads (as I see and hear them), but it was template in which the students would be able to improvise upon.

Well, it was enough of a hit that my violinist friend who sponsored the event wanted the students to have something to take home.  Another friend of mine from CCAC, needed people to record for his Audio Recording course.  I saw this as the perfect opportunity to help both of my friends get things done!  I am happy to announce the result: a fully realized version of the song “To be determined…”  Here is a link to the score:

Screen Shot 2017-12-12 at 11.58.33 PM.png

Here I will note that I have titled this a “composition.”  For me, creating a template for improvisation falls far on the side of composition and less improvisation.  Knowing that improvisation will happen is only a part of the compositional process, not an actual realization of the result.  Writing, planning, and realizing the backing track was truly fun; though the sound of the song is of a pop kind, the process for me was as much like any other composition that I have written, with decidedly different results.

Posted on

Composition: Piano

This is the final piece in the Interludes for piano – a series of works devised for my music theory teaching.  The last movement contains one of my earliest ideas – during the B section.  Somewhere in my old files is a bunch of scherzo sketches that never amounted to a work.  The B section in this piece uses exactly one of those concepts from the scherzo sketches.  It is something I have always liked and it fit this particular piece very well, even as an old idea and super secret introduction to the octatonic scale.

And here is where I admit that I didn’t know what the octatonic scale was until much after I had invented this idea.  Or perhaps I didn’t pay enough attention to my theory classes as an undergrad but absorbed particular ideas.  It does’t matter.  It fits the piece and if you want my original idea, pull an 8′ and 2′ flute, play the beginning of the B section quickly, and you’ll hear my original plan.

Always write down every musical thought.  Every idea can have a place: discard or future use. This piece is an excellent example.  Download here!  Here’s me performing the work:

 

Posted on

Composition: Piano

The fifth piece in these (free!) piano interludes is perhaps the most obvious in its form: namely, ternary.  I never had the chance to use this in a classroom setting but I am really happy with the B middle section, which is a two voice fugue.  I wrote this fugue for this piece because I had attempted to write an easy fugue for another work (TBA) and I eventually scrapped it.  But I love fugal writing and I find two voices in particular to be challenging as much has to be filled in by the listener.

That being said, I love the contrast between a more aesthetically driven section and something contrapuntal.  Franck, Beethoven, my favorite of the romantics often used counterpoint as an element of contrast.  There is even an interview with Philip Glass where he admits the study of Bach helped him understand voicing.  Maybe the next set of free works I write will be a variety of fugues or some other forms of counterpoint.

Download the score here.

Enjoy!

Posted on

Composition: Piano

This particular Interlude, one I would call a valiant attempt, is supposed to be in rondo form.  As I have stated in previous posts, these Interludes were composed with the a teaching element in mind.  The problem with rondo form is that it is usually a larger scale form, one that cannot simply be put on a single page.  From this point on, this and the next two interludes were never presented to any class I taught.  I like these pieces, but didn’t feel they did what I wanted for teaching purposes.

Interestingly, this was my second attempt at writing a single page rondo.  I’m not sure it is entirely successful, but here it is in any case.  Each line in this rondo form has it’s own form marking, ABACACoda (A-B-A1-C-A2-A-coda in reality).  But expressing this form as found in a single page is quite trite.  Most classical rondo forms are lengthier than this particular piece.  Download it here.

Posted on 1 Comment

Composition: Piano

The third Interlude in this series is the earliest written.  Just as the other Interludes incorporated elements taught in a theory curriculum for both written and aural theory 3, this one too does as well.  The element prominently used is of course the metric modulation.  There are some harmonic elements typical of later 19th century music too.  It’s also written in a rounded binary form which was a part of the assignment.  That’s all well and good as far as the assignment goes, but what I enjoyed about writing was using the romantic harmonies.  I hadn’t done anything quite deliberate like this before, one were I was explicit in form and harmony.

I also like E Major.  Fits nice in my hands.  Download the score for free here!

Posted on 1 Comment

Composition: Piano

This second interlude was more recently written and is a demonstration of rounded binary form.  I also used this for my aural theory class by erasing a number of notes out and having the students fill it in.  Hence, there are no accidentals in the work, making it slightly easier as an aural theory assignment.

That last statement presented me a challenge: how do I get the piece to fit into two different assignments at the same time?  Part of the answer is making the piece somewhat modal.  I also inverted the theme in the return of the A section, leading to a cadence in the key.  That part, I think, tripped up a few people in the assignment.  I’ll discuss the style of these works in the next post, but I was trying to allude a certain style coming in typical written theory 3 curriculums.

Posted on 1 Comment

Composition: Piano

Greetings!  I know I haven’t posted anything but it is because of the usual things that happen around March and April, which is of course Palm Sunday, Holy Week, and Easter.  The other event that usually happens to me around this time is the end of a semester of teaching music theory.  This year, I decided to write a series of short piano pieces to demonstrate different binary and ternary forms.  Two of them were written in prior years, but this one was specifically written this April for an assignment.  Important: get the score here!

The assignment was to decide the form of the piece and defend your answer.  The answer is ternary because of the three distinct, independent parts = A B A (and repeats).  Like many of the free works I post, this one was fun to write and is definitely related to how I often improvise on a piano.

Posted on

Composition: Organ

This composition is the last of the set of three lenten chorale preludes for the hymn St. Flavian.  Here is where I admit that this particular movement went through a whole bunch of drafts before it got to the version that it’s currently in.  One thing I have tried to do with these preludes is leave them open to interpretation.  I decided to register this movement for manuals only, strings in the right hand, flutes in the left.  That was after I had a different registration where I had the upper two voices for the hands and the chorale in the pedals; namely a trio registration.  I also first played it fairly slow but decided to record it at a faster tempo.

That’s all a round about way to say that I have tried to make these preludes open ended.  I love the idea that a composition can take a different shape depending on who is performing it.  There are compositions that I want to have specific outcomes, but not here.  Don’t forget to download the score here!

Posted on

Composition: Organ

Every once in a while, I do enjoy writing some counterpoint.  These chorale preludes, in particular to my compositional/contrapuntal style, sound like a slightly more refined version of some of my improvisations.  (Or perhaps, at least that’s how think of it.)  I often break the rules if there is a certain effect I am trying to achieve.  I am not egregiously breaking the rules, in fact, I don’t believe it is all that noticeable.  I sometimes like dissonance used to emphasize moments to make the music more interesting.

It is also an exercise.  Practicing counterpoint (and occasionally publishing something) keeps the musical mind sharp.  It is why many never tire of playing J.S. Bach, the master contrapuntalist.  I have in the past, written pieces or movements that imitate this style.  This particular prelude is in a form I like to improvise in: the theme starts in one hand while counterpoint flies along and is then switched between hands.  Simple, but effective and from an improvisational standpoint, forces me to think in both terms of above and below a cantus.  Get the score, free, here.

Posted on

Composition: Organ

The second piece in the third set of chorale preludes is on Erhalt uns Herr.  I don’t know what it is that inspires me so, but I really like chorale variations.  Perhaps it’s the multiple verses that have multiple meanings can be attributed to a single tune.  Perhaps it’s the excuse to create a set of short works using the same tune.  I have to admit that it makes composing a lot easier when I can approach a tune knowing that I don’t have to rely on a single piece to express myself.

That’s a lot of talk because I think that the Chorale Variations that I composed so far represent a refined version of my improvisations more than anything else.  I so often find myself adding an “extra movement” to a singular improvisation because the liturgy, for example, demands 40 more seconds.  Even on this day that I have made this recording, I found myself having to add to the liturgies that I played.

The last thing I will add to this blog post/conversation is that I have no directives for registration.  I think there are always a lot of ways to interpret chorale variations and this particular recording I have made keeps things pretty mild.  For example, the last variation is set with a 4′ Principle stop, when I think that last movement could be much bigger.  Registration is such a fascinating topic and difficult subject to broach as no two instruments or acoustics are the same.