Originally posted by Quijote
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You went to the four-part exercises because you wanted to give us something more basic to start with than the two-part, but it seems adding the additional requirement that it has to be specifically in the style of Bach makes it more complicated than the two-part exercises.
You had no idea how it could be relevant?
But about the 'rule' of the '10th' or the 'rule' of the '+12' between the Tenor and Soprano. These rules strike you as random and ill-founded?
Not at all. In vocal music (specifically), they are common-sense in terms of clarity of texture, not to mention sonority.
Not at all. In vocal music (specifically), they are common-sense in terms of clarity of texture, not to mention sonority.
Then there are the rules which my ear does not confirm. For example, I would never have guessed that the rule about parallel fifths could apply to two voices when one of the intervals is not a perfect fifth. That sounds perfectly good to me. So if I am to follow that rule, someone is just going to have to tell me about it. Nor would I ever have guessed that anyone would find ending on a major third undesirable. My modern ears aren't fit for hearing these things the way people did back then. And then there are the things that my ear tells me are no good that are apparently perfectly acceptable in some systems, like your unisons in the last exercise.
But you chose anyway to play the recalcitrant 'give-your-teacher-hell' role anyway, or as you put : "stick it to the man"? I eat this type of student on a regular basis, and I'm paid to never be full up of it, though you can understand I prefer a more varied diet to save me from boredom. You are certainly alleviating that, I grant you! No, really, I love it when students (young or not so young) question me, and I can tell you I have many bovine students.
I sadly missed out on this kind of sparring during most of my university years. It's rather hard to argue with a teacher about math, since that's about as precise as it gets. I thought the same way about programming techniques as well at the time, but some real-world experience on that front has shown me otherwise. In fact, all the methods they taught us back then were nothing but overly-complicated wastes of time thought up by eggheads trying to get published. If I had known then what I know now, I really would have given those teachers some hell! But enough reminiscing.
Maybe you could scan (with your annotations / questions) and post the Bach invention that you're studying so we can take a look at it?
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