Take a look at the attached PDF, especially Chorale N° 283. Nice tenor line there. Alto and Bass pretty good, too !
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Originally posted by Quijote View PostAnd the same for Chris.
I will have to look through your other versions later and see if I can find the mistake, and also to see what other things might have been possible.
Ah, in the Bach chorale harmonizations his Tenors (and Altos !) do some pretty amazing things, in fact. My versions 2 and 3 make a humble approach to that. Whoever made up that rule about being "on the right track if the tenor part is uninteresting" should be shot! Probably written by some 19th century Anglican clergyman !!!!!!!!
Take a look at the attached PDF, especially Chorale N° 283. Nice tenor line there.
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Originally posted by Chris View PostWow, I have escaped unscathed this time! In fact it looks like my first three measures are (nearly) identical to yours. A first sign of my descent into madness?
Originally posted by Chris View PostI will have to look through your other versions later and see if I can find the mistake, and also to see what other things might have been possible.
Originally posted by Chris View PostNo, it was written by a 21st century Catholic organist...
Originally posted by Chris View PostI have noticed that in most of the four-part hymns I play, the tenor line is incredibly boring, really just filling out the harmony and totally uninteresting in itself. Often the range does not exceed a fifth, and I can play it with the left hand without having to move the hand at all. A lot of repeated notes. The alto lines are not much better. The overall effect is fine, but it sure is boring to actually sing with the tenors! Of course, the harmonizations in our hymnal are quite simple (pretty much just as in my four-part working), and using something more harmonically complex tends to throw off the congregation.
Originally posted by Chris View PostYes, and it dips below the bass at places. He really should lose a few points for that...
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Originally posted by Quijote View PostPS: There is one mistake in my working (same place as in version 2 as well) that I could have easily changed, but I'll leave it as it is. See if you can find it ! If not, I'll let you know where it is and the rule that applies.
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Originally posted by Quijote View PostAnd my 3rd version. same as version 2 (harmonically), but more 'jazzed up' rhythm !!
PS: There is one mistake in my working (same place as in version 2 as well) that I could have easily changed, but I'll leave it as it is. See if you can find it ! If not, I'll let you know where it is and the rule that applies.
Is your error fifths in the second bar inner parts? Also your leading note frequently falls instead of rising but that's ok I recall in the inner parts n'est pas?'Man know thyself'
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My second attempt was worse than the first, I now realize. So I'm sending a third one, if I may, despite the fact that, after finishing it, I looked at Quijote no. 1 solution and found the second phrase had almost the same bass. I did this with that second half of the chorale fragment: instead of planning an harmonic progression, I began writing the bass and then find out an harmonic progression that fitted. But the bass matched Quijote's one almost to perfection. Bad luck.Attached Files
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Originally posted by Chris View PostOn the first beat of the second to last measure your soprano and alto lines are more than an octave apart. That seems to make for a bit of a bottom-heavy voicing. Is that what you were referring to?
But my students are not allowed to do this until I say they can.
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Originally posted by Peter View PostShould we play it in swing time?!
Originally posted by Peter View PostIs your error fifths in the second bar inner parts? Also your leading note frequently falls instead of rising but that's ok I recall in the inner parts n'est pas?
So, do you all want more time to find my error, or shall I put you out of your misery?
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Well, I'll take that silence as a "We give up, Don, please enlighten us!"
The mistake is the last quaver (8th note) in the Bass of bar 1 and the first beat of the next bar.
My bass (A) leaps to the bass of a 6/4 chord (D). The rule is that the bass of the 6/4 chord may not be approached by leap from an inversion of another chord. I approach the bass of the 6/4 via a first inversion of a VII7.
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Originally posted by Quijote View PostWell, I'll take that silence as a "We give up, Don, please enlighten us!"
The mistake is the last quaver (8th note) in the Bass of bar 1 and the first beat of the next bar.
My bass (A) leaps to the bass of a 6/4 chord (D). The rule is that the bass of the 6/4 chord may not be approached by leap from an inversion of another chord. I approach the bass of the 6/4 via a first inversion of a VII7.
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Originally posted by Chris View PostOh, for goodness sake! Is that really a rule that Bach and other composers of his time explicitly followed, or was that something derived from a kind of statistical analysis later?
So, when we try to harmonize a chorale melody 'in the style of JS Bach' these are the 'syntactical' touches we need to respect. You have a problem with that?
However, there is a musical reason for this 'rule' (that seems to grate on you so much). The musical idea is one of cadential impact. Let us say that the most 'effective' approach (in this idiom) would be IV-I6/4 - V or IV6-I6/4-V or II-I6/4-V or II6-I6/4-V. My first inversion VII7 (a sort of premature 'dominant effect' if I may put it that way) 'takes away' the final impact of reaching that perfect cadence.
Like rules you not seem to. Them for often reasons are good there.Last edited by Quijote; 01-29-2013, 05:30 PM. Reason: Searching for the right words to convey musical meaning
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