Well, I thought I'd launch this for the teachers on this BRS forum (and you don't have to be a reader of The Guardian, pace Headmaster!).
Anyway, today was my first lesson of the term for the Second Year undergraduates in écriture (which translates as "Harmony & Counterpoint").
First impressions : seem a likeable enough group, quite dynamic (engagé), but unwilling to sing as an ensemble when I asked them to sing a short harmony exercise to highlight the forbidden "overlap" rule that on the piano strikes one as inoffensive (the piano often "falsifies" or "mitigates" a true harmonic flaw, as opposed to actually singing the 4-part harmony). The point about overlap of course, is that it creates confusion in the part writing.
Apart from that, it should be an enjoyable term as we put in practice their knowledge in the service of harmonizing Bach chorale melodies.
On Friday I have the Masters' degree harmony course starting up for the would-be teachers, which normally is great fun as they have survived 3-4 years of the French university system and are quite committed to music.
Anyway, today was my first lesson of the term for the Second Year undergraduates in écriture (which translates as "Harmony & Counterpoint").
First impressions : seem a likeable enough group, quite dynamic (engagé), but unwilling to sing as an ensemble when I asked them to sing a short harmony exercise to highlight the forbidden "overlap" rule that on the piano strikes one as inoffensive (the piano often "falsifies" or "mitigates" a true harmonic flaw, as opposed to actually singing the 4-part harmony). The point about overlap of course, is that it creates confusion in the part writing.
Apart from that, it should be an enjoyable term as we put in practice their knowledge in the service of harmonizing Bach chorale melodies.
On Friday I have the Masters' degree harmony course starting up for the would-be teachers, which normally is great fun as they have survived 3-4 years of the French university system and are quite committed to music.
Comment