Created by georgie.proctor
over 10 years ago
|
||
Steve Reich- Electric Counterpoint
CONTEXT Steve Reich- New York 1987, fascinated with tape loops characteristics of minimalism= drones, ostinato/ loops, cells, phasing, metamorphosis, layering, note addition and subtraction, rhythmic displacement, augmentation, diminution, static harmony, non-functional harmony, melodic transformation and polyrhythms ABOUT ELECTRIC COUNTERPOINT Last in series of three pieces for soloists Recording is like a tape loop that develops allowing for many minimalist characteristics Built up in layers. This is the third movement entitled 'fast'. 7 pre-recorded guitar parts and 2 bass guitars plus the live recording Texture builds up in section A with the parts with the parts coming in in the following order:
Guitar 1 (one-bar ostinato) Live guitar (note addition) Guitar 2 (one-bar ostinato played a crotchet later- rhythmic displacement) Guitar 3 (note addition and rhythmic displacement) Guitar 4 (more displacement- 4 part canon- live guitar plays resultant melody)
Bass guitars added- section B Live guitar plays percussive strummed guitars- section C cross rhythms- changes key to C minor then returns to E minor again metre = 3/2, 12/8, 3/2 piece ends with dramatic E5 chord played together in all 5 remaining parts MODAL- piece uses E Aeolian mode TEXTUREbegins with sparse texture with one guitar, gradually building up until there are five layered parts- the parts are imitative, building up a four part canon with the live guitar playing a resultant melody. Texture mostly contrapuntal/ polyphonic. Texture builds up gradually and thins out towards the end. Once all parts are introduced, texture remains fairly constant- clever panning and interweaving rhythms give the impression of changes in texture. Changes of rhythm and metre: rhythmic development just as important as melodic development. Changes in metre between 3/2 and 12/8 in section B. Feels in 3/2 metre with cross rhythms- rhythmic counterpoint. Interplay of bass parts add rhythmic interest.Resultant melody: interweaving guitar 1-4 parts seem to share a melody when played together- live guitar plays thisPanning: recording studio technique to make instrumental sounds come from different speakers. 3 strummed guitar parts and bass parts separated with panning.
Section A- structure defined by changes in texture melodic cell stated in guitar 1 Live guitar imitates this with a displaced fragment of the melodic cell (displaced by two quavers) - then note addition all melodic material stems from the first cell ostinato Guitar 2 doubles live guitar, so live guitar fades out live guitar then starts with a different fragment Fade outs = a way technology is used, occurs once a melody has developed panning and strumming at bar 36 Live guitar plays resultant melody at 67 Section B structure defined by key and metre changes CODA- change in texture so just melodic cell 114
GRADUAL PROCESS OF CHANGE = mathematical way of composing- binary form with coda- states ideas for 2 bars then a change (2 bar cycles)
DIATONIC
'All Blues'- from 'Kind of Blue'- Miles Davis
GENREmodal jazz (a jazz style in which the solos are based on modes instead of the chord changes). This leads to longer, freer improvisations. TIME SIG = 6/4 (compound duple time)- jazz waltzMODE = mixolydian, using G,A,B,C,D,E,F,G (F is i the flattened 7th note in the key of G)HEAD = the main melody accompanied by the 12 bar blues chord progressionCHORUS = each repetition of the blues chord progression- changes = the chord sequence in a jazz songHARMONYbased on the 12 bar blues chord pattern, but there are altered or extra notes added to the harmonics in bars 9 &10 of the changes, and blue notes are added frequently. Although the home note is G throughout, a lack of conventional cadences and the frequent use of the blue flattened 7th (F natural) makes the music sound modal rather than in the key of G12 bar blues chord progression:G7/G7/G7/G7C7/C7/G7/G7D7#9/Eb7#9/G7/G7Altered chords = G7#9 (G,B,D,F,A#) & Eb7#9 (Eb,G,Bb,F#)VOICINGS = the pianist, Bill Evans, varies the order of the notes in the chord from the bottom note to the top. Order of the notes is called 'voicings'RHYTHMIC DEVICES = swung rhythms, syncopation, triplets, rhythmic displacement and cross rhythmsSTRUCTURE = 'All Blues' is a head arrangement, consisting of variations of the head (main tune) over a 12- bar blues progression. There is an introduction at the start, a coda at the end and a four bar riff introduces each of the main sections Top jazz musicians of the time recorded the album- at the peak of their abilities Davis felt that jazz was becoming too dependant on complex chord sequences. In the album he wanted to explore the concept of modal jazz. This meant that rather than relying on complicated chord patterns the harmony focuses on a mode or scale and the improvised solos are freer and longer The track is from the album 'Kind of Blues' which was recorded in one take in New York in 1959 Instrumentation- trumpet, alto sax, tenor sax, piano, double bass, drum kit (drums play a syncopated snare drum part and steady beat on ride cymbal) ORDER OF EVENTS1) four bar intro (rhythm section of piano, drum kit and bass)- the bass plays riff 1 (an ostinato played throughout). The piano plays a trill in 3rds. The drum kit plays a 3 beat waltz rhythm quietly with brushes. 2) four bar riff 2 (saxophones and rhythm section)- the saxes play a stepwise figure in parallel thirds moving up to the blue 7th of G (F) and back3) Head 1- the main 12 bar head melody played for the first time on the trumpet using a harmon mute with its stem removed. The melody has a rising leap of a 6th with the long high note decorated with a mordent. It then moves stepwise using a narrow range of a 5th4) Head 2- riff and head are repeated5) trumpet solo- riff 2 or the link is played followed by four 12 bar choruses for un-muted trumpet. The texture changes as the piano trills are replaced by comping ( the piano playing the background chords) using the accompaniment rhythms based on riff 2- the drummer adds the ride cymbal and uses unpredictable syncopated hits on the snare- the trumpet solo is modal, using the mixolydian mode over the G7 and C7 chords. A diminished scale is used over the altered chords- trumpet techniques include grace notes (appogiaturas), blue notes, ghost notes and the fall off. The melodic phrases are longer and higher and wider in range than that of the head6) link- repeated, but without the two saxophones (bar 89)7) alto saxophone solo- more angular than the solo of Davis, with more leaps, shorter phrases, more chromatic notes, more rhythmic with strong accents on the beats, a thick tone, sudden groups of fasts notes, fast scales and arpeggios in semiquavers and triplets- the melody is sometimes triadic (using the notes of a chord), has leaps, blue notes and a wide 2 octave range. There is a swung rhythm with syncopations and triplets 8) Link (riff 2)9) Tenor sax solo- (4 choruses), less vibrato than Adderley. The first chorus is simple with ideas exploring the mode. The 2nd chorus has short 3 and 4 note ideas with sequences and complex rhythms. The 3rd and 4th choruses combine extremely fast scales, arpeggios and triplets with long sustained phrases- Coltrane10) Link11) Piano solo- ( 2 choruses) the style is calmer with more intricate comping with the left hand as the right hand plays long melody notes in the first chorus. In the 2nd chorus the 2 hands combine into a chord based solo using parallel 7th and 9th chords, sometimes with the left hand in contrary motion. The middle range of the piano is used with a limited range of notes- Evans12) link- (riff 2) piano reintroduces the trill idea. Sax play riff 2 in thirds again. Ride cymbal is played more quietly13) Head 3- the trumpet played with a mute14) link15) Head 416) Link17) Coda (outro)- trumpet uses only the tonic and dominant notes in the first two phrases. Davis then uses the same simple legato phrase he played at the end of the head. Saxophones play riff 2. Piano plays trills. The song fades out
Grace by Jeff Buckley
The opening chords move in parallel motion over a descending chromatic bass line Vocalisation is a passage of wordless singing The lowest guitar string is tuned to a D (drop D tuning) Recording techniques for voice include vocal compression and EQ Recording techniques for guitar include flanging and distortion Grace was composed in 1991, album was released in 1994 STRUCTURE Intro-verse-pre-chorus-chorus Link- verse 2- pre-chorus- chorus Middle 8 or bridge link- verse 3- outro The link is the same as the intro and is in two sections separated by an Em chord HARMONY There are dissonant sounds because harmonies were created by sliding traditional chords such as Em up and down the guitar fretboard whilst keeping some strings open as a drone. The lower guitar string was in drop D tuning to enable power chords and for its deeper and darker sound Although many chords are root position triads, the harmonic progressions are often chromatic rather than functional. Some chords have sevenths and/ or are inverted, and decorative non- chord notes appear in all of the parts, including the bass There are some very dissonant effects, particularly in the chorus, where open guitar strings clash with the harmonies, as well as in places where Buckley deliberately pitches a note to clash with the underlying chords (such as F natural over E minor chord at start of bridge) In intro and links, notes of chords are finger picked as arpeggios TONALITY The key is not clear at the beginning- it is just a series of minor chords. The tonality is ambiguous, although it occassionally settles towards E minor. The harmony is often chromatic and dissonant The song is in Em, but very unclear until halfway through the first verse-in intro Fm and D chords and first half of the verses use a chromatic progression. No conventional cadences modal/minor tonal ambiguity INSTRUMENTATION 2 guitars, vocals, bass, drums Instrumental techniques = power chords, drop D tuning, use of bar chords, pull offs in the introduction and hammer ons, hitting strings on the word far, arpeggio finger plucking, strumming, electric guitar played in a high register, flanged guitar sounds towards end, cymbal splashes, kick and snare drums keep the basic beat, atmospheric fills on the toms Vocal techniques = soars in falsettos, vocal sliding (glissandos), nonsense syllables, vocalisation, virtuosic, melisma on 'love' strings gliss imitates guitar and vocal slides backing vocals- counterpoints MELODY The melody of the vocal solo has a very wide range exceeding two octaves most phrases tend to fall, contributing to sad mood Slides used and melody consists of a mixture of stepwise movement and leaps Buckley improvises on fragments of the chorus melody in the coda First half of verse- low in Buckley's range, moving mainly by step, slides between descending leaps Second half of verse- a higher register for 'my fading voice', more leaps, melisma Chorus- falling melody lines, melisma Word setting mostly syllabic USE OF TECHNOLOGY synthesizer- various synthesizer sounds rhythm guitar part has been double tracked (overdubbed) to thicken the sound guitar effects include distortion and, in the coda, flanging vocal track uses delay and EQ and overdubbing and vocal compression METRE AND RHYTHM compound quadruple 12/8, folk influence lilting drums keep the pulse vocal part has a free feel and has grace notes, triplets and much syncopation bass is often syncopated and pairs of dotted quavers sometimes create cross rhythms against the groups of three quavers in other parts TEXTUREVaried, sound effects create a complex texture
Why does my heart feel so bad?- Moby
CONTEXT Moby was born in 1965. 'Why does my heart feel so bad' was the fourth single that Moby released from his album 'Play' in 1999 It is referred to as club dance music METRE AND RHYTHM Beginning does not have a clear pulse, but the rest of the song is in quadruple metre. The accompaniment of the main section is based on a mostly unchanging drum loop with an emphasized backbeat. The synthesized strings have sustained chords There is syncopation in the other instrumental parts, including voices. A silent bar (apart from echoes) adds variety. HARMONY AND TONALITY Most of the song is in the dorian mode of A The female vocal sample is later accompanied by the chords of F and C, even though the music has not modulated to C major The harmony is diatonic- only a few root position chords are used (6) TIMBRE The timbres are either synthetic or sampled. The male ad female vocal samples are edited samples taken from old recordings of gospel music The percussion sounds such as claves, shaker, snare drum and bass drum are produced on a Roland drum machine. The bass and string parts are produced on synthesizers, and the piano sounds on a digital sound module Electronic processing such as reverberation, delay and EQ has been used to edit the sounds STRUCTURE Two- chord sequences arranged in 8 bar blocks Chord sequence 1 (verse) Am/Am/Em/Em/Gm/Gm/D/D Chord sequence 2a (1st half of chorus) C/C/Am/Am/C/C/Am/Am Chord sequence 2b (2nd half) F/F/C/C/F/F/C/C STUDIO EFFECTS Sampling- Moby left the background noise in his samples to retain the emotional quality of the recordings. The background noise acts almost like another percussion instrument and adds to the texture Reverb and delay are used on vocal sample 2 when the section changes Panning and EQ are used for each sound Panning in piano intro In verse 2 EQ used to give a singing down a telephone wire effect
ORDER OF EVENTSIntroductiontime sig is 4/4, key is A minor, tempo is 98bpm. Piano plays chord sequence 1.Verse 1four repeats of chord sequence 1, untidy vocal sample accompanies the simple piano chord sequence drum loop is introduced, sustained synth pad plays bass notes, another sustained synth pad is the response in a call and response texture with the vocal sample A synth. bass part begins, an additional synth pad plays sustained chords to fill out the texture Piano plays a different rhythms, decorating the rhythm with sus4 and sus2 chords (third of the chord is replaces by either the 4th or 2nd note) Chorus Chord sequence 2a begins, lifting the music, key is ambiguous (could be Am or C), second vocal sample is introduced, texture is similar to verse 1, but the answering piano phrases are more subtle, the synth backing recedes more to the background Chord sequence 2b begins- key is now C major, sample is played faster in a call and response pattern Verse 2An echo effect and EQ is applied to the vocal part, making it sound thinner. The echo is also delayed with several quicker repeats of the echo fading away into the distanceBreakAll parts drop out for a single bar. Only the dying repeats of the delay on the EQed vocal echo, the snare drum delay and the falling off reverb from the other parts can be heard- breakdownChorus Vocal sample 2 is used with much reverb and delay,making it sound distant. The sample blends with a lush string part which has reverb. The drums enter The reverb on the vocal sample is reduced,making it sound clearer Part B of the chorus is unexpectedly repeated OutroThe texture is reduced to just the first vocal sample accompanied by a soft synth. pad
Skye Waulking Song- by Capercaillie
CONTEXT from the album Nadurra 2000- folk fusion music between celtic folk and Western pop Waulking song refers to a working man's song which would be sung while working Waulking is the process by which tweed is beaten against a board after being soaked in urine, this was usually done by a group of women who worked together. Traditionaly takes up to 1 hour so keeps the team working The singing is usually led by 1 person and answered by the rest of the team (call and response) Features- vocables = nonsense syllables INSTRUMENTATION traditional- fiddle, accordion, uilleann pipes, bouzouki, flutes, bodhran modern- synthesiser, bass guitar, drum kit, wurlitzer piano techniques- tremolo played at the start, brushed on the drums MELODY Melodies are in counterpoint with each other Would have been improvised around the same melody simultaneously Vocal part is pentatonic throughout (G-A-B-D-E) Text is mainly set syllabically Relatively simple dynamics, starting quietly and building up, becoming louder when all the instruments join in. Dynamics build up in the instrumental- solo afterward is quiet again. Dynamics not in the score but for the performer to decide RHYTHM AND STRUCTURE no changes in tempo syncopation is found and there is a variety of note lengths with complex rhythms. Lilting (swaying) rhythms are found throughout The piece is in compound time (12/8), 4 dotted crotchets per bar, no time sig changes Intro, verse 1, break, verses 2-6, instrumental, verses 7-8, Outro TONALITY Tonally ambiguous at the beginning E Aeolian mode established at the end of the introduction They key is G major, but sounds modal becuase the dominant (d) is avoided and the melody uses the pentatonic scale which omits the sub dominant and the leading note (C and F#). Uses E minor pentatonic chords (relative minor) No abrupt changes but same chords are used throughout (Em, G &C). This makes chord changes more obvious when they occur. The piece is entirely diatonic- notes proper to the key- no chromatic alteration HARMONY Simple harmony with only 4 chords used in total, based around G major scale Instrumental sections include cluster chords In the coda, alternating C and G chords sound like plagal cadences. Words are in gaelic and the singer has a contralto voice, strophic structureTEXTURE monophonic, contrapuntal, heterophonic (pipes and fiddle in instrumental), homophony, call and response- in intro texture slowly builds up starting with synth and fiddle and adding other instruments in later- bazouki and keyboard play an interweaving melody, voice joins in adding to the contrapuntal texture texture becomes thicker when all the instruments come in verse 4. There is a heterophonic texture in the instrumental between Uilleann Pipes and the fiddle as they play almost the same melody at the same time but one is more ornamented
reich
MILES DAVIS
BUCKLEY
moby
capercaillie
Want to create your own Notes for free with GoConqr? Learn more.