To me, this sounds like an organ piece. So, maybe, it should be scored that way ... not for "violin" and so-on, and, perhaps not in three separate staves.
One other thought: play it very fast. Turn the tempo up so fast that the notes begin to blur together, and listen. "They do, indeed, 'blur together.' " Here we have three parallel lines of music that are as chock-full of notes as they could be, generally moving in the same direction, generally at the same time. Whew!!
You describe it as "open score," but it's dense. What if... it weren't?
I wonder what would happen if "these woods were trimmed a little bit?" Just go in there and (as we say in the Tennessee (USA) summertime) chop out the privet, trim the sucker-branches off the trees, and so on. What if one or another part just laid-off completely for a few measures, letting the others state the current theme while they remained silent? It might give the composition a little more "room to breathe." It would certainly be an idea worth exploring, maybe, of course in a copy of the very fine piece of music that you have here.
I certainly find this to be true in creative-writing. (Uh huh, and I should apply it to this post... oh well...) You write a bunch of stuff. Then, you thin it out, and when you do, you find it's stronger.
Thank you "shutter freak" for your kind works of appreciation. I know some see no point in writing music in the baroque style --- but I just love writing in this way.
And musecore even allows me to write choral works in the style of Bach's cantatas --- what a wonderful program.
Comments
Too bad it's not for piano.
Regards,
In reply to This is what I got when I opened it. by xavierjazz
not sure why the file did not open for you...sorry. Any way, it is for keyboard, simply written in open score format.
I am sorry you cannot listen to it. I am able to open the file and it seems to work -- so I am not sure if there is any thing I can do...again sorry.
To me, this sounds like an organ piece. So, maybe, it should be scored that way ... not for "violin" and so-on, and, perhaps not in three separate staves.
One other thought: play it very fast. Turn the tempo up so fast that the notes begin to blur together, and listen. "They do, indeed, 'blur together.' " Here we have three parallel lines of music that are as chock-full of notes as they could be, generally moving in the same direction, generally at the same time. Whew!!
You describe it as "open score," but it's dense. What if... it weren't?
I wonder what would happen if "these woods were trimmed a little bit?" Just go in there and (as we say in the Tennessee (USA) summertime) chop out the privet, trim the sucker-branches off the trees, and so on. What if one or another part just laid-off completely for a few measures, letting the others state the current theme while they remained silent? It might give the composition a little more "room to breathe." It would certainly be an idea worth exploring, maybe, of course in a copy of the very fine piece of music that you have here.
I certainly find this to be true in creative-writing. (Uh huh, and I should apply it to this post... oh well...) You write a bunch of stuff. Then, you thin it out, and when you do, you find it's stronger.
In reply to To me, this sounds like an by mrobinson
That's how it plays on my computer. Only the instrument names are a bit weird :)
I like it, it contains quite some Bach inspiration.
In reply to It's an organ pice by shutterfreak
Thank you "shutter freak" for your kind works of appreciation. I know some see no point in writing music in the baroque style --- but I just love writing in this way.
And musecore even allows me to write choral works in the style of Bach's cantatas --- what a wonderful program.
corrected score
In reply to 3v fugue by penske77
I'd like to try it in string trio.
Cheers,
Olivier
wow, nice piece you made there! i think its quite hard to make baroque style look genuine, and you pulled it out really well :)