writing for string quartet -...

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2 Welcome ƚŽ ƚŚŝƐ LJĞĂƌƐ zŽƵŶŐ ŽŵƉŽƐĞƌ ŽĨ LJĨĞĚ ƐĐŚĞŵĞ Once again our Resident Composer is Peter Reynolds who has joined forces with our Resident Ensemble to produce this workbook which we hope will help you along your journey of composition. And now let me introduce our Resident Ensemble for 2011 12. The Brodowski Quartet comprises David Brodowski , Catrin Win Morgan (violins), Felix Tanner (viola) and Vanessa LucasSmith (cello). Originally from Germany, Wales, Scotland and England (indeed Catrin was brought up in Llangadog) they now live in London and indeed have been described by one critic ĂƐ ƚŚĞ ŶĞǁ ŬŝĚƐ ŽŶ ƚŚĞ >ŽŶĚŽŶ ƐĐĞŶĞ Find out more about the quartet at their website www.brodowskiquartet.com where they will be keeping a blog about their residency with us here in West Wales http://brodowskiquartet.posterous.com/. You can download an Introduction and Guidelines to submitting a piece for the Brodowski Quartet; a registration form for a tutorial and the application form that needs to accompany any composition you submit from our website www.ymmd.org.uk Dates for the Diary Friday 9 December 2011. Deadline for registering a onetoone tutorial with Peter Reynolds Friday 10 February 2012 Deadline for submissions Week of 19 March 2012 A selection of the compositions submitted will be performed by the Brodowski Quartet at a series of Schools Showcases Saturday 24 March 2012 Young Composer of Dyfed Celebration Concert at Neuadd y Dderwen, Rhosygilwen If you have any questions please feel free to contact me. Email: [email protected] Phone: 029 2019 0176 Cathy Morris Administrator

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 Welcome      Once  again  our  Resident  Composer  is  Peter  Reynolds  who  has  joined  forces  with  our  Resident  Ensemble  to  produce  this  workbook  which  we  hope  will  help  you  along  your  journey  of  composition.    And  now  let  me  introduce  our  Resident  Ensemble  for  2011  -­‐  12.    The  Brodowski  Quartet  comprises  David  Brodowski  ,  Catrin  Win  Morgan  (violins),  Felix  Tanner  (viola)  and  Vanessa  Lucas-­‐Smith  (cello).    Originally  from  Germany,  Wales,  Scotland  and  England  (indeed  Catrin  was  brought  up  in  Llangadog)  they  now  live  in  London  and  indeed  have  been  described  by  one  critic  

   Find  out  more  about  the  quartet  at  their  website  www.brodowskiquartet.com  where  they  will  be  keeping  a  blog  about  their  residency  with  us  here  in  West  Wales  http://brodowskiquartet.posterous.com/.      You  can  download  an  Introduction  and  Guidelines  to  submitting  a  piece  for  the  Brodowski  Quartet;  a  registration  form  for  a  tutorial  and  the  application  form  that  needs  to  accompany  any  composition  you  submit  from  our  website  www.ymmd.org.uk            Dates  for  the  Diary    Friday  9  December  2011.    

Deadline  for  registering  a  one-­‐to-­‐one  tutorial  with  Peter  Reynolds      

Friday  10  February  2012    

Deadline  for  submissions  

Week  of  19  March  2012   A  selection  of  the  compositions  submitted  will  be  performed  by  the  Brodowski  Quartet  at  a  series  of  Schools  Showcases    

Saturday  24  March  2012   Young  Composer  of  Dyfed  Celebration  Concert  at  Neuadd  y  Dderwen,  Rhosygilwen  

     If  you  have  any  questions  please  feel  free  to  contact  me.    Email:     [email protected]  Phone:     029  2019  0176        

Cathy  Morris  Administrator  

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Introduction    Composing  for  the  String  Quartet  

beyond  about  fifty  years  ago,  but  the  string  quartet  has  been  around  for  over  250  years.  You  might  think  that  during  that  time  composers  might  have  exhausted  all  the  possibilities  of  writing  for  this  combination  of  instruments,  but  it  has  such  an  immense  wealth  and  range  of  sounds  and  possibilities  that,  each  year,  composers  come  up  with  something  new  for  it.  This  is  now  your  chance.    What  is  a  string  quartet?  

A  string  quartet  consists  of  two  violins,  a  viola  and  a  cello   The  group  normally  sit  in  a  semi-­‐circle,  so  that  they  can  keep  eye  contact  with  one  

another  when  they  play   String  instruments  are  not  like  a  keyboard  or  piano  where  it  is  possible  to  play  a  melody  

and  accompaniment    instead  they  are  essentially  melodic  instruments,  designed  to  play  single  lines.  

The  string  quartet  came  into  existence  because  of  this:  it  is  group  of  many  possibilities,  from  playing  a  simple  melody  that  the  other  instruments  accompany,  through  to  perhaps  writing  four  individual  melodic  lines  that  simultaneously  fit  together.  

When  you  depress  a  note  on  the  piano,  or  play  a  note  on  a  woodwind  instrument  there  is  no  way  of  changing  the  sound  of  that  note.  String  instruments  though  can  make  all  sorts  of  different  and  fascinating  sounds  that  make  it  one  of  the  most  colourful  ensembles  of  all  time.    

In  this  book  you  will  find  a  list  of  the  sounds  and  techniques  that  a  string  quartet  is  capable  of  and  which  you  can  include  in  your  compositions  if  you  wish.  

   Do  I  have  to  write  for  the  whole  string  quartet?  How  do  you  write  something  for  each  of  the  four  instruments?  Oddly  enough,  writing  for  four  string  instruments  is  easier  than  writing  for  one,  two  or  three!  This  book  includes  lots  of  examples  of  ideas  and  techniques  that  other  composers  have  used  in  writing  for  the  group.  In  previous  years,  there  have  been  other  opportunities  to  add  your  own  instrument  to  the  line-­‐up,  but  this  year  we  are  asking  everyone  to  write  for  the  string  quartet  alone  because  the  group  is  so  rich  in  the  number  of  sounds  available.      If  in  doubt    -­‐  just  ask.  In  the  pages  that  follow,  you  will  find:    

- Technical  tips  on  writing  for  violin,  viola  and  cello  - Some  ideas  for  getting  your  piece  going  -  

   

   

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     A  Brief  History  of  the  String  Quartet    1750s  -­‐    The  String  Quartet  is  born       Pieces  for  two  violins,  a  viola  and  cello  composed  called  divertimentos,  serenades  and  

quartettos.       Composers  employed  by  aristocrats  to  write  chamber  music  for  pleasure  and  

performance  by  aristocratic  amateurs,  see  picture  below    

     1780s      Composition  style  of  the  quartet  established       Haydn  composed  his  Op.  33  Quartets       Mozart  composed  six  quartets  dedicated  to  Haydn     Private   performances   by   aristocratic   amateurs   with   an   invited   audience   organised   in    

courts  and  palaces     At  one  Viennese  gathering  Haydn  and  Mozart  performed  together  in  a  quartet                                                                                                          1800s      Aristocrats  could  no  longer  afford  to  pay  the  composers     Composers  began  to  arrange  profit  making  concerts  to  make  money     Professional  musicians  paid  to  perform  String  Quartets  in  concert  halls      1820s      Composers  wrote  more  demanding  music  for  the  professional  musicians       Instrument  makers  developed  string  instruments  and  bows  to  meet  the  demands  of      

the  music  and  aid  projection  in  the  concert  halls    1900s    Purpose  built  concert  halls  for  Chamber  Music         For  example,  the  Wigmore  Hall  in  London,  built  in  1901       A  greater  demand  for  listening  to  the  String  Quartet  repertoire     Thus  the    professional  String  Quartet  is  established      

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 The  Basics    THE  VIOLIN    Range  

   The  Strings:    G,  D,  A,  E    Clef  -­‐  written  in  the  treble  clef  as  in  diagram  above    Bowing:    Arco    indicates  to  play  with  the  bow    Players  assume  it  is  arco  unless  it  is  marked  pizz,  to  pluck    Once  you  have  written  pizz  remember  to  write  arco  where  the  pizz  should  end    Have  you  considered?    Each  string  has  different  characteristics.  Therefore  you  could  insist  that  a  player  plays  on  a  specific  string  by  writing  the  Roman  numeral  of  the  string  above  the  passage.    A  melody  that  can  be  played  low  on  the  D  string  could  be  played  high  on  the  G  string  creating  a  dark,  rich  tone.  Roman  Numerals  for  Violin  Strings:  E  =  I    A  =  II    D  =  III    G  =  IV      Role  of  the  1st  Violin      Among  the  four  players,  the  first  violin  may  get  the  most  attention  and  acclaim;  many  quartets,  for  example,  are  named  after  their  first  violinists.      - The  Virtuoso  of  the  quartet  - Mostly  plays  the  melody  - Occasional  accompaniment  role  - Generally  plays  in  the  higher  register  of  the  Violin  - Usually  has  the  most  notes!      

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Violin Joke Q. What's the difference between a violin and a viola? A. There is no difference. The violin just looks smaller because the violinist's head is so much bigger.

                     

 Role  of  the  2nd  Violin    It  is  a  versatile  role    the  2nd  violin  could  be  described  as  the  Chameleon  of  the  String  Quartet  and  is  demanded  to  play  many  different  roles  

- Countermelody    supportive  role  to  the  melody,  mostly  the  1st  violin  - Dialogue    alternating  interjections  with  the  other  parts  - Melody    sometimes  taking  over  the  melody  - Accompaniment    blends  in  with  harmony  and  accompanies  the  melody  - Harmonically    bridges  the  gap  between  the  higher  register  of  the  1st  violin  and  the  viola  

by  adding  warmth  and  depth  to  the  texture.      Is  it  so  bad  to  play  2nd  Violin?!    

                           

               

A comic First Violin Tale Ignaz Schuppanzigh (1776-1830) was the leader of the first ever professional

handsome young man, but in adult life became seriously obese. Towards the end of his life, his fingers grew so fat that he was unable to play in tune. Beethoven composed a short comic choral piece dedicated to him called

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 THE  VIOLA    Range    

   The  Strings:    C,  G,  D,  A    Clef  -­‐  written  in  the  alto  clef,  as  diagram  above.  For  high  notes  use  the  treble  clef        Role  of  the  Viola    The  short  story  is  that  the  viola  is  the  tenor  voice  of  the  string  quartet.  It  dates  from  a  similar  time  to  the  violin  in  the  middle  of  the  16th  Century.  The  viola  is  an  acoustically  imperfect  instrument    to  get  the  best  sound  from  the  lowest  notes  the  string  would  have  to  be  so  long  that  it  would  be  impossible  to  play!    

- The  viola  has  a  very  characteristic  dark  and  mellow  tone  - Baroque  Era  -­‐  filling  in  harmony  with  the  occasional  bass  line  - Classical  Era    Viola  liberated  -­‐  given  melodies  - Romantic  Era    used  as  a  solo  voice    - 20th  and  21st  Century    Viola  used  as  an  equal  voice  in  the  quartet  

   Have  you  considered?  Giving  the  viola  the  melody  solo  line  or  forcing  the  viola  to  take  control  of  the  bass  line  by  writing  the  cello  higher  in  register  than  the  viola?    

Viola Joke Q. What's the difference between a viola and an onion? A. No one cries when you cut up a viola.

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THE  CELLO      Range:    

   The  Strings:    C,  G,  D,  A    Clef  -­‐    Usually  written  in  the  bass  clef.    For  higher  music  use  the  tenor  clef  and  for  even  higher  the  treble  clef.    Down  and  Up  bows      Down  bows  are  heavier  (moving  from  the  frog  to  the  point)  and  are  generally  used  on  the  strong  

   Role  of  the  cello    

-  provides  the  bass  line  -  an  accompanying  instrument  responsible  for  the  stability  and  structure  of  the  music  

often  in  control  of  the  flow  - Through  the  centuries  the  cello  has  been  liberated  by  composers  taking  advantage  of  its  

vast  expressive  qualities  and  allowing  the  cello  to  take  many  a  beautiful  melody  with  the  other  instruments  providing  accompaniment.        

                     

 

Cello Joke Q. How do you get a Violin to sound like a Cello? A. Play in the low register with a lot of wrong notes!

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EXTENDED  TECHNIQUES     Expands  the  vocabulary  of  the  instruments  to  add  greater  expression  and  variety   Adds  unusual  sound  worlds  and  tones  to  the  music   Expresses  something  other  worldly     Stretch  the  instrument  to  the  max  

   

   Always  ask  yourself  WHY  you  are  using  a  particular  effect  /  technique.  As  players,  we  see  a  fine  line  between  an  imaginative  use  of  an  effect  and  an  effect  for  its  own  sake.  Always  have  a  reason,  and  make  it  clear  in  the  score  where  you  want  the  effect.  Some  pieces  have  a  short  explanation  of  any  effects  and  how  the  composer  would  like  them  performed  at  the  beginning  of  the  score.      WHAT   HOW     EFFECT  Sul  Tasto     Bow  over  the  fingerboard   Wispy,  warm,  gentle  

sounds  Sul  ponticello   Bow  very  close  to  the  

bridge  Glassy,  metallic  sounds  

Col  legno   Using  the  wood  of  the  bow  to  tap  the  string  

Percussive  effect,  with  a  high  pitch  

Glissando   Sliding  the  finger  up  or  down  the  string  

A  smooth  rising  or  falling  of  pitch  

Mute    con  sordino    with  mute  senza  sordino    without  mute    

Attach  mute  to  the  bridge     Dampens  the  vibrations  to  create  a  softer,  more  muffled  sound  

Practice  Mute   Attach  a  larger  mute  to  the  bridge  

An  extreme  version  of  the  standard  mute.  Very  quiet  

     

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Extreme  vibrato   A  wider,  less  controlled  version  of  vibrato  

Bending  of  pitch  hysterical  sounding  

Non  vibrato     Playing  deliberately  without  vibrato  

Sparse,  pure  tone  colour    

Bartok  pizz  (noted  by  a  circle  with  a  vabove  the  note  in  question)  

Plucking  hard  allowing  the  string  to  hit  the  wood  of  the  fingerboard  

A  sharp,  loud  snap  

Left  hand  pizz  (noted  by  a  +  sign  above  the  note)  

Plucked  with  the  left  hand   Facilitates  a  quick  change  between  arco  and  pizz  (where  the  pizz  is  an  open  string)  Sometimes  bowing  and  plucking  is  possible  at  the  same  time.  

Bowing  on  the  tailpiece   Bowing  lightly  on  the  tailpiece  

A  ghostly  whisper    

Tapping   Using  your  hand  to  tap  the  shoulder  or  body  of  the  instrument  

A  tap  or  knocking  sound  to  add  rhythm  or  effect  

Bow  behind  the  bridge   Bowing  behind  the  bridge  where  the  string  is  very  short  

An  unpleasant  screech!    

Microtones   Playing  less  than  a  semitone    

An  out  of  tune  effect,  quite  painful  sounding  

Harmonics   Pure  -­‐  Touching  the  string  lightly  with  the  left  hand  at  various  points  of  the  string  Stopped    lightly  touching  the  string  (usually)  a  fourth  higher  than  the  stopped  note  being  held  down  

Pure,  flute-­‐like  quality.  Especially  effective  in  soft  dynamics  

 For  a  full  comprehensive  diagram  of  how  to  write  Harmonics  for  string  instruments  visit      http://www.composershop.com/public/Strings%20harmonics%20table.pdf                    

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Practical  Considerations  are  important!    For  players  it  is  essential  that  you  have:  A  CLEAR  SCORE    The  clearer,  the  simpler,  the  better.      

   

           

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PAGE  TURNS    Try  and  arrange  your  pages  so  page  turns  can  be  facilitated  easily  and  at  the  least  disturbing  

   PROGRAMME  NOTE      

enter  into  your  world.    For  example  we  recently  performed  a  quartet  by  Simon  Holt  who  uses  the  poem  shown  below  as  

   

   

   I  heard  a  Fly  buzz    when  I  died    The  Stillness  in  the  Room  Was  like  the  Stillness  in  the  Air      Between  the  Heaves  of  Storm      The  Eyes  around    had  wrung  them  dry      And  Breaths  were  gathering  firm  For  that  last  Onset    when  the  King  Be  witnessed    in  the  Room      I  willed  my  Keepsakes    Signed  away  What  portion  of  me  be    Assignable    and  then  it  was  There  interposed  a  Fly      With  Blue    uncertain  stumbling  Buzz    Between  the  light    and  me    And  then  the  Windows  failed    and  then  I  could  not  see  to  see      Emily  Dickinson    Two  movements  for  string  quartet  is  the  second  part  of  my  proposed  five-­‐

se  for  soprano  and  orchestra.  It  is  a  cycle  of  pieces  using  the  poetry  of  Emily  Dickinson  as  its  starting  point.    

 uncertain  stumbling  Buzz      e  or  less  all  the  material  for  the  piece  is  derived  

   Simon  Holt,  April  2001  

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 visit  our  Blog  Page  http://www.brodowskiquartet.com/2011/07/14/young-­‐composer-­‐of-­‐dyfed-­‐blog/    Why  visit  our  blog  page?  

Ask  us  a  question  directly   See  musical  examples  of  different  styles  of  composing  for  String  Quartet   Watch  a  visual  guide  to  sound  effects  

 And  lots  more  to  come....    We  look  forward  to  meeting  you  in  Wales    David,  Catrin,  Felix  and  Vanessa  (The  Brodowski  Quartet)      

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Composition  hints  and  tips    Techniques  for  making  a  start  on  your  composition  

screen,  trying  to  find  that  first  idea  that  will  get  your  piece  started.  Many  of  the  composers  who    

ing  some  of  these  with  you.  You  should  be  able  to  adapt  them  to  your  own  pieces  or  perhaps  use  several  elements  from  them  to  come  up  with  some  individual  of  your  own.    How  do  I  write  for  four  string  instruments?  

that  you  can  draw  on,  but  how  do  you  combine  these  in  a  piece  for  four  instruments?  Here  a  few  thoughts:    

The  four  voices  of  the  string  quartet  more  or  less  correspond  to  the  four  voices  of  a  choir:  soprano  (violin  1),  alto  (violin  2),  tenor  (viola)  and  bass  (cello).  This  means  that  if  you  were  to  transcribe  more  choral  music,  each  of  those  parts  would  fit  the  quartet  with  virtually  no  need  for  adjustment  (example:  Hen  Wlad  fy  Nhadau)  and  most  piano  music  (often  written  in  four  parts)  will  do  likewise  (example    opening  eight  bars  of  Beethoven  Sonata  in  C,  Op.2/3).    

Remember    you  do  not  have  to  give  all  four  instruments  something  to  do  all  the  time.  In  real  quartet  writing  the  group  often  break  into  trios,  duos  and  even  solos.      

Who  has  the  melody?  Any  of  the  instruments  that  you  choose.  Remember,  having  the  tune  is  not  just  confined  to  the  first  violin.      

you  play  a  note,  it  begins  to  decay.  But  strings  are  sustaining  instruments    they  can  

zy  part-­‐writing!)    

Keys.  Whether  or  not  you  are  thinking  in  terms  of  writing  your  piece  in  a  key,  string  instruments  respond  more  happily  to  simple  sharp  keys  (G,  D  etc)  on  account  of  their  open  strings.      

- The  most  straightforward  major  keys  are:  E  flat,  B  flat,  F,  C,  G,  D,  A  &  E  - The  most  straightforward  minor  keys  are:  C,  G,  D,  A,  E,  B  - More  awkward  are  A  flat  and  B  major  and  F  and  F#  minor  - The  most  difficult  major  keys  are:  D  flat,  G  flat,  C  flat,  F#  and  C#  - The  most  difficult  minor  keys  are:  B  flat,  E  flat,  A  flat,  C#.  G#  and  D#  

 

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In  C  -­‐  Terry  Riley  Californian  composer  Terry  Riley,  more  or  less,  invented  minimalism  with  this  piece  in  1963.  Look  at  his  piece  In  C  on  page  16  and  you  will  see  it  fills  only  one  side  of  a  piece  of  paper  and  

 would  last  more  than  a  minute,  but  it  can  last  as  long  as  an  hour  and  is  packed  with  rhythmic  energy.  The  way  it  works  is  very  simple:    

- It  is  written  on  one  side  of  a  piece  of  paper  and  consists  of  53  separate  musical  fragments.    

- Each  player  can  play  one  of  these  for  as  long  as  s/he  wishes  before  moving  on  to  the  next.    

- All  fragments  are  in  C  major  (or  at  least  on  white  notes)  except  for  some  about  two  thirds  of  the  way  through  which  use  F#s  or  B  flats.      

- There  is  no  way  to  predict  when  a  player  will  move  on  to  the  next  fragment  or  how  quickly,  so  the  performers  have  to  listen  and  respond  to  one  another  in  a  improvisatory  manner  which  recalls  jazz.    

 

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Composing  using  a  sequence  of  chords:      Fratres    Arvo  Pärt    Estonian-­‐the  hypnotic  tranquillity  of  his  music.  Fratres  (meaning  Fraternity)  has  a  mysterious  ritualistic  feeling  about  it.    - It  is  based  on  a  sequence  of  

chords,  repeated  seven  times.    - A  sense  of  continuity  is  achieved  

through  a  very  simple  way  of  varying  the  chords.  

 - The  first  time  the  chords  are  

heard,  they  are  played  in  a  very  high  ethereal  register  of  the  string  quartet  and  then,  with  each  repeat,  they  sink  into  a  lower  register  until  their  final  dark  mysterious  repeat.    

 - The  sequence  is,  more  or  less,  

made  up  of  four-­‐part  chords  and  the  interest  is  maintained  by  revoicing  them  each  time  they  are  heard  (for  instance,  transferring  the  cello,  viola  or  2nd  violin  voice  to  the  top  line  and  so  forth).    

                                       

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Composing  using  an  ostinato:    Shostakovich  String  Quartet  No  8  (second  movement)      Russian-­‐born  Dmitri  Shostakovich  wrote  this  chilling  and  dramatic  piece  in  just  three  days,  

 victims  of  fascism  and      An  ostinato  is  a  rhythmical  pattern  or  

phrase  that  is  obsessively  repeated.      - Shostakovich  using  four  or  five  very  simple  

repeated  rhythmical  patterns  (or  ostinatos)  to  build  up  an  exciting,  driving  texture,  full  of  drama  and  excitement.    

- Ostinato  1:  a  simple  forward  propelling  idea  in  violin  1    

- Ostinato  2:  heavy  repeated  chords  in  the  other  strings  

 - Ostinato  3:  the  DSCH  (D-­‐E  flat-­‐C-­‐B)  idea  

       

     - Until  we  get  to  the  big  tune  (about  a  

minute  into  this)  all  the  music  comes  from  these  three  ostinatos.  

     

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Texture:    Bartók  String  Quartet  No.5  (second  movement)    Eighty  years  ago,  the  Hungarian  composer  Béla  Bartók  reinvented  the  sound  of  the  string  quartet  as  we  know  it.  In  some  of  the  slow  music  from  these  quartets  he  evokes  through  unusual  textures  and  sounds  the  strange  sounds  of  night.    - This  music  that  is  about  creating  

an  atmosphere    about  making  time  stand  still    so  it  is  not  important  to  move  it  forward  in  the  conventional  kind  of  way.    

- The  second  violin  plays  a  tremolo  on  its  lowest  note  throughout    

- The  first  violin  has  quick,  nervous  upward  and  downward  scales  (each  of  these  moves  through  the  notes  between  the  interval  of  a  tritone  (or  augmented  4th)    

- The  viola  has  several  disjoined  pairs  of  pizzicato  notes  (a  little  like  one  of  those  night  insects  that  we  can  all  hear,  but  not  see)    

- The  cello  has  fragments  of  melody,  pulling  the  music  together  and  giving  it  direction.  

                                   

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Rhythm:    Stravinsky:  Three  Pieces  for  String  Quartet  (First  section)    This  is  music  that  is  driven  forward  almost  by  rhythm  alone  in  a  very  systematic,  almost  mathematical  kind  of  way    but  the  result  is  raw  and  earthy  in  the  mood  it  creates.    

- There  is  no  changing  harmony  at  all:  the  cello  keeps  on  repeating  the  same  three  notes  (E  flat,  D  flat,  C),  the  viola  has  just  one  note  (D),  the  second  violin  always  has  a  descending  C#  scale  (starting  on  F#)  and  the  first  violin  has  a  melody  in  G    its  like  having  three  different  keys  going  simultaneously.      

- Each  of  the  four  instruments  has  an  idea  of  its  own  which  is  just  repeated  but,  because  they  are  all  different  lengths,  they  never  come  together  at  the  same  time.    

- The  violin  melody  is  23  beats  long    

- The  viola  and  cello  accompaniment  is  7  beats  long    

- The  second  violin  has  a  very  odd  and  complicated  sequence.    

- at  the  original  starting  point.  

   

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The  Presentation  of  Scores  and  Performing  Parts      In  General    Much  valuable  rehearsal  time  can  be  lost  discussing  practical  notational  problems  in  the  score,  rather  than  the  music  itself.  So  much  time  is  wasted  working  out  whether  this  passage  should  be  played  staccato  or  legato,  or  deciding  whether  it  should  be  mf  or  pp  when  the  musicians  should  be  concentrating  on  interpreting  the  work  in  front  of  them.  This  is  not  only  a  waste  of  time  (and  money!),  but  both  musicians  and  composer  often  find  this  process  frustrating  and  annoying!      Score    A  score  is  just  a  way  of  communicating  your  creative  ideas  as  clearly  as  possible  to  the  musicians.  There  are  lots  of  different  ways  to  do  this.  Some  scores  are  just  a  list  of  instructions  to  the  musicians.  Handwritten  scores  or  computer-­‐generated  scores  are  both  fine.  If  you  want  to  experiment  with  unconventional  notation  or  graphic  scores,  that's  fine  too.      If  you  decide  to  use  Sibelius  software,  please  don't  be  restricted  by  your  knowledge  of  the  software  -­‐  if  there's  a  sound  or  an  idea  that  you  want  that  you  can't  get  the  computer  to  notate,  print  it  out  and  write  in  any  extra  symbols  by  hand.  This  can  also  be  useful  if  you  want  to  include  a  free  or  improvised  section  in  the  piece.      1.     The  most  important  thing  here  is  that  the  score  is  clear  and  legible.  If  you  are  not  

using  Sibelius  or  a  computer  program  the  score  should  be  presented  in  black  ink  (not  pencil)  and  should  include  both  bar  numbers  and  rehearsal  letters.  Remember,  a  neatly  written  hand  copy  is  often  as  good  as  something  printed  off  the  computer.    

 2.     The  ideal  format  is  A4  portrait,  not  landscape  or  any  strange  configuration  of  paper      3.     Scores  and  parts  should  be  presented  in  loose  leaf  format  (not  bound  please,  as  we  

often  have  to  make  copies).      4.      

markings  as  well  if  you  feel  confident  of  doing  this.  Remember  a  score  that  sounds  fine  on  Sibelius  playback  will  often  go  slower  in  live  performance.    

 Parts,  instrumental  or  vocal      1.    Exactly  the  same  principles  apply.  If  you  are  not  using  Sibelius  or  a  computer  program  

parts  should  be  clearly  written  in  black  ink.  Bar  numbers  and  Rehearsal  figures  are  absolutely  essential.    

 2.     Remember  that  performers  have  to  turn  pages.  Page  turns  should  be  carefully  

arranged  with  at  least  one  bar's  rest  on  either  side  of  the  page  turn  otherwise  players  will  have  to  stop  playing  (and  perhaps  lose  their  place)  whilst  they  turn  the  page.  Composers  who  are  using  computer  programs  such  as  Sibelius  or  Finale  will  still  have  

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to  arrange  this  carefully  when  they  extract  parts  from  a  file.  The  computer  does  not  do  this  automatically!  You  will  have  to  arrange  these  turns  by  using  format  applications  in  the  program.    

     Phrasing.  slurs  and  dynamics      1.     Please  be  clear  about  how  you  intend  the  music  to  be  performed.  Phrasing,  slurring  

and  dynamics  are  an  integral  part  of  any  score  and  as  important  as  the  notes  themselves.    

 2.     Be  clear  about  how  the  music  should  be  slurred.  In  fact,  this  is  more  important  than  

giving  vague  phrase  marks  to  performers.  Composers  do  not  need  to  give  specific  instructions  about  up-­‐bows  or  down-­‐bows,  but  they  must  be  clear  about  how  individual  notes  or  phrases  should  be  slurred.  

 3.     It  is  pointless  protesting  to  musicians  that  particular  passages  are  too  loud  or  soft  if  

dynamic  markings  are  absent.  Be  very  clear  about  dynamic  markings  in  the  score  and  parts.    

 4.     It  is  vital  to  check  each  instrumental  part  with  the  score,  even  if  the  parts  have  been  

extracted  from  Sibelius.  This  is  especially  true  with  transposing  instruments.          The  deadline  for  submissions  is  Friday  10  February  2012    Students  interested  in  submitting  a  composition  may  register  for  a  one  to  one  tutorial  with  our  Resident  Composer  in  the  New  Year.  Registration  forms  will  be  available  from  all  Heads  of  Music  across  the  three  counties  or  via  Cathy  Morris,  Administrator.      The  deadline  for  registrations  for  a  one-­‐to-­‐one  tutorial  is  Friday  9  December  2011