I have questions:
When scoring, I often encounter dissonances that I dig....but then later I view them as "wrong", and tend to correct them (back to vanilla....yuck) I need to learn to trust my inner ear!
Ok......
Quote: "I think of it strictly linearly. What goes over it is probably counterpoint, but it's another linear line written over it. I don't particularly go at it harmonically-it's what you hear in your head." - Jerry Goldssmith
Quote: "The lines have their own individuality. They cause dissonances here and there." -Alex North
What does this mean?
So let's say I lay down a vague, nebulous, bassline........Now I play a viola line over it......And then mute it (in other words don't listen to it on purpose)
Now...I play the bassline again, but now record a violin line over the bass..
Now I rewind and play back the results of violas, violins and bass playing back together.....
And construct / deconstruct from there?
Would this be a good way to "force" my ear OUT of wanting to write conventional harmony, yet maintain some sort of structured dissonance since both viola and violin were written to the same bassline?
Is this what linear writing is all about? (I googled "Harmony resulting from linear writing"....found nothing)
I'm looking for ways to KILL my predictability.
Here is a link, click on "Ennio_Linear?"
http://homepage.mac.com/WebObjects/FileSharing.woa/wa/default?user=svonkampen&templatefn=FileSharing1.html&xmlfn=TKDocument.1.xml&sitefn=RootSite.xml&aff=consumer&cty=US&lang=en
Towards the end of this cue there seem to be a lot of dissonances...Is this an example of a linear-harmonic writing approach?
Excuse my ignorance......
Thanx,
SvK
When scoring, I often encounter dissonances that I dig....but then later I view them as "wrong", and tend to correct them (back to vanilla....yuck) I need to learn to trust my inner ear!
Ok......
Quote: "I think of it strictly linearly. What goes over it is probably counterpoint, but it's another linear line written over it. I don't particularly go at it harmonically-it's what you hear in your head." - Jerry Goldssmith
Quote: "The lines have their own individuality. They cause dissonances here and there." -Alex North
What does this mean?
So let's say I lay down a vague, nebulous, bassline........Now I play a viola line over it......And then mute it (in other words don't listen to it on purpose)
Now...I play the bassline again, but now record a violin line over the bass..
Now I rewind and play back the results of violas, violins and bass playing back together.....
And construct / deconstruct from there?
Would this be a good way to "force" my ear OUT of wanting to write conventional harmony, yet maintain some sort of structured dissonance since both viola and violin were written to the same bassline?
Is this what linear writing is all about? (I googled "Harmony resulting from linear writing"....found nothing)
I'm looking for ways to KILL my predictability.
Here is a link, click on "Ennio_Linear?"
http://homepage.mac.com/WebObjects/FileSharing.woa/wa/default?user=svonkampen&templatefn=FileSharing1.html&xmlfn=TKDocument.1.xml&sitefn=RootSite.xml&aff=consumer&cty=US&lang=en
Towards the end of this cue there seem to be a lot of dissonances...Is this an example of a linear-harmonic writing approach?
Excuse my ignorance......
Thanx,
SvK