Flexible Transposition
But when you ask the same question about key choice and transposition for a large orchestra composition, the whole subject is becoming very complex. When you transpose a whole score up or down, then circumstances who come into action become very complex, and only a detailed description of all the possibilities would bring light into the phenomena's and facts that are of relevance and are perceptible.
In such situations the whole thing is getting very complex, this because the possibilities explode to manyfold reasons and circumstances, and also, you are shortly before to make strong changes who affect the overall color. The circumstances can act as single phenomena, for example two parts are equal in harmony and in the same key of Db, but in the second part of the two, the melody is set a fifth higher, but still plays the same melody note movement wise.
Or when several phanomena’s interact for what can make a composition darker or brighter, then we may better make a list of what variations and techniques are avalable for the composer to achieve a desired clang and color change. One thing is clear, two composition can be in Db, and still sound very different in clang and color, so the key alone doesn't mean much.
1) One of the most instrumentation techniques I come across in a color/clang situation is, that I have a melody, but I didn’t decide what instrument will play the melody. Being at this point, it is normal that first you have to decide for the instrument, let’s say a muted trumpet, but then you realize that the melody doesn’t sound right with muted trumpet, but you want to keep the trumpet. and therefore you have to tranpose the melody to the range who delivers the color you are after, and more likely then also the whole rest of the music has to be transposed.
2) In other situations I don’t bother transposing a whole score up or down. For example, simply because the composition all of a sudden needs the root note Ab0 (25.96Hz) with the Contrabassoon, but I am in a key where the root note is F0 (21.83Hz), which is below the range of the Contrabassoon, then I simply tranpose the whole partitura three halfsteps up.
3) In the art how I compose my original music, it is impossible to describe that this or that key is brighter or darker. I could not say it follows the fixed rule that when composition “No. 1 in Db” is tranposed up the overall clang will become brighter, also the reverse could be possible, becoming darker. or just staying about in the same tone color. The music is simply in the color I’m in, the clang, pitch, range etc. I started composing the music, and I can’t remember that I said once, the whole composition is too dark, let’s tranpose it up until it has the right brightness, or it is to bright. lets transpose all down until it reaches the right darkness. But the idea trying that is tempting.
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But when you ask the same question about key choice and transposition for a large orchestra composition, the whole subject is becoming very complex. When you transpose a whole score up or down, then circumstances who come into action become very complex, and only a detailed description of all the possibilities would bring light into the phenomena's and facts that are of relevance and are perceptible.
In such situations the whole thing is getting very complex, this because the possibilities explode to manyfold reasons and circumstances, and also, you are shortly before to make strong changes who affect the overall color. The circumstances can act as single phenomena, for example two parts are equal in harmony and in the same key of Db, but in the second part of the two, the melody is set a fifth higher, but still plays the same melody note movement wise.
Or when several phanomena’s interact for what can make a composition darker or brighter, then we may better make a list of what variations and techniques are avalable for the composer to achieve a desired clang and color change. One thing is clear, two composition can be in Db, and still sound very different in clang and color, so the key alone doesn't mean much.
1) One of the most instrumentation techniques I come across in a color/clang situation is, that I have a melody, but I didn’t decide what instrument will play the melody. Being at this point, it is normal that first you have to decide for the instrument, let’s say a muted trumpet, but then you realize that the melody doesn’t sound right with muted trumpet, but you want to keep the trumpet. and therefore you have to tranpose the melody to the range who delivers the color you are after, and more likely then also the whole rest of the music has to be transposed.
2) In other situations I don’t bother transposing a whole score up or down. For example, simply because the composition all of a sudden needs the root note Ab0 (25.96Hz) with the Contrabassoon, but I am in a key where the root note is F0 (21.83Hz), which is below the range of the Contrabassoon, then I simply tranpose the whole partitura three halfsteps up.
3) In the art how I compose my original music, it is impossible to describe that this or that key is brighter or darker. I could not say it follows the fixed rule that when composition “No. 1 in Db” is tranposed up the overall clang will become brighter, also the reverse could be possible, becoming darker. or just staying about in the same tone color. The music is simply in the color I’m in, the clang, pitch, range etc. I started composing the music, and I can’t remember that I said once, the whole composition is too dark, let’s tranpose it up until it has the right brightness, or it is to bright. lets transpose all down until it reaches the right darkness. But the idea trying that is tempting.
.