Martin:
Deal! [:D] Thanks.
Be Well,
Poppa
Deal! [:D] Thanks.
Be Well,
Poppa
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@PoppaJOL said:
[...] I know this thread is about the composition competition but I will take the position that we are discussing composition until a moderator tells us differently. [...]
... timpani, percussion, keyboard, harp and stringDoes this mean ONE keyboard (i.e., orchestral piano or celesta -- or doubling on both, for example) and how MANY percussionists? The usual max 3 or so? How about marimba and/or xylophone? Is it acceptable to specify a mix of percussion elements that (say) 3 players could handle while switching around between gongs, cymbals, blocks, marimba, xylophone, Mahler hammer, etc.?
I certainly cannot hear the music in my head
@paulhenrysmith said:
The submission deadline for the 2006 Fauxharmonic Orchestral Composition Contest has been extended to March 18, 2006.
You can find out more about the contest and the judges here:
http://www.fauxharmonic.com/composition-contest/
@PoppaJOL said:
wellsdeckers:
1. Ear Training - This may be the most important thing of all for you. In my opinion you should make this the number 1 priority in your development. Not everyone is lucky enough to hear music in their heads. Because you can, you must train yourself to understand what you are hearing.
2. Orchestration/Arranging - Many people would put Harmony before this and they are probably correct but, for me, Orchestration and Ear Training are the true keys for people who really hear the music already.
3. Harmony and Advanced Harmony - The better you understand the components of music the easier it will be for you to remember and to translate what you are hearing.
4. Composition - This is the skill and technique of taking what you hear and crafting into a piece that realizes all the potential in your ideas.
Poppa
As for the ear training, is that literally just sitting at keyboard and hitting notes over and over again until eveytime you hear one you can recall it being an Fb etc?
@clarkcontrol said:
And one last thing: Having perfect pitch can drive you crazy. Hearing the creak of a door and being distracted by its pitch or the hum of your refrigerator, hearing a recording that is in the key of F but going crazy because the playback is fast so everything is a quarter step sharp--AARGH!!
Clark
O well, I guess you heard the news, more importantly issues at hand: Nick and jessica broke up . Its all over, Its all over, Its all over the tabloids, I'm having to cope with it, I guess I'll just try taking it one day at a time. The only thing one can do.