3rd measure, 3rd system, you have written an unsingable progression ie one that can't be sung in perfect tuning.
As seems to be usual, I must disagree with Choirbook again. Singers like to tune. So a well-educated music director who has gone beyond parallel fifths might get a group of amateur singers quite interested in pitch work. I'm going to my studio for a few minutes and I'll bring back suggested revisions for both pieces, CYS and Adam Wood ("Parallel Octave" Wood).
In the end, decided that Adam's setting is fine just as it is, even though we learn in Harmony 101 not to use parallel octaves. But in that setting, the effect is as of using 16' and 8' stops, so as you say, Adam, it is perfectly singable and effective.
The downward triangle indicates a comma flat, and in a diatonic setting, the third of the tonic, dominant, and subdominant major triads is naturally sung a comma flat. Tonic is a cross in a circle, perfect fifth relations the thin arrows, up for dominant down for subdominant.
I don't think I'll ever quite get it until I see an example accompanied by a recording or live demonstration.
I'm not sure what you said, too, but I think I don't agree.Oh, I wonder if CDub is on the same page
Presto: I made a video of tuning charts to go with an a cappella piece, "O My Deir Hert, Young Jesu Sweit". The notation uses proportionally sized bars up or down (sharp or flat). You can also see that it's not a "temperament", because sometimes the same note is tuned one way, and sometimes another.
recordings are imperfect and, worse, perhaps, reproduction electronics vary widely, very widely ... so I like to see a score. Why don't you post one?Can we listen to a work without a score in front of us
Blue bars indicate tuning lower than equal tempered equivalents, orange bars indicate tuning higher than equal tempered notes. The vertical size of the bars is proportional to the amount of tuning required. For example, the first G of the alto line is 14 cents lower than a G on the piano, tuned against the root Eb. Note the changing intonation on the soprano F, for example, page 2: sometimes tuned low, in relation to subdominant harmony (bar 7), and sometimes tuned high, in relation to tonic or dominant harmony (bar 9). The tonic note Eb is exactly the same on piano and in voice.
A conductor may something like "if you have a fat blue/green bar, TUNE to the other voices; if you have a thin gray line, you are tonic and hold your pitch for others to tune to; if you have a narrow blue/green or orange bar, your voice is in perfect relation to tonic, so also try to hold pitch by your tonal memory and let others tune to you; if you have a fat orange bar or a double-wide blue/green bar, your pitch is exceptional and you should learn how it fits in the musical texture."
the recording isn't the music
but not so much with my recent path with how intonation works.
that's only because I went hermit for many years while developing these ideas and just the past few months have begun stirring up what pots I can about the ideas.
Yes, the rhythms are precise, that was kind of a compositional goal, versus some of the soupy popular versions of this song. .... And you raise that darn barbershop word again ... makes me irritated, but if that's how you hear it that's up to you.
Aristoxenus, Greek philosopher and student of Aristotle, “had a dispute with Pythagorean tuning.” He questioned whether the musings of theorists were as important as the observations of the musicians. He contended that the judgment of the ear was superior to mathematical calculations.
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