New hymn tune - critique/help requested
  • Adam WoodAdam Wood
    Posts: 6,451
    I'm happy with the tune, but I find part writing quite difficult.
    Any commentary is much appreciated.

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  • Curious tune.
    Very nice!
    (Whence Cedar Street?)
    Thanked by 1JonathanLC
  • Adam WoodAdam Wood
    Posts: 6,451
    Thanks!

    My current dwelling is on Cedar Street. This is the first hymn tune I've written while living here, and - since I am moving soon - will likely be the only hymn tune I write at this address.
  • (Ha! I suspected something like that.)

    Have you a text in mind for this 87 87 87 87 tune?
  • Adam WoodAdam Wood
    Posts: 6,451
    Yes but I cannot share it.
  • Adam,

    Welcome back to the forum. (I have the feeling that you've been elsewhere rather than on this forum, but still at CMAA).

    Do you intend the parts to be sung, or played instrumentally?
  • Adam WoodAdam Wood
    Posts: 6,451
    Sung. This is intended to be a hymnal harmonization.
  • Adam WoodAdam Wood
    Posts: 6,451
    > Welcome back

    I had to step away. I'll probably never be as engaged as I was, but I'm trying to do more composing so I'm sure I'll be around on and off.
  • JonathanLCJonathanLC
    Posts: 74
    It looks fine to me, but there again, I am no composer :) I really like the tune - I am eager to see what others have to say!
  • SalieriSalieri
    Posts: 3,177
    I like the tune--just hummed it.

    I haven't played through it yet, but just looking at it, I'm immediately drawn (not in a good way) to the ascent of a major seventh into a minor second in bars 1 & 5 of the Bass. I could over-look that if it was intended as a purely instrumental line (i.e., if the Tune was to be unison only with accompaniment, a la SALVE FESTA DIES), but for singers, especially more amateur singers in a church choir, it should be avoided.

    On a slightly different subject: Personally I prefer a more open notation for hymns: Having so many eighth-note beams/flags on a closed score plus a text between them, ends up looking really cluttered and unappealing; I would suggest a switch from a Common Time notation to Alla Breve. But that's your call.
  • cesarfranck
    Posts: 158
    I love the tune. Looking forward to knowing the text to which it will be wed. Please keep us updated.
    Thanked by 1Adam Wood
  • rich_enough
    Posts: 1,031
    I like the hymn, and would probably like it even better with the text. The melody strikes me as a bit "cramped" in its range and rhythmic patterns, though it does open up a little in the third line (and the poor altos are pretty much stuck between C and E-flat most of the time). Again, this may "work" with the text you have in mind, I don't know.

    Having said this, overall I think the harmonization works well. You have established a good "sound" and there is some interesting interaction among the voices, particularly the melody and bass, which is always a good sign. A few things stuck out for me:

    (1) In measures 7-8, I think it would be more effective to have the E-flat only at m. 8 (in other words, don't anticipate the E-flat on the third beat of m. 7). Perhaps a chord with a D-flat in it at m. 7. Similar critique at m. 3-4, though the anticipated E-flat is as not troublesome there, in my opinion. However, the parallel 9ths between the bass and soprano (beats 2 to 3 of mm. 3 and 7) seem out of place here.

    (2) The first chord of m. 11 also doesn't "work" for me. The F in the bass is good - echoing the G two measures before), but the chord to my ears is not in the same "sound world" as the rest of the hymn. Perhaps change the tenor to A-flat and the alto to D-flat (i.e. bass to soprano: F - A-flat - D-flat - B-flat), and then a B-flat minor chord at the last measure of the line, modifying the harmony in between accordingly. (I happen to like forays into the "flat" side of the circle of fifths within a piece, though this may not be to everyone's taste.)

    (3) The "dominant 7th" chord in the penultimate measure sounds (to may ears at least) too conventional an approach to the final chord (V7-I). Similarly for the chords at mm. 4 (good ol' half diminished 7th) and the last measure of the third line.

    Finally, I understand you are not writing in common-practice style, but I see some (accidental) parallel 5ths and a parallel octave. I think they are weak part-writing (lack of independence in the voices) if they happen to show up in the texture, and are not done for deliberate effect (as are your parallel 7ths, unprepared dissonances, and other common-practice "no-no's").
  • Adam WoodAdam Wood
    Posts: 6,451
    rich_enough Thank you, this is the level of part-writing feedback I was hoping for.


    > Salieri:
    > I would suggest a switch from a Common Time notation to Alla Breve.

    Yes, someone else has suggested this too. Apparently this notation gives the impression the piece is too fast. I intend it about quarter note = 75-80 as currently written, but the beams make it look like swift runs.



    Thank you to every one else as well - you are all most kind.
  • Liam
    Posts: 4,939
    I can't play this (not being a keyboard player), but some thoughts:

    1. Is the text trochaic?
    2. Given the thick texture of close harmonies, parallel intervals in places from syllable to syllable, and what I might find to be a relatively disguised approach to harmonic motion, consider how that may act to obscure the clarity of diction in the chosen text and how well that text is suited to that vocal context.
    3. The bass jump of the major seventh to a minor second will invite pitch problems at best - most amateur singers will want (subconsciously) to aim for no higher than F, and flatter downhill from there (as always). Normally, such adventures when ventured are more likely to be kept to inner parts.... (A pure singer perspective that keyboardists may miss....)
    4. I'd feel a yearning to stray further from the relatively strict rhythmic motifs. For example, making the second measure of the third line equal notes (but this is merely abstract without the text). A1/A2 // A1/A2 // B1/B2 // A1/C
  • Adam WoodAdam Wood
    Posts: 6,451
    > the ascent of a major seventh into a minor second in bars

    That is intended as an octave displacement of a descending line. (I originally wrote a straight descent, but it got too low for congregational use, I thought). When I think of the line melodically, I find it relatively easy to sing.
  • Adam WoodAdam Wood
    Posts: 6,451
    > Is the text trochaic?
    yes
    Thanked by 1Liam
  • Adam WoodAdam Wood
    Posts: 6,451
    Any thoughts about transposing up (to D or E minor) to give a little more space for the inner voices? Would the E be too high for a congregation?
  • Adam WoodAdam Wood
    Posts: 6,451
    Also - are the breaks at the half line too long?

    I think I want the melody to be more free to alternate between 2s and 3s (CHANT!) but when i write like that, Mainline organists get very confused.
    Thanked by 1cesarfranck
  • Would the E be too high for a congregation?


    Adam,

    It partly depends on what you think about other music which already does this.

    1) The tune Blenheim does this, and the Welsh seem to have no difficulty singing it. (Clearly it can be done...)
    2) Sr. Suzanne Toolan's I am the bread of life does it, unless you pitch it in A-flat. (...but maybe it shouldn't be)

    3) Among those of us who sing chanted Salve Regina or sequences galore, high pitches are merely par for the course.

  • chonakchonak
    Posts: 9,157
    Hi, Adam!

    In general, I think the tessitura of the piece is on the low side for all the parts, which can make tuning difficult.

    M.5 resembles m.1 so much that the difference in the bass line is going to look like a discrepancy (Bb-Ab-Ab is changed to Bb-Bb-Ab). Intended?

    m.1-2 has a lot of dissonance for so early in the piece: the insistent F-G-Ab combinations make it hard for a listener to grasp the tonality.

    m. 11 starts with the 7th of the chord in the bass, which poses a challenge for them and the other parts.

    The static chord in m. 12 brings the piece to a stop, and may make it difficult for singers to keep time for the entrance in m. 13.

    Hope this helps!
  • SalieriSalieri
    Posts: 3,177
    Just played through. Nice harmony. I echo what The Richards say about mm. 11-12. I like Richard mix's solution F-Ab-Db-Bb, and bar 12 just needs something: it can be difficult in a tune like this to keep the momentum when phrases end on whole-bars, and you've done that well in mm. 4 & 8, but at 12 it just grinds to a halt and sits there. I would do something (unless there's something in the text that would warrant the stasis in that bar).
    Thanked by 1CHGiffen
  • Adam WoodAdam Wood
    Posts: 6,451
    Thank you, that all helps.
  • Adam WoodAdam Wood
    Posts: 6,451
    My thought on bar 12 was a big cadence on the dominant of the relative major, to set up the end. It was harmonically motivated rather than textually motivated, so I'm quite open to adjustment if there's a better way to prepare the last line.
    Thanked by 1cesarfranck
  • Adam,

    3rd system. Both dotted crotchets sound clunky to my ear. The first chord makes sense as an A-flat major one (so, raise the bass pitch from g to a-flat) and the same place two bars later as a b-flat 4-3, (so, raise the tenor pitch to a-flat).
  • Adam WoodAdam Wood
    Posts: 6,451
    what about putting Eb in the bass to double the third and make the more conventional I6 rather than I64?
  • SalieriSalieri
    Posts: 3,177
    Any thoughts about transposing up (to D or E minor) to give a little more space for the inner voices? Would the E be too high for a congregation?

    I would transpose up a second (d min.) for range--although I like the sound of c minor. The E might be too high for some in the congregation at a morning service.

    Also - are the breaks at the half line too long?

    I think they work, assuming that the text is such that a breath at the half-line is possible without destroying the textual line. I like the movement in m. 6--maybe do something similar in the next line?

    putting Eb in the bass to double the third

    Just don't let a certain uber-Catholic-hymnal editor see it! ;)
  • SalieriSalieri
    Posts: 3,177
    .
  • Adam WoodAdam Wood
    Posts: 6,451
    > assuming that the text is such that a breath at the half-line is possible

    There's a punctuation break of some kind at that point in every verse.
  • what about putting Eb in the bass to double the third and make the more conventional I6 rather than I64?


    Do you mean the first time, to swap the E-flat and the G?
  • Adam WoodAdam Wood
    Posts: 6,451
    First chord of third line, I meant separating the tenor and bass, leaving the tenor on the G and giving the bass the Eb.
  • Adam WoodAdam Wood
    Posts: 6,451
    With a lot of help from others, here is a revised version of this hymn tune.
    Thoughts?

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  • SalieriSalieri
    Posts: 3,177
    Magnificent. I don't know what the text will be for this tune, but I can tell that a great deal of care love went into it---perhaps connected (like DOWN AMPNEY) with its namesake.
    Thanked by 1Adam Wood
  • CHGiffenCHGiffen
    Posts: 5,148
    There is the issue, in the (much better) revised version, of parallel fifths and parallel octaves (if indeed these matter, although in general they tend weaken the texture): 5ths S/T in m1, 5ths S/T in m2, 8ves S/B in m1, 5ths A/T in m11, 5ths S/T in m13, 5ths A/T in m13-14 & m15.

    The only (I think) instance of parallel dissonance is the parallel 9ths A/B in m13.

    In m5, I wonder if the octave leap on B-flat in the bass might be better placed a beat earlier (on beat 4) and the following B-flat (on beat 5) lowered to A.

    Thanked by 2Adam Wood irishtenor
  • Salieri is right. This melody has that unique quality of strong hymns in that it seems instantly familiar on first hearing and first playing.

    -The parallel 5ths in measure 13-15 in the A/T stick out to me, and not in a pleasing way. It is especially apparent in m.14, I think because my ear is expecting the same moving quarter notes that appear in the texture of the parallel sections in mm.2, 6, and 10. A possible fix is to have the alto sing E-D-C, quarter-quarter-whole. On the other hand, I personally favor keeping the alto on D for beats 1-4, but the lush ii7 chord that results might be out of keeping with the ethos of the music...

    -The other moment that sticks out to me is the V7 chord in the penultimate measure b3-5. There is melodic development here--it differs from the 4 quarter rhythmic motif of mm. 3, 7, and 11--and I think that the moment would come off stronger without an unstable 7th chord. Besides that, the seventh is held for an extended 3 beats and then fails to resolve to an A, further weakening it. Maybe there is some way to get a 4-3 suspension over the bass C?

    -I think a VI-I cadence would sound better than I(64)-I in the last measure.

    Thanked by 1Adam Wood
  • Adam WoodAdam Wood
    Posts: 6,451
    More corrections and edits.
    Thank you to those who have commented, I've incorporated many of your suggestions.

    I *think* I've eliminated all the parallel 5ths and 8ves.
    (Though it is possible I have introduced additional ones.)

    Let me know your thoughts.

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  • CHGiffenCHGiffen
    Posts: 5,148
    Nice. But there is an instance of parallel 8ves between TB in m2.
    Thanked by 1Adam Wood
  • SalieriSalieri
    Posts: 3,177
    instance of parallel 8ves between TB in m2.

    Maybe I'm dense, but I don't see it. Could you spell it out for me?
  • Still has a few parallel 8ves, TB mm3 b1; between mm8-9
    Thanked by 2chonak Adam Wood
  • CHGiffenCHGiffen
    Posts: 5,148
    Oops, m3 has the parallel octaves. I need to learn how to count.
    Thanked by 2Adam Wood Salieri
  • Adam WoodAdam Wood
    Posts: 6,451
    It's not that I don't know how to find them. It's that I can't pay attention long enough.