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Published byDylan Wheeler Modified over 8 years ago
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Birds Birds
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Transitions
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Analyze Do your ideas really belong together? What makes them so? What do they have in common? What are their differences? Where are they going? What kind of development will they undergo?
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1. Tempo: –Slow down or speed up to arrive at the right tempo for the new idea –This also suggests that the new idea might be in a different tempo than the first idea.
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2. Register –Change register to the register of the new idea –This also suggests that the new idea might be in a different register than the first idea.
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3. Repeat a motive from the first idea to give it the feeling of both ending that idea and preparing a new idea
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4. Stretto a motive from the first theme to give the feeling that change is inevitable
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5. Dynamics –Slowly dim. or cresc to the new idea –This also suggests that the new idea might have a different dynamic than the first idea.
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6. Pivot idea or a new theme between A and B that includes elements of both ideas (similar to a pivot chord used in tonality)
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7. Silence –Add short silences in the transition to indicate that something is about to happen and that the resulting change is inevitable
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8. Rhythm –Choose a rhythm from theme A and vary it until it becomes a rhythm for theme B
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9. Modulate in some way (tonality not necessary, you can use a scale type, chord type, set type, etc. that can work just as well).
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10. Keep some element of A active in B (a rhythm, pitch, etc.) so that B does not sound like an introduced foreign body to the music of A.
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11. If they have anything else in common: Keep the common element between them and morph the rest?
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12. Use whatever contrast they have between them as the vehicle to get from one to the other (i.e. if one is in eighth notes and the other in sixteenth notes [simple example] let the eighth notes change to sixteenths during the transition).
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13. Take one element of A and morph it slowly into B
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14. Foreshadow B in A
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15. Maintain at least one element between the two ideas.
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16. Maintain lots of variety in A so that B will not come as a shock.
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17. Hold a single held note or chord (common between the two ideas for a long enough time so that the new idea seems prepared)
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18. Use a common timbre to get from one idea to another.
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19. Have the cadence of A become the first chord of B
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20. Use A and B together as transition (i.e. overlap them)
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21. Slowly morph the textures between A and B
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22. Slowly add or subtract an articulation to find B
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23. Sleight of hand: point the music away from what you’re doing (e.g. Chopin’s flourishes)
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24. Line up the ducks - –Align all of those elements in common between the two ideas
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25. Develop A until it turns into B
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26. Switch the themes (as a technique, not in reality) for a better point of view
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27. Develop the mystery of what’s coming next
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28. Use a subtle ostinato to underlie both themes and thereby underscore their similarity
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29. Use a pedal tone during the transposition
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30. Balance –Somehow inform the listener that B is now necessary
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31. Create a strong cadence to A so that B seems necessary
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32. Modulate during the transition to inform listeners that something of substance must now occur
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33. Bore them to death with A so they beg for B
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34. Convince the audience that A is a prelude to B
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35. B is really an extension or coda to A (i.e. play with the respective values of A and B)
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36. Intersplice A and B (Stravinsky) as in juggling them at the same time
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37. One voice of A actually becomes B
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38. An over-arching umbrella idea that encompasses both A and B
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39. Grapes into wine - B becomes the resolution of A
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40. Change for a dollar as A becomes B (i.e. different view of the same thing)
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41. Present many ideas in A and one of them becomes B
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42. Grow B from A
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43. Graft B to A (i.e. some aspect of A becomes B)
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44. Somehow musically describe B before it enters so it arrives naturally
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45. Have B become the point of arrival for A (Tchaikovsky)
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46. B is A in a different guise
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47. No transitions can work too, only not as rule.
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50. If all else fails: –Try reversing A and B to see what happens. –Try using a new A or B theme
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Death and the Maiden http://www.mfiles.co.uk/scores/death-and- the-maiden3.htm http://www.mfiles.co.uk/scores/death-and- the-maiden3.htm
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Brahms http://www.mfiles.co.uk/scores/brahms- intermezzo-op118-no2.htm http://www.mfiles.co.uk/scores/brahms- intermezzo-op118-no2.htm
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