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At 2:37 PM -0500 9/24/01, jim palmer wrote: > >have you checked out webern's string quartet music? > >i'm not too familiar with webern. >i know most of these guys only from studying music theory in college. >i kind of got it backwards, studying it first, then listening. >i come from the rock and roll side of things. >this led to some interesting clashes with "jazzers" and "classical" types. > > > >btw, i'd say that, even though scheonberg was "demolishing >tonality," he was really just extending the late romantic tradition >to one logical extreme. > >totally agree. >i think that it is easier to study it than to hear it, if you know >what i mean... > > > i believe that bartok also had a tonality system, though i don't >know much about it and it seems like too much for my little brain > >love bartok. >listen to the string quartets regularly. >i think his system is somewhat geometric as well. >a very bartokian sonority is to superimpose major and >minor triads with the same tonic in a way that results in a vertically >(pitch) >symetrical shape (ex. E3 G3 C4 Eb4: minor third, perfect fourth, >minor third). >very cool... > >he also used hungarian folk melodies as source >material to manipulate in sonically new ways. >so he was quite the "remixer," too. >i'd love to hear what he would have done with modern electronics. > His first string quartet continues to amaze me -- the cello parts feel like a precursor to punk/funk bass playing. I keep wondering how he managed to notate those sounds. -- "It was the best of times, it was the worst of times" -- Charles Dickens Emile Tobenfeld, Ph. D. Video Producer Image Processing Specialist Video for your HEAD! Boris FX http://www.foryourhead.com http://www.borisfx.com