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-   -   God Rest You Merry Gentlemen (http://www.notation.com/vb-forum/showthread.php?t=1875)

M G Jacobs (mgj32) 12-23-2008 05:09 PM

I worked up a piece for the se
 
I worked up a piece for the season, which is a set of variations on the old carol, "God Rest You Merry Gentlemen." I posted it at www.Soundclick.com/mgjacobs. It is the first piece in the list. The song info is there. Since I wrote it to be played freely, the .not file isn't annotated and uses several non GM instruments.

Season's Greetings to all.

mgj

Sherry Crann (sherry) 12-23-2008 07:49 PM

Howdy MG, I just finished l
 

M G Jacobs (mgj32) 12-24-2008 05:36 AM

Hi Sherry, I'll post it
 
Hi Sherry,

I'll post it after cleaning up notes to myself. There's very little annotation, other than some like, emph.(asis) sec. emph. I wanted to leave a lot of room to tinker with volume of individual instruments and those that are playing accompaniment as well as those making "comments." You may have heard some "signature" sounds, or accompaniment/commentary figures that go well, I think, in a lot of situations.

all best,
mgj

M G Jacobs (mgj32) 12-25-2008 05:19 AM

Hi Sherry, Here is the .not
 

M G Jacobs (mgj32) 12-25-2008 05:40 AM

Try this one.

 

Mark Walsen (markwa) 12-25-2008 06:07 PM

Hello MG, Merry Christmas!
 
Hello MG,

Merry Christmas! And thanks for your distinctive MG-style version of God Rest Ye Merry Gentlemen.

Cheers
-- Mark

Djim Tio (djimtio) 12-26-2008 12:36 AM

Hi MG Thanks for this very mo
 
Hi MG
Thanks for this very moving version of God Rest Ye Merry Gentlemen.
I have added your MP3 version to my growing compilation of " MG´s Best " home-made CD.
I will listen and have a look at the not.file as well,just to learn where the magic comes from.
All the best to you and lots of inspiration for coming year,
Regards
Djim

M G Jacobs (mgj32) 12-26-2008 09:10 PM

Hi Djim, Glad you liked the
 
Hi Djim,

Glad you liked the variations. The score is intentionally pretty vague in many respects, mostly because I realize I could change a lot of things in the performance and still like what I was hearing.

Happy New Year!!

all best,
mgj

Sherry Crann (sherry) 12-26-2008 09:44 PM

Howdy,


 

M G Jacobs (mgj32) 12-27-2008 04:56 AM

Hi Sherry, quote: Do you
 
Hi Sherry,

quote:

Do you have a definitive "This is IT!" moment for your compositions, or do you find that they are constantly "works in progress", sort of like an ongoing jam session?

I often experience the THIS IS IT moment. But I have never that I can remember got a stone tablet and carving instruments and probably never will. Two reasons. One is that when I hear something from a year before, I often get a That is the way I should have done it moment. Two is that however detailed your instructions, the performances of the music are going to differ from performer to performer or conductor to conductor. So I have been moving toward giving only instructions for what I think absolutely necessary.

Last summer I was listening to a performance of Berlioz Symphonie Fantastique by the Midlands Symphony, in which there were tempi I had never heard in any performance before--much faster that I had got used to hearing over the years. And I remember thinking that probably wouldn't have happened if Berlioz had put in a specific TPS numbers. It was still Berlioz, but Carl's vision of what Berlioz meant by a tempo annotation. So it was a good lesson in really thinking about how specific it is necessary or desireable to be.

An example of a This is it moment that became a this needs...realization, is my first piano concerto. The material beginning about about measure 230, or 4:04 minutes wasn't there until I returned to it about a year ago, and it struck me that a movement of its length needed a pronounced contrast. I wound up using the first theme backward in a contemplative dialog for piano and some other solo instruments. Now this seems to be IT, but I still haven't taken up stone carving.

So yes, I tinker. I usually start with a pretty good idea of what I want to do and can usually estimate to within a minute the length of a piece before I put down a single note and I don't (or didn't use to) do a whole lot of tinkering as I wrote. (That has changed, but for non-musical reasons that I don't really understand.) But once I have a draft I re-evaluate and make changes, that is, tinker, a lot. And after time has passed, I often tinker again. I guess the THIS IS IT moments should be considered tentative certainties, and working with stone tablet isn't something I'll ever have to do.

Or is it that Composer just makes tinkering, from minor to wholesale changes so easy? ;)

all best,
mgj


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