On 12/9/2016 5:14 PM, iCloud wrote:
> Hi Steve,
>
> The distinction is useful until it’s not.
>
> If I have a fast piece in 2/2, conducted in 2, and then I need a bar that’s 
> elongated by a beat, I’m going to write a bar of 3/2, and conduct that bar in 
> 3.
>
> If I have a piece in 5/4, conducted in 5, and then I need a bar that’s 
> elongated by a beat, I’m going to write a bar of 6/4, and conduct that bar in 
> 6.
>
> If I have a piece in 4/4, conducted in 4, and then I need a bar that’s 
> elongated by two beats, I’m also going to write a bar of 6/4, and conduct 
> that bar in 6.
>
> Traditional worries about which parts of the bar are stressed don’t really 
> apply to my music, and that’s true of much modern music.
>
> That bar of 6 might contain people playing all kinds of syncopations and 
> over-the-barline rhythms and cross-rhythms. There might not even *be* an 
> attack on beat 4 to emphasize. Insisting that 3/2 can only be 2+2+2 and 6/4 
> can *only* be 2+2+2 is a convention that is not useful my music, or in the 
> music of many (if not most) contemporary composers.
>

Darcy, the musical project in question in the original message was only 
asking about which would be better for the particular situation in which 
he specifically asked for a measure in which there will be 6 quarter 
notes which would be better to indicate placing the stresses on quarter 
notes 1, 3, and 5 instead of 1 and 4.

You obviously write your music in a manner which produces the great 
results you and your band get and obviously what you write is clear to 
them. Your arguments in favor of 6/4 have all been very good for the 
kind of music that you write as well as a lot of other modern music (but 
not necessarily for all music being written today) but in none of your 
replies in this thread have you indicated how best to show the stresses 
on quarter notes 1,3 and 5.

How would you indicate such in music which doesn't have syncopations and 
other obscurations of the beat?  In fact in your reply which I've quoted 
intact you say "there might not even *be* an attack on beat 4 to 
emphasize." That's about as far from the original question as a person 
can get because the original question indicated clearly that he didn't 
want to emphasize the 4th quarter note, which indicates that there *is* 
an attack on the 4th quarter note (in a measure containing 6 quarter 
notes) which he doesn't want stressed.

So how would you indicate stresses on 1, 3, and 5 in a measure 
containing 6 quarter notes without using accents or tenuto lines or any 
other articulation, but rather simply by the meter, which was the 
original question?


-- 
David H. Bailey
[email protected]
http://www.davidbaileymusicstudio.com
_______________________________________________
Finale mailing list
[email protected]
https://lists.shsu.edu/mailman/listinfo/finale

To unsubscribe from finale send a message to:
[email protected]

Reply via email to