Telemann Canonic Sonatas
Telemann Canonic Sonatas
02:47 on Wednesday, April 5, 2006
|
|
|
Re: Telemann Canonic Sonatas
06:29 on Wednesday, April 5, 2006
|
|
|
Re: Telemann Canonic Sonatas
07:36 on Wednesday, April 5, 2006
|
|
|
Re: Telemann Canonic Sonatas
01:23 on Thursday, April 6, 2006
|
|
|
Re: Telemann Canonic Sonatas
05:32 on Thursday, April 6, 2006
|
|
|
Re: Telemann Canonic Sonatas
08:26 on Thursday, April 6, 2006
|
|
|
Re: Telemann Canonic Sonatas
12:06 on Thursday, April 6, 2006
|
|
|
Bilbo (1340 points)
|
"OK, so let me get things straight. The pdf I have with all six sonatas is Urtext (I didn't know what this means before) and the movement I mentioned is in AM, like you sat it should be. Then the other music I have for only that movement is in CM (I don't know what I was thinking about). So AM is the real key and CM is a transposition.
Although I like music to fit the instrument I'm playing (i.e. not to have lower notes than is possible, for instance notes below F on a treble/alto recorder), since the trasposition of all the sonatas isn't easily available to me at the moment I'll just have to switch to violin to play the sonatas in their original key."
In case you are confusing the Soprano.treble and Alto recorders.
Soprano Recorders and Treble/Alto Recorders are in a different key (Usually in F, I believe). The Soprano reads down to middle C on the Piano and is pitched in C but sounds an octave higher like the Piccolo. The Alto reads down to the F above it. However, sometimes recorder players do transpose in their heads. If you had two Altos and read the Telemann Canons as if the fingerings were for the Soprano, then it would sound fine.
It was also fairly common for musicians to read music that was not for their instrument. Suchas a Flute reading Violin or Oboe music.
Urtext means as close as possible to the original. Sometimes discrepancies exist where it's hard to decipher what the composer actually wrote. This is different from edited versions where an individual (usically of some repute) modifies the score with common changes such as articulation, breath marks, embellishments, accidentals "to make it sound better" and such.
A sonata has three or more movements. The first and last generally define the tonality and are usually in the same key.
So Sonata #5 is generally in A major with three sharps. The 1 Vivace and the 3 Scherzando have this. The 2nd slower mvt Cantabile. is really in b minor with two sharps. Just as many individual movements migrate through keys during the movement, so do sonatas but they should end in the same key that they started in. This sonata is wweird in that it has b minor as the 2nd mvt because the key cohange would have been more normal if it were in E major a minor f# minor or even e minor but b minor is unusual since it's not very related to A major.
~Bilbo
N.E. Ohio
|
|
|
|
Re: Telemann Canonic Sonatas
07:09 on Friday, April 7, 2006
|
|
|
|
|
|