Ostinato
16:37 on Saturday, January 5, 2008
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Re: Ostinato
17:45 on Saturday, January 5, 2008
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Re: Ostinato
17:53 on Saturday, January 5, 2008
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Re: Ostinato
17:55 on Saturday, January 5, 2008
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Re: Ostinato
18:49 on Saturday, January 5, 2008
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_TonyT-PiccoloBO Y_
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Posted by _TonyT-PiccoloBOY_
Thank you, do you know where i could get this piece?
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Re: Ostinato
23:14 on Saturday, January 5, 2008
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Scotch (660 points)
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This is partial quote from Britannica, will give you an idea:
...a roughness of harmony coupled with a rapid melody; obstinacy is evoked by the contrapuntal combination of highly independent (obstinate) melodies. Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach (1714–88) and the Mannheim school were exponents of the doctrine. |
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That's a bizarre quote--or at the very least, a misleading one. An ostinato is simply a continually repeating passage, such as a ground bass, above (or more rarely below) which non-repeating passages are played. Ostinatos in jazz and rock are typically called riffs. Ostinato has nothing especially to do with "roughness" or "rapid"-ity. It is traditionally a contrapuntal procedure, but it isn't associated with melodies that are any more independent than those in other contrapuntal forms, such as a fugue, for example, and the term obstinate has nothing inherently to do with independence. Moreover, it's a technique, not a "doctrine", and it isn't especially associated with the Mannheim school.
Here is the introduction to the Grove Ostinato entry:
"(It.: ‘obstinate’).
"A term used to refer to the repetition of a musical pattern many times in succession while other musical elements are generally changing. A simple and easily remembered method of construction, ostinato is extremely widespread in oral musical traditions. It has also been used in Western art music, one of the earliest surviving examples being the 13th-century canon Sumer is icumen in. Ostinato enjoyed a Golden Age during the Baroque period (see Chaconne; Passacaglia; Folia; Ruggiero; and Borrowing, §8) and, after a decline during the Classical and Romantic eras, it reappeared in other guises in the 20th century (see also Ground and Variations)."
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Re: Ostinato
23:20 on Saturday, January 5, 2008
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Re: Ostinato
04:53 on Sunday, January 6, 2008
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Re: Ostinato
16:37 on Wednesday, January 9, 2008
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Re: Ostinato
17:20 on Wednesday, January 9, 2008
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_TonyT-PiccoloBO Y_
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Posted by _TonyT-PiccoloBOY_
o yes i do plan to preform it. It is WAY easier than it sounds, I sight read it with no problem. but it is still a fun song and im sure the crowd will like it. i will probably use it as and opener. thank you for the information on it!
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Re: Ostinato
18:11 on Wednesday, January 9, 2008
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