Music Composition DUMmIES

(Ben Green) #1

Stringed instruments .........................................................................


Because the bow (or pick, in the case of the guitar) is such an important com-
ponent of playing a string instrument, and because there are so many varia-
tions of expression produced by different bowing techniques, a set of
symbols instructing the player as to which bowing techniques to use has
been developed.

For example, a down-bow (pulling the bow down) can produce a more aggres-
sive expression than an up-bow (when you push the bow up). This holds true
for down and up picking on a guitar as well, and the guitar symbols are bor-
rowed from the string symbols. Notice in Figure 14-21 that the down-bow looks
like a picture of the heel end of the bow and the up-bow looks like the tip.

&4


4 j
œ


ϲ
J

œ


≥ œ≤ œ≥
œ

≤ œ≥
J

ϲ
̇


j
œ Œ

Figure 14-21:
Notation
for bowed
or picked
instruments:
down-bows
and up-
bows.

182 Part IV: Orchestration and Arrangement


Tips on transposing


Here are a few shortcuts to help you remember
how to do the most common transpositions:
E flat instruments: Find the relative minor, make
it major, then write in that key. This means that
if you were writing a piece of music in the key
of C, and you wanted to write a part for an E flat
instrument, you would first find the relative
minor of C major (A minor), then notate the
music for the instrument in A major — that is,
with three sharps in the key signature. All the
notes in the music are then moved up a fourth,
or three spaces and lines, from their original
positions. Some E flat instruments include the
contra-alto clarinet, the alto clarinet, the E flat

clarinet, the alto saxophone, the baritone saxo-
phone, the tenor horn, and the E flat tuba.
F instruments: Just add one sharp or subtract a
flat from the key signature, and write the music
in the resulting key. All notation is moved up one
perfect fifth from where originally written. Some
F instruments include the English horn, the
basset horn, and the F alto saxophone.

B flat instruments: Move everything up one
whole tone. Some B flat instruments include the
B flat clarinet (soprano and bass), the soprano
and tenor saxophone, the trumpet, the cornet,
the flugelhorn, the euphonium, and the tenor
trombone.
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