Can Someone Play This For Me

HKZSquared

New member
Hey guys, I wrote a short etude for my music theory class and I don't have a piano to listen to the piano part on, so could one of you guys please record a little clip of playing it on a piano?
ImageUploadedByTapatalk1411673946.056430.jpg
It's just a simple 16 bar etude in E minor.
If you have any questions on it or would like to see the full score for all instruments please just ask. Thinking 110BPM.
Thanks guys!
 
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Re: Can Someone Play This For Me

Also look at a program called Notion (http://www.presonus.com/products/Notion-5) - not very expensive, and is great for writing notation and playback (there's even an app for iPad).

I'm a few versions behind (was a little surprised that they got bought by PreSonus), but it's good kit for formal music creation.


BTW, you may get dinged by your theory teacher for that sequence of parallel fifths... ;)
 
Re: Can Someone Play This For Me

Also look at a program called Notion (http://www.presonus.com/products/Notion-5) - not very expensive, and is great for writing notation and playback (there's even an app for iPad).

I'm a few versions behind (was a little surprised that they got bought by PreSonus), but it's good kit for formal music creation.


BTW, you may get dinged by your theory teacher for that sequence of parallel fifths... ;)

Thanks for the program idea! I've been working with Sibellius in class but I don't trust how it makes a piece sound.
And I probably would be dinged for the 5ths, but we're given free reign over most of our projects and if we can explain why we made a certain passage in an otherwise iffy way, we don't get docked. Easy answer: "power chord inspired piece." The rest of the full piece is mostly power chord movements over other instruments. Honestly, I think he's just happy I'm not using 4th power chords like crazy again this year lol
My theory class is very interesting. There's only four of us left from last year. Two guitarists (both metal oriented players ironically), a trumpeter, and a clarinetist, yet for a teacher, we have a classically trained guitar major. Strange class. Stranger students.
So off topic now lol
 
Re: Can Someone Play This For Me

Pfft, if he gives you a look for parallel fifths, just pick up a guitar and play a bunch of powerchords to spite him.
 
Re: Can Someone Play This For Me

Yeah, the general rule for formally writing new music is "know what rules you're breaking and why".

Don't like the sound of parallel octaves? Better not listen to Oscar Peterson, but you'll be missing out on sound gooood tunes. *grin*


Sent from my iPad using a bunch of electrons, copper, and probably some fiber optic cable
 
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