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Welcome, my name is Garri Voodoo. My journal will feature articles by my good friend, the violinist and music scholar, Runa Fanany. She will mostly cover classical music, with perhaps a slightly alternative point of view. Enjoy!
As a teacher, I have frequently come across students who, for whatever reason, lack the basic ability to replicate(sing back) a given pitch. This is a significant hurdle to teaching any further aural skills, and one which should be overcome as quickly as possible. The benefits of developing these skills are obvious and numberous - even possessing this simple ability makes the attack of unprepared notes on wind and brass instruments much easier to learn.

It is moderately problematic though, that this is an assumed skill of people in general - there are few if any tactics developed with which this skill can be taught and developed. Once this skill is taught, then traditional basic aural training may properly commence - the comparison of intervals, singing of melodies, recognition of harmonies, etc. There are numerous guides and instruction sets for these skills, but little widespread understanding of how to pass on to students these very basic building blocks. My purpose in this short article is to propose several processes with which I have found success in teaching this skill to students.


This situation first arises when students are asked to sing back a note, and they sing back something alarmingly distant and seemingly irrelevant to the note. It appears either that they are not hearing the note clearly in their head, or that they lack the ability to replicate this sound with their voice. Usually, when students are new to this, the problem is some of both.

It must be stressed that the student should be comfortable to glissando around, or jump with their voice, until they find the pitch. In at least one student I have taught, the simple embarassment of moving their voice around to find a pitch was a big obstacle. If this has been overcome, it will make some of the other tactics easier, and may even solve the problem outright.


Comparing the intervals of what the student has sung, to what they are asked to sing, shows them where they are and where they need to be. Ask them to consider if they are higher or lower than the given note. Interestingly, different people can have different trends to how far away from a note they sing. For instance, of three students with this problem, one tended to sing a tone below the given note, one a major third above, and another the fourth below or fifth above. Some of this is easy to understand - all of these intervals have a certain amount of stability, at least compared to a minor second or a tritone for instance. The harmonic stability of the third, and the acoustic stability of the fourth and fifth make them common errors, since many students when trying to sing a note are not singing to find a pitch, but to find a place where the interval they produce sounds stable.

Here then is a possible way to train this skill - have the student aim to bring the stability of what they are singing to a unison or octave. This will sound the most stable to anyone, and this quality of stability is something that can be taught. The student needs to hear a lot of what it sounds like when a voice is in unison with a given note, and when it is not. Then, even if the problem persists, if a student recognises the quality of being in unison, they can train themselves, and the battle is already won.

As one last side note, there seems to be some difference with this skill when different instruments are used for the task. Perhaps certain harmonic overtones can make this task easier or more difficult. When singing against a sustained tone, such as a violin or a clarinet, the student can hear their voice and the given note constantly, and so are able to more easily hear the interval produced. When the sound decays, such as in a piano, it can sometimes be more difficult for the student to compare the sound they are making to what they hear. Experimenting with students in this field gives best results.

I send my best wishes to any teacher attempting to teach their students this invaluable skill.
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The Armenian Duduk

April 25th 2007 02:22
A short while ago, an Armenian friend of mine asked me if I could learn to play the duduk for a possible work he was writing. After spending a little bit of time with the duduk, I thought I might post some of my impressions and what I've learned of this unique and curious instrument.

The duduk is a double reed instrument(like the oboe and bassoon) but has a much larger reed than both of these instruments. As such, it requires a great deal of lung capacity to play uninterrupted phrases on it, and players of traditional orchestral instruments may be surprised initially at the resistance offered by this small instrument. It is almost always played with vibrato, and the design of the instrument lends itself well to both lip and finger portamentos. These are a characteristic feature of much music for the duduk. It is also interesting to note that like clarinets, there is an extended family of duduks in all ranges. In recent times, the characteristic expressive, moan like sound of the duduk has seen its way into movies such as The Last Temptation of Christ, Syriana, and Gladiator
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Practical Use of Aural Perception

January 8th 2007 14:17
Subjects in university music courses that teach aural skills, along with sections of high school syllabuses containing such exercises, are often seen as an unrequired irritation by students. Given the huge variance in natural ability that different people possess regarding these skills, it is no wonder that many view it as unfair that blanket courses are often applied to all students. However, development of these skills, regardless of the level a person starts at, holds huge and tangible musical rewards.

For jazz musicians, the ability to hear what is going on around them and react is vital.
As a teacher, possessing good aural skills is invaluable. In any situation where a student wants to work on repertoire that their teacher might not be familiar with, provided the teacher has a score, they can still give feedback, correct possible wrong notes, understand structural implications and so on without needing to ever pick up their instrument. This is especially valuable if a teacher needs to deliver a masterclass or give feedback to works played on an instrument other than their own. Beyond the simple ability to relate what is on a page to what is heard, probably the most important skill that needs to be possessed by a teacher is an ability to pick up on the tiniest nuances in performances, and to hear the wealth of small details that make each performance unique. This perception, coupled with a solid musical and instrumental understanding, is probably what separates many highly skilled teachers


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After a bit of a hiatus, here is the conclusion to my look at some of the challenges awaiting video game composers:

2) Lack of available resources

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Writing music for games is an interesting challenge, as they are unlike any other media format. There are a number of specific challenges which have confronted game music composers over the years. Some change, but there are many constant difficulties in the format which make it an exciting field to investigate. I thought it might be an interesting dissertation to examine a few of these challenges which make the field fascinating to me:

1) Music often has to constantly loop
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The ability of music to stir emotions and evoke feelings is well known, and its use within other forms of media - for instance movies or advertisements - highlights this. It is commonly understood that there are some basic aspects of traditional Western music that everyone can relate to on an emotional level without any training, things such major music being happy and minor music being sad. Beyond just tonality, there are other features of music people commonly relate to things, such as choirs having some religious connotation, or slow lyrical pieces conveying a heartfelt emotion. These general connotations that people have to music are taken for granted, but there is occasional debate as to whether these connotations are based purely off experience in life, as an associative connotation, or whether they come from more primal and universal human reaction to sound, as an instinctive connotation. I would put forward that human musical reaction is a mix of both - but that we are much more bound to music by purely being human before experience in life tempers the mind.

It is probably in communities isolated from Western culture completely where most valuable research on this topic can be done.
Consider the following - everything reacts to vibrations. It is possible upon finding the resonant frequency of a glass to shatter it with sound, and such resonant frequencies actually need to be a consideration in building. In addition to the physical effects of sound, humans are capable of reacting cognitively as well - you generally need no prior training to be able to tell if a note is particularly high or particularly low in pitch. The way people recieve intervals as dissonant or consonant does not appear to require any prior experience. The purity and hollowness found in octaves and fifths, or the striking discord of a tritone was recognised by early musicians documenting their work during the Renaissance. When tonal music was undergoing basic development, those listening did not have prior associative experience to draw upon. Musical intervals are combinations of vibration patterns that combine in different ways, and human response to this requires no education


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Interesting Links

November 6th 2006 02:10
With exams at the moment, I'm pretty in the thick of it and don't have time for a full update this week. I can however deliver a few links that you might find interesting that I've come across in my travels.

http://www.stuartgreenbaum.com/nelson/index.html
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Influences on Composition - Part 2

October 16th 2006 13:46
Last week I looked at Tchaikovsky and Stravinsky as examples of how life implicitly makes it’s way into a composer’s music. This week I’ll look at a few more.

Folk dancers in Prague
It is impossible to talk about how surroundings and life influenced some composers without giving mention to the writing related to the surge of nationalism during the nineteenth century. As nation states were established and there was increasing separation from the Ottoman empire in Europe, it became a predictable event that music would be used as a tool for the glorification of these seceding countries. Some composers looked towards the folk music already in their smaller communities for inspiration. Examples are numerous, including Bartok in Hungary, Vaughn Williams in England, Tchaikovsky in Russia, and Khachaturian in Armenia. In some cases, such as Dvorak’s, music became an expression of the value of culture and richness of a native population. His 9th Symphony - From The New World - seems to demonstrate a degree of homesickness for Bohemia while he lived in America. Bedrich Smetana, another Bohemian, used his music as a tool to cultivate nationalism in a populace long crushed under Austrian influence. As such, his operas include Czech dances and tell of Czech heroes and history. The nineteenth century air of nationalism was inescapable for many composers, and their music came to embody nationalistic values and ideals


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Influences on Composition - Part 1

October 9th 2006 12:56
Bit of a big update this time, so I’m splitting it over two weeks. Hope you enjoy.

As an expressive art form, music is unparalleled in it’s ability to convey emotions, ideas or events. Composers have often sought to express in their music something that is of prime significance to themselves or something they have a direct connection to. We often hear about the passionate and mood swing addled character of Schumann coming out in his works, or how Rachmaninov or Grieg expressed music which was attached to the heart of their own nationalism, but how exactly is it that these outside factors can become part of composition


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Performance Teaching as a Science

September 18th 2006 02:02
When looking at professional instrumental teachers carry out their work, it may not at first seem like a particularly scholarly or scientific pursuit. A fair observation could state that much of what is taught is just a continuation of principles centuries old - instrumental faculty is developed, common musical interpretation is passed on along with perhaps an opinion or two on the part of the teacher based on personal reason. But beyond this, the field is anything but static, and while yes, the fingering positions on a violin or clarinet aren’t likely to change in the way they are taught to beginners, at advanced levels there is a wealth of investigative study and research related to modern performing.

A clarinet lesson, taken from the Mount Allison University site (www.mta.ca)
To demonstrate this development, examples can be taken from teaching manuals, both historical and modern. While it is understood that a book alone provides not enough information or adaptability to really learn an instrument, many performers have attempted to chronicle some of their discoveries in performance for the profit of future generations. Leopold Mozart and Carl Phillipe Emanuel Bach are two big classical examples, for their works on violin and keyboard technique respectively. What is interesting about works like this at this stage was that much of their development would have to rely on personal investigation on the part of the authors. There were no major conservatoriums during this period that funded these developments, no scholarly bodies whose collected discoveries were focused by these authors. Through trial and error and personal discovery these books were made possible. While most musical knowledge is passed on through teaching, we cannot forget the contribution made by these manuals to the preservation of musical discovery


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No Update This Week

September 11th 2006 13:17
Sorry about this, I've become a bit bogged in work this week to the point where I don't have more than an hour free for lunch each day. However, I have recieved an interesting possibility - for those who read my update about the Vienna Philharmonic a little while ago, there is the possibility that I would be given an opportunity to interview principal clarinettist and manager Peter Schmidl. This is exciting news indeed.

My apologies, I'll be back with a proper update next week, where I'll look at some of the issues I feel relevant in teaching performance practice.
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The Damage of Volume

August 7th 2006 02:00
After having a tutorial full of terrifying facts thrown at us in a recent Music Technology class, I feel that it would be very worthwhile sharing some important information.

Get some ear plugs. Trust me on this


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It is unarguable that the music of the 20th century has been startlingly varied, going from the late romanticism of Rachmaninov to the impressionism of Debussy, jumping from folk idioms of Vaughn Williams to the completely different sound worlds of Boulez, Reich and Glass. Orchestral music has remained a fixture throughout this time, though much of its instrumentation has been liquid and varied.

Possibly the biggest change to the symphony orchestra from the romantic period in terms of instrumentation has been the expansion and development of the percussion section. Instruments such as Marimba, xylophones and glockenspiel were adopted for their effects, along with other instruments which saw increased usage such as snare drums, bass drums, gongs, tubular bells, triangles, wood blocks and a vast many more. The life of the percussion player in the orchestra has become increasingly varied, and rarely dull when 20th century works are being played


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From about the years 1830 to 1910, the orchestra more or less achieved it’s full size and was completely standardised. While string numbers might change, the set up of first and second violins, violas, cellos, double basses, clarinets, flutes, bassoons, oboes, horns, trumpets, timpani, trombones and (usually) tuba was generally a mainstay.

The forces needed for the American premiere of Mahler's 8th Symphony
The romantic era is largely identified by the desire of composers to illustrate emotions or scenes in music. There are obviously other developments, but the desire to produce music that tells some kind of story is a mainstay. While there are some exceptions, most notably Brahms, many symphonic works now attempted to depict some kind of feeling or story. The development of the tone poem pushed this even further


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