Showing posts with label Christmas music. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Christmas music. Show all posts

Tuesday, October 2, 2012

Music Writing: Ave Maria for Christmas

Every year for the longest time, I have written (aka arranged) at least one piece of Christmas music.  This started out in church, where my family often sings or plays instruments.  We couldn’t find solos or duets for songs we wanted with our weird amalgamation of instruments and voices.  So I started arranging the music, and a personal Christmas tradition was born.  This year, I have chosen two: I want to write my own melody for an Ave Maria, and I want to arrange Riu Chiu for a choir.  Whether or not anyone actually sings or plays this remains to be seen, but I don’t care.  I am writing them.  First up… Ave Maria.  I am going to try to write my own melody to this beautiful and poetic prayer.
I don’t think mine will become a timeless classic like Schubert… but you never know :)
I use the freeware program called MuseScore to write my music at the moment.  In the “old days” I would use handmade staff paper, a pencil with a fresh eraser, and my mother’s piano.  Ah, how times have changed.
Before I wrote the music, I had to decide whether to have the song in English or Latin.  I put the lyrics below.  After a lot of flip flopping I decided to stick to traditional Latin.  I think it sounds more lyrical.
Music Writing 03
Now for the fun stuff: creating the titles! When you open a new project in MuseScore, this is the first thing that pops up, so it is easy to do. I just love looking at the title, and seeing my name somewhere underneath it is just another perk.
Music Writing 01
Next, I put together the musical instruments on the staves.  The instruments in question are 6 voices to cover a complete choir.  I intend to make a solo version and a piano version, but this is what I want to start with.  Now, the voice sounds on MuseScore do leave something to be desired, so while I am working on the song the voices will be exchanged for woodwind instruments.
Music Writing 02
I have been humming a tune for about a week that I decided was perfect for this carol.  So I put that down before I could forget it.  It sounded amazing to me.  And, if I remind myself to keep the melody simple, this little diddy should harmonize well.  MuseScore allows me to type the notes in using alphabet keys, as well as just use the mouse and literally place the notes where I want them.  And I can play back whenever necessary to keep the harmony in place.  However, I will say that computer instruments really do lack the emotion and personality of a live instrument.  That is why the sample below has all the dynamics below.  I wanted to hear the main melody of the alto (third bar line) above everything else.  Real singers could just be told where the melody lies, but the computer doesn’t like to be told such things.  Finicky computer…
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As I wrote the tune out, I decided to type the lyrics in.  This is done by clicking on a note once, and pressing <CTRL L>.  Better still, you can go from one note to the next by typing a – or the space bar, so I can separate syllables without constantly clicking <CTRL L> over and over again.
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Okay!  The melody has been put down, now time for the accompaniment.  In my opinion, the accompaniment is the most fun to write, because you can use it to create the mood of the song.  Yes, the melody is super important.  But the accompaniment decides if it will be a somber tune, a lively and up-tempo song, or a chord-chord-chord Christmas classic (if you don’t know what this is, look at how Christmas songs are written in any hymnal).  I love a plainsong, so my accompaniment will hopefully keep the song somber and just a little bit… melodramatic. 
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I give the accompaniment license for a few measures at the beginning and the two stanzas of the prayer to give a little color to the song.  Oddly enough, my fingers decided that the accompaniment would be a round, with the voice alternating the same rhythms between the right and left hand.  I do this both times, with different musical rhythms.  It works so well, I can’t believe I wrote it when I hear the playback.  >POP!<  Pardon me, that was just my ego exploding just a little bit.
Music Writing 08
Ahhh… the song is coming along nicely.  But, as what often happens when I do something new, I have added a little too much dissonance, I think.  There are several places where I flinch now when I hear the clashing notes, and that shouldn’t happen in a Christmas carol, especially if I want it to be an instant classic (just kidding).  So I am now revamping several small bits of the accompaniment to keep it on the pleasantly plainsong side of slightly dissonant.
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Of course, some of the areas are sacrosanct.  I absolutely love the harmonizing for the Iesus bars.  If I change that, my whole song would be totally different.  But, in the 6-part harmonies there is enough wiggle room that I may have gone a little out of control.
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I am so almost done.  I only have a few small pockets of nothingness between me and a listening party with all my 2 readers!  Unfortunately, the burst of creativity that started this endeavor ran dry two days ago, and now I am slogging through a strong urge to stop.  I will continue until I am finished, but I will end this post for now.
To be continued on the second installment of Music Writing: Ave Maria.

Sunday, August 26, 2012

Music Writing: Arrangements My Way

Another long loved hobby of mine is writing music.  I grew up in a musical household.  My mother has played piano and organ for churches since before me and my siblings were born.  She taught piano, and started each of us on it when we were about five years old.  I sang in church choirs, played French horn in the school band and at special church services, and even sang solos in our church every so often (as did my sister).  One of the things I grew to love about music was music theory.  Creating something from strange symbols that actually came out of my mind.  Clutter and chaos into rhythm and melody.

The first type of music writing I learned to do was arrangement: writing a known song in a different style.  For French horn, this was as simple as transposing the song as is into a key more suited to my range.  I did that a lot.  A more unique form of arrangement is taking a piece of music and putting your own style to it.  Look at Christmas music every year, and you will hear arrangements.  In fact, Christmas music is where I started.  I would arrange pieces for me or my sister to sing in church, for me to play on the French horn, or my sister to play on her flute, with our mother to accompany us.  I loved doing this, and every year made two or three new arrangements of our favorite songs.  My favorite Christmas song to arrange is "O Come, O Come Emmanuel".  I love the plainsongs.  My sister liked to look up more unique songs, and my favorite from her list is "Jesus Christ the Apple Tree".

Arranging music is not hard.  I always start by just humming the tune, over and over, over a few hours or days.  Not always out loud, but let it run through my head.  I do this at work, while doing the dishes, doing homework, any time my humming wouldn’t really bother anyone.  Eventually, if through nothing more than sheer boredom from repetition, I would hear my head adding harmony.  Or I would hum the song slower, faster… the possibilities are different each time.  That is when I would try to write the music down or record it somehow.  Today’s phones are great for this, because I always have mine in my pocket or purse.  Then, I have to focus my mental energy (which is very hard for me) and try to lay the music down in my own particular order.
First, I lay down the melody.  This never takes long for me in an arrangement, because it has been stuck in my head for quite a while.  Then I choose the tempo and time signature, in that order.  I rarely set the key signature until the song is finished, because I am not always sure if the key I start arranging in is the one I will finish in.  I just write all the notes as flats and sharps until a key signature jumps out at me.  Time signature is the easiest for me, because I have no problem picking out the pattern of the song, even in it has changed from the traditional time signature for whatever piece of music I am working on.

After melody comes harmony.  The harmony in my simple arrangements is usually played by the right hand of the piano accompanist.  Sometimes, if I want more gravitas in the the song the harmony is played by the left hand (normally bass clef notes), but I try to keep it fairly simple for Christmas arrangements.  I also love to have a counter melody that the piano plays in the middle of my arrangements, something that I make up completely by myself.  The counter melody, to me, sounds like a second singer coming into the song, singing in conjunction with the main melody.  It also gives the piano accompanist a chance to shine, as it is usually played a little louder than just a harmony.

Lastly, I put in what I call “filler.”  this is the balance of the pianist’s accompaniment that rounds out the feeling of the arrangement.  Syncopation, or playing notes on or in between up beats, is something I like to use to add the feeling of complexity to a simple tune.  And I knew my mom could do any syncopation I could write.   If I wanted the arrangement to have a more traditional feel, the left hand would play two and three note cords on every beat, which would be reminiscent of what you would find in a church hymnal.  The filler, to me, is the most unique part of my arrangements, and what would take the most time in the writing.

And this is the method I would use to write an arrangement.  Until very recently, I would do this on a piano (when I lived in Levelland) or my Casio keyboard with staff pages I actually made myself (sometimes with a ruler and a pencil).  Now I use a freeware program called MuseScore on my computer.  When my arrangements became more and more complex, I realized that I started writing completely original compositions.  It was made clear to me that I could do this when I made a piano solo arrangement of “O Come, O Come Emmanuel” in the style of Chopin; specifically my sister’s favorite nocturne, Nocturne in E Minor, Op. 72 no. 1.  I played it in church at the Christmas Eve service, and asked the pastor’s wife after the service what she thought of it.  She said she loved Chopin.  No one had realized that it was an arrangement I had written.

I would love to post these pieces for you to hear and critique.  But when I moved to Alabama, I left them in my mother’s house in Texas.  I am still working on getting them sent to me, and will post them as soon as I get them.  But finding them is troublesome.  I, with my scatterbrain, know I kept them in a folder, but cannot tell my sister where they are.  But she keeps looking.