It's not a "known fact". Seriously, just stop.
But there aren't ever more than 2 going on at once (the same as in "Blues for Klook") in Chan's version of Aranjeuz, are there? There are a greater variety of voices used throughout the piece but not all at the same time. It's always guitar+string or horn+string or guitar+horn or string+woodwind. Or am I not recalling this correctly?
I have also noticed a bias in your posts in regard to Lori Nichols choreography. You don't seem to think much of Nichols choreography and criticize it at every turn. This renders your opinions of programs choreographed by Nichol as moot.
I love Takahashi and his ability to become the music. But I also recognize that he is doing less complex choreography with less detail that Patrick. Both skaters are prone to making mistakes, but then they are doing more difficult elements than nearly everybody else. And Takahashi is more prone to letting his performance go when his jumps aren't solid. Patrick never gives up on his program which is why his PCS tends to hold up better with mistakes.
More fail reasoning. Not caring for much of Lori's recent work doesn't mean I have any kind of misplaced bias. It means I don't like the work, for the exact reasons I always describe.
Do you even understand how criticism works? Someone's view is not "rendered moot" as a result of not exalting a popular person constantly. There are a sizable number of Hollywood films released every year that make $200+ million dollars and quite a lot of them receive poor reviews overall. That doesn't mean the critics' opinions are rendered worthless by the financial success of the product (although certain studio executives would have you think that way, as you are trying to do here).
People seem to be mistaking bias with an informed opinion. The bias here is rather your own FOR Lori's work, since you always defend it as perfect without any relevant reasoning.
Hm, a lay person can usually catch only two or three voices at a time. So how can I explain this? Let me try:
Exercise #1: Listen to the guitar alone. There are two different voices. (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nv4TWYesMBE#t=5m000s) Now, pay attention to the background. Can you hear the violin? So there are three voices going on at once in that section.
Exercise #2: It starts with chords (six notes simultaneously at every stroke) made by the guitar (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nv4TWYesMBE#t=0m036s) to accompany the dominant melodic voice (the oboe) that comes moments later, soon joined by the violins II and cellos, and shortly violins I and violas....
Last edited by skatinginbc; 02-04-2012 at 08:34 PM.
Okay, BC, I don't have music training, just years of self-taught listening, so you'll have to break it down for me. When you say there are two voices in the guitar alone, do you mean (because I couldn't catch it in that little extract) that two strings are being plucked at once, or that when a single note is plucked, it has undertone vibrations that are another note? (I recall one junior high school music class where the teacher hit a note on the piano and made us listen for the other tones.) I know that acoustic guitar is especially good for learning about this kind of thing, because it's got such clear vibrations; it's not some synthesized electronic construct.
Sorry to butt in, but I can't figure this out for myself. Thanks!
In Exercise #1, the second melody comes a quaver later an octave higher than the first (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YC91sfBYCF4#t=9m023s).
Okay, thanks, BC.
Interesting, BC. Those aspects of music are things I'd probably like to take classes on if I could find the time. I used to do singing competitions and know how to read some music, but there's a whole lot more out there to learn (and I have to kick myself for not trying to learn the piano and guitar as a kid).
Actually, your questioning about the contrapuntal density of Aranjeuz is not completely wrong. Compared to Baroque music, Aranjeuz makes minimal use of counterpoints. Even Exercise #1 is a very simple type of canon, nothing fancy about it. I think the composer feared that the guitar might be overwhelmed by the orchestra if too many voices are present.
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