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Dear Friends,
To make things easier, let's get the Beethoven "opera" right in front of us:
In Tip 12, I suggested it was a king--King Macho the First--who declared his magnificence in the 1st measure, and that his queen reminded him she was also a ruler in measures 2, 3, and 4. In measure 5, the king interrupted her to bring the spotlight back to him. At the end of that Tip, I asked you these questions:
To get the answer to "Who sings next?" I looked at measures 2, 3, and 4 and saw that measures 6, 7, and 8 were almost exactly the same: the rhythm and dynamic is the same in both spots, and the intervals are almost exactly the same, so my call was: it's the queen. And you? For the answer to "What is being said in measures 6, 7, and 8?" I reviewed the conversation in measures 1-5, and looked at the words I had added to the music in those measures:
I understood that, in measures 6, 7, and 8, the queen isn't intimidated one little bit. The music says so. It's the same tune she sang in measures 2, 3, and 4, when she asserted herself. But this time, she's even stronger. How can we tell? You tell me. Here are her two statements: measure 2, 3, and 4... and measures 6, 7, and 8:
Check it out. The queen starts singing two notes higher (A) in measure 6 than she did in measure 2 (F). In fact, all the music in measures 6, 7, and 8 is higher than in measures 2, 3, and 4. I think she's singing higher (stronger) because she's wants the king to understand that his precious little power play isn't working (in doing so, she's clearly a model for all young women.) What words might she be singing to express these feelings? Here's my suggestion:
Can you hear it? What was your version?
OK, on to measures 9-16. Here they are:
At the end of Tip 12, I asked you to "continue to assign characters and words to measures 9-16..." Did you get a chance to do it? What did you come up with? I made up two different stories for those measures. The first is that the king and queen start to argue. They go offstage, and we hear members of the court--divided into two choruses--singing:
The other version that came to mind was that the king and queen realized how inappropriate it was to bicker, changed their tune (ha, ha!), and expressed their affection for each other (but not without the queen warning the king in measures 15 and 16 to clean up his act!):
There are, of course, lots of different stories and words you can make up to fit the music in measures 9-16, or anywhere in almost any piece. The point is that developing stories and characters suggested by the music you're working on can be very, very helpful. There's no law that says you can't learn music and express it with great feeling without creating stories and characters. At the same time, you may find that this approach helps from time to time; in my own life, I've found that having several different ways of understanding something can be a big help. With All Best Wishes, David Barg, Learning Center Director The Classical Archives, LLC email: david@prs.net |
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