RE: [Finale] artificial or natural harmonic notation?

2006-09-11 Thread Owain Sutton
Continue with the P4-above notation.  It's perfectly normal and
acceptable to use it for open-string harmonics, and in this context
anything else is more unwieldly.



 -Original Message-
 From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
 [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Randolph Peters
 Sent: 11 September 2006 04:30
 To: finale@shsu.edu
 Subject: [Finale] artificial or natural harmonic notation?
 
 
 I was puzzling over a notational problem I had regarding artificial 
 and natural harmonics notation on a stringed instrument.
 
 I have a section in a piece I'm writing where the violin soloist 
 plays a series of artificial harmonics (P4 above). When the passage 
 comes to an open string, I've usually thought of those notes as being 
 natural harmonics. The thing is that the traditional notation for 
 natural harmonics looks odd and jumps out at you.
 
 Should I carry on with the artificial harmonics notation (a note and 
 a diamond a P4th above) or should I mix the two kinds of harmonics 
 notation? [Let's assume the player is using an open string and not a 
 fingered version of the same note.]
 
 I appeal to the wisdom of the list.
 
 -Randolph Peters
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RE: [Finale] artificial or natural harmonic notation?

2006-09-11 Thread Lee Actor
 I was puzzling over a notational problem I had regarding artificial
 and natural harmonics notation on a stringed instrument.

 I have a section in a piece I'm writing where the violin soloist
 plays a series of artificial harmonics (P4 above). When the passage
 comes to an open string, I've usually thought of those notes as being
 natural harmonics. The thing is that the traditional notation for
 natural harmonics looks odd and jumps out at you.

 Should I carry on with the artificial harmonics notation (a note and
 a diamond a P4th above) or should I mix the two kinds of harmonics
 notation? [Let's assume the player is using an open string and not a
 fingered version of the same note.]

 I appeal to the wisdom of the list.

 -Randolph Peters

I'm not sure what you mean by traditional notation for natural harmonics.
Let's say we're talking about, for example, the natural harmonic at A a
fourth above the open E, sounding two octaves above the open E.  That could
be notated three ways: 1) at the sounding pitch with a small circle above it
(the traditional natural harmonic notation, though it is not unambiguous
and might likely be played up high on the E string); 2) with an open diamond
notehead at the A where the finger lightly touches the string; or 3) a
diamond on the A plus a note of the proper rhythmic duration on the E (the
standard for artificial harmonics).  I would definitely use the last
mentioned method, as it leaves the least room for doubt as to what you want.
The second method cannot distinguish between, say, quarter and half notes,
and the first method is too ambiguous and will look awkward among a series
of artificial harmonics. Granted, using the recommended method could result
in the note being played as an artificial harmonic on the A string (or even
D), but if it's that important, you can always add a sul E or just I
(Roman numeral one).  Besides, in some contexts it may be advantageous to
playing it as an artificial harmonic, as this would allow vibrato
(impossible on a natural harmonic).

Lee Actor
Composer-in-Residence and Assistant Conductor, Palo Alto Philharmonic
http://www.leeactor.com




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Re: [Finale] artificial or natural harmonic notation?

2006-09-11 Thread Christopher Smith
It's been my experience that string players pretty much universally  
ignore my helpful notations about how to play harmonics, and unless  
it is impossible, will always play an artificial harmonic rather than  
a natural one. They explain that it is for tuning, as you can't tune  
a natural harmonic; and for timbre, as the sound of an open string is  
substantially different from a stopped one.


Regardless, the notation with the diamond a 4th higher is perfectly  
correct, even on an open string, though as I said, most players will  
probably play it on the next lower string so that it will be an  
artificial harmonic in any case.


Christopher


On Sep 10, 2006, at 11:30 PM, Randolph Peters wrote:

I was puzzling over a notational problem I had regarding artificial  
and natural harmonics notation on a stringed instrument.


I have a section in a piece I'm writing where the violin soloist  
plays a series of artificial harmonics (P4 above). When the passage  
comes to an open string, I've usually thought of those notes as  
being natural harmonics. The thing is that the traditional notation  
for natural harmonics looks odd and jumps out at you.


Should I carry on with the artificial harmonics notation (a note  
and a diamond a P4th above) or should I mix the two kinds of  
harmonics notation? [Let's assume the player is using an open  
string and not a fingered version of the same note.]


I appeal to the wisdom of the list.

-Randolph Peters
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RE: [Finale] artificial or natural harmonic notation?

2006-09-11 Thread Owain Sutton
If it were part of a melodic line, I'd probably avoid the open-string
harmonic, too.  Not just for the reasons mentioned, but because it is
often much easier to play with a sustained sound, with shifting of the
consistent 1-4 handshape, instead of switching from 1-4 to 0-3 as needed
for the open string.


 -Original Message-
 From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
 [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Christopher Smith
 Sent: 11 September 2006 12:56
 To: finale@shsu.edu
 Subject: Re: [Finale] artificial or natural harmonic notation?
 
 
 It's been my experience that string players pretty much universally  
 ignore my helpful notations about how to play harmonics, and unless  
 it is impossible, will always play an artificial harmonic 
 rather than  
 a natural one. They explain that it is for tuning, as you can't tune  
 a natural harmonic; and for timbre, as the sound of an open 
 string is  
 substantially different from a stopped one.
 
 Regardless, the notation with the diamond a 4th higher is perfectly  
 correct, even on an open string, though as I said, most players will  
 probably play it on the next lower string so that it will be an  
 artificial harmonic in any case.
 
 Christopher
 
 
 On Sep 10, 2006, at 11:30 PM, Randolph Peters wrote:
 
  I was puzzling over a notational problem I had regarding 
 artificial  
  and natural harmonics notation on a stringed instrument.
 
  I have a section in a piece I'm writing where the violin soloist  
  plays a series of artificial harmonics (P4 above). When the 
 passage  
  comes to an open string, I've usually thought of those notes as  
  being natural harmonics. The thing is that the traditional 
 notation  
  for natural harmonics looks odd and jumps out at you.
 
  Should I carry on with the artificial harmonics notation (a note  
  and a diamond a P4th above) or should I mix the two kinds of  
  harmonics notation? [Let's assume the player is using an open  
  string and not a fingered version of the same note.]
 
  I appeal to the wisdom of the list.
 
  -Randolph Peters
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  Finale mailing list
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Re: [Finale] artificial or natural harmonic notation?

2006-09-11 Thread Randolph Peters
Thanks to Owain, Christopher and Lee for your thoughts on harmonics 
notation. I'm going to stick with the artificial harmonics notation 
for the extended passage I was referring to.


This list is a very useful resource!

-Randolph Peters
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Re: [Finale] artificial or natural harmonic notation?

2006-09-11 Thread John Howell

At 10:30 PM -0500 9/10/06, Randolph Peters wrote:
I was puzzling over a notational problem I had regarding artificial 
and natural harmonics notation on a stringed instrument.


Don't feel bad.  I'm a string player and every time I come across 
harmonics I have to stop and figure out what's intended!  It's 
especially confusing in the books for Broadway musicals, since the 
copyists didn't always know or follow the rules!!


I have a section in a piece I'm writing where the violin soloist 
plays a series of artificial harmonics (P4 above). When the passage 
comes to an open string, I've usually thought of those notes as 
being natural harmonics. The thing is that the traditional notation 
for natural harmonics looks odd and jumps out at you.


Yes, they are natural harmonics, but PLEASE treat them the same as 
the others, as artificial, for consistency.  No problem sightreading 
them that way; BIG problem reading if they bounce between systems. 
And the player, not you, will decide whether to use the open string 
based on the geometry of the passage.


John


--
John  Susie Howell
Virginia Tech Department of Music
Blacksburg, Virginia, U.S.A 24061-0240
Vox (540) 231-8411  Fax (540) 231-5034
(mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED])
http://www.music.vt.edu/faculty/howell/howell.html
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RE: [Finale] artificial or natural harmonic notation?

2006-09-11 Thread John Howell

At 12:49 AM -0700 9/11/06, Lee Actor wrote:


Besides, in some contexts it may be advantageous to
playing it as an artificial harmonic, as this would allow vibrato
(impossible on a natural harmonic).


Not entirely true.  It's a different kind of vibrato with limited 
amplitude, but quite easy to produce and sounds like ... well ... 
vibrato.


John


--
John  Susie Howell
Virginia Tech Department of Music
Blacksburg, Virginia, U.S.A 24061-0240
Vox (540) 231-8411  Fax (540) 231-5034
(mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED])
http://www.music.vt.edu/faculty/howell/howell.html
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Re: [Finale] artificial or natural harmonic notation?

2006-09-11 Thread Andrew Stiller


On Sep 10, 2006, at 11:30 PM, Randolph Peters wrote:

I have a section in a piece I'm writing where the violin soloist plays 
a series of artificial harmonics (P4 above). When the passage comes to 
an open string, I've usually thought of those notes as being natural 
harmonics. The thing is that the traditional notation for natural 
harmonics looks odd and jumps out at you.


Should I carry on with the artificial harmonics notation (a note and a 
diamond a P4th above) or should I mix the two kinds of harmonics 
notation?


The notation for artificial harmonics exists for clarification 
purposes, and is not mystically connected to the idea of the harmonic 
being artificial; it is therefore perfectly acceptable to use this 
notation for a natural harmonic where that would be clearer.


However, to make certain the player does not go for an artificial 
harmonic on another string, you should either indicate the string name, 
or put a zero above the note to indicate the open string.


Andrew Stiller
Kallisti Music Press
http://home.netcom.com/~kallisti/

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RE: [Finale] artificial or natural harmonic notation?

2006-09-11 Thread Owain Sutton

 The notation for artificial harmonics exists for clarification 
 purposes, and is not mystically connected to the idea of the harmonic 
 being artificial; it is therefore perfectly acceptable to use this 
 notation for a natural harmonic where that would be clearer.
 
 However, to make certain the player does not go for an artificial 
 harmonic on another string, you should either indicate the 
 string name, 
 or put a zero above the note to indicate the open string.
 
 Andrew Stiller


I suppose it's worth noting another technique for notating natural
harmonics, which uses just the diamond notehead by itself.  This is most
relevant to a series of various natural harmonics, particularly when
upper partials (e.g. the natural harmonic at the major sixth above the
open string) are involved.  The outer movements of the Stravinsky violin
concerto is two examples which I know use this, and also use small
bracketed noteheads to indicate the intended pitches, which in this case
is sufficient to remove the need for roman numeral indications of
strings.

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RE: [Finale] artificial or natural harmonic notation?

2006-09-11 Thread Lee Actor
 At 12:49 AM -0700 9/11/06, Lee Actor wrote:
 
 Besides, in some contexts it may be advantageous to
 playing it as an artificial harmonic, as this would allow vibrato
 (impossible on a natural harmonic).

 Not entirely true.  It's a different kind of vibrato with limited
 amplitude, but quite easy to produce and sounds like ... well ...
 vibrato.

 John

You're right for octave harmonics, which have some leeway.  But at the 4th
above the open string, you basically lose the harmonic with even a slight
deviation from pitch, at least on violin.  Maybe on cello?

-Lee


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RE: [Finale] artificial or natural harmonic notation?

2006-09-11 Thread Owain Sutton


 -Original Message-
 From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
 [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Lee Actor
 Sent: 11 September 2006 17:47
 To: finale@shsu.edu
 Subject: RE: [Finale] artificial or natural harmonic notation?
 
 
  At 12:49 AM -0700 9/11/06, Lee Actor wrote:
  
  Besides, in some contexts it may be advantageous to
  playing it as an artificial harmonic, as this would allow vibrato
  (impossible on a natural harmonic).
 
  Not entirely true.  It's a different kind of vibrato with limited
  amplitude, but quite easy to produce and sounds like ... well ...
  vibrato.
 
  John
 
 You're right for octave harmonics, which have some leeway.  
 But at the 4th
 above the open string, you basically lose the harmonic with 
 even a slight
 deviation from pitch, at least on violin.  Maybe on cello?
 
 -Lee
 

A slight increase in finger pressure does enable a variation of pitch,
although yes, it's far more difficult than at the octave!  It's
certainly possible to lower the D harmonic on the G string by around a
third of a tone before it breaks into a multiphonic.

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[Finale] artificial or natural harmonic notation?

2006-09-10 Thread Randolph Peters
I was puzzling over a notational problem I had regarding artificial 
and natural harmonics notation on a stringed instrument.


I have a section in a piece I'm writing where the violin soloist 
plays a series of artificial harmonics (P4 above). When the passage 
comes to an open string, I've usually thought of those notes as being 
natural harmonics. The thing is that the traditional notation for 
natural harmonics looks odd and jumps out at you.


Should I carry on with the artificial harmonics notation (a note and 
a diamond a P4th above) or should I mix the two kinds of harmonics 
notation? [Let's assume the player is using an open string and not a 
fingered version of the same note.]


I appeal to the wisdom of the list.

-Randolph Peters
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