burn Flashcards
notation
-scores made based on recorded sound, some improvised elements
-two staves for short score strings
-additional stave for sitar
-additional staves added for sarangi, percussion, synthesised bass and vocals
-brass, harp, flute and solo cello are notated in string staves
-guitar chords given
sonority
-strings, sitar and vocals
-sarangi later introduced
-orchestral additions (brass, harp, flute)
-manjira (indian)
-western drum kit
what is the piece about?
lyrics concern the mystery of love as reflected in the moon, sun and stars and expressed in the dance
texture
-MDH, sitar = melody
chords in strings = accompaniment
-chords vary in density as piece develops
-octaves in string melody
-octave synth bass
-percussion ostinato
-vocal initially one line but later becomes doubled a 3rd below
-third voice added at the climax
-densest textures at the climax
dynamics
crescendos lead into new sections
tempo/metre/rhythm
-no varition in tempo
-4/4 metre throughout
-however the opening sitar solo has a free feeling, qualities of ‘alap’ open the ‘raga’ where the scale is used in a rhythmically free style.
when percussion is involved it’s a bit stricter, which could recall the ‘jhala’ section of the ‘raga’
-strings have long sustained chords
-sitar:
dotted rhythms, triplets, syncopation, quintuplet
melody
sitar:
-in the Western key of C#minor (with some B#’s) rather than a scale associated with one of the ragas
-its opening line consists ornamentation
micro-tonal slides, ‘crushed’ notes and mordents of varying durations
vocals:
-initially a limited range that being a 6th
strings:
-initially the uppermost part has a range of a 5th but later expands
-anticipates the vocal line
harmony
-avoidance of cadential harmony but one near perfect cadence
-slow harmonic rhythm
-oftenly quietly dissonant language
-root position chords
-suspension chords
-slash chords
-adedd note chords
-relatively frequent A7-C# progression
-C# present throughout
tonality
-C#minor with aeolian elements
-closes on D5
-C#’s could be like the tanpura-like drone of indian classical music