6/8 marches vs. ¢marches
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- bloke
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6/8 marches vs. ¢marches
' sorry if I've already posted about this (maybe in a thread about something else)...
...but how many of your wind-band colleagues make the distinction (and or understand/notice the distinction) between playing quarter-note bass notes in ¢time marches vs. playing quarter notes in 6/8 time marches?
To me, the distinction is very important, and contributes (even more than the percussion parts) to the proper "feel" of duple meter and/vs. triple meter marches.
...but how many of your wind-band colleagues make the distinction (and or understand/notice the distinction) between playing quarter-note bass notes in ¢time marches vs. playing quarter notes in 6/8 time marches?
To me, the distinction is very important, and contributes (even more than the percussion parts) to the proper "feel" of duple meter and/vs. triple meter marches.
Re: 6/8 marches vs. ¢marches
This doesn't answer your post, but I love the shift from 6/8 to 2/4 meter used by Sousa in his "El Capitan" march. It occurs between the second strain and the trio. There is a pleasant and clever feel to it.
https://youtu.be/f61GX6xeiIQ?t=62
Ace
https://youtu.be/f61GX6xeiIQ?t=62
Ace
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Re: 6/8 marches vs. ¢marches
yeah...That's a really great "hook" in that march, and I enjoy it very much as well.Ace wrote: ↑Mon Oct 19, 2020 11:10 am This doesn't answer your post, but I love the shift from 6/8 to 2/4 meter used by Sousa in his "El Capitan" march. It occurs between the second strain and the trio. There is a pleasant and clever feel to it.
https://youtu.be/f61GX6xeiIQ?t=62
Ace
============================
The 6/8 vs. ¢ time thing is a note-length and volume-taper thing,
whereas 2/2 ¢ time is more "BUP - bup - BUP - bup",
the 6/8 thing is much more "BOW - bow - BOW - bow"...
yes...???
bloke "BOW...as in 'bow' after playing a piece of music"
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Re: 6/8 marches vs. ¢marches
I've always thought that an eighth on the beat in 6/8 marches should be different from a quarter on the beat. I've also been told repeatedly over the years by conductors to play quarters the same as an eighth. A few let me make a difference when playing, but not many.
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Re: 6/8 marches vs. ¢marches
6/8 marches are cavalry marches. I think of the gait of a horse. Ta Da Ta Da Ta Da
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Re: 6/8 marches vs. ¢marches
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Re: 6/8 marches vs. ¢marches
In 2/2 time, the quarter note fades out in time to reveal the offbeats.
In 6/8 time, the quarter note fades out in time to reveal the eighth note at the last third of the beats. Note that I used the words “fades out“, which refers to the style in which either quarter notes should he played in a typical American march - where the tuba is playing “oompahs” (and not some figure which is a “hook“, nor the “dogfight“ strain). That quarter note in 6/8 time - when executed as intended - is considerably longer than the one in 2/2 time. Certainly by the 20th century (and centuries earlier), composers were pretty darn specific about what they wrote and what they wanted. Lengths of notes meant/mean what they say - certainly by then. The only things that really cannot be completely notated are style and the subtleties of phrasing.
In 6/8 time, the quarter note fades out in time to reveal the eighth note at the last third of the beats. Note that I used the words “fades out“, which refers to the style in which either quarter notes should he played in a typical American march - where the tuba is playing “oompahs” (and not some figure which is a “hook“, nor the “dogfight“ strain). That quarter note in 6/8 time - when executed as intended - is considerably longer than the one in 2/2 time. Certainly by the 20th century (and centuries earlier), composers were pretty darn specific about what they wrote and what they wanted. Lengths of notes meant/mean what they say - certainly by then. The only things that really cannot be completely notated are style and the subtleties of phrasing.
Re: 6/8 marches vs. ¢marches
You hit it on the screws. They're very different feels. I'm certainly not going to play "Stars and Stripes Forever" the same way I play "In Storm and Sunshine."
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Re: 6/8 marches vs. ¢marches
When I was a kid, I was told to imagine the difference between the bass line versus the break strain/dog fight/bottom part as "string bass pizzicato vs. sostenuto," and I'd be in the ball park. British marches required similar attention, although the style (note length) and feel was different, and German marches required full-bodied, but shorter and cleaner notes.bloke wrote: ↑Mon Oct 19, 2020 10:12 pm In 2/2 time, the quarter note fades out in time to reveal the offbeats.
In 6/8 time, the quarter note fades out in time to reveal the eighth note at the last third of the beats. Note that I used the words “fades out“, which refers to the style in which either quarter notes should he played in a typical American march - where the tuba is playing “oompahs” (and not some figure which is a “hook“, nor the “dogfight“ strain). That quarter note in 6/8 time - when executed as intended - is considerably longer than the one in 2/2 time. Certainly by the 20th century (and centuries earlier), composers were pretty darn specific about what they wrote and what they wanted. Lengths of notes meant/mean what they say - certainly by then. The only things that really cannot be completely notated are style and the subtleties of phrasing.
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Re: 6/8 marches vs. ¢marches
yes to allDoc wrote: ↑Tue Oct 20, 2020 11:40 amWhen I was a kid, I was told to imagine the difference between the bass line versus the break strain/dog fight/bottom part as "string bass pizzicato vs. sostenuto," and I'd be in the ball park. British marches required similar attention, although the style (note length) and feel was different, and German marches required full-bodied, but shorter and cleaner notes.bloke wrote: ↑Mon Oct 19, 2020 10:12 pm In 2/2 time, the quarter note fades out in time to reveal the offbeats.
In 6/8 time, the quarter note fades out in time to reveal the eighth note at the last third of the beats. Note that I used the words “fades out“, which refers to the style in which either quarter notes should he played in a typical American march - where the tuba is playing “oompahs” (and not some figure which is a “hook“, nor the “dogfight“ strain). That quarter note in 6/8 time - when executed as intended - is considerably longer than the one in 2/2 time. Certainly by the 20th century (and centuries earlier), composers were pretty darn specific about what they wrote and what they wanted. Lengths of notes meant/mean what they say - certainly by then. The only things that really cannot be completely notated are style and the subtleties of phrasing.
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Re: 6/8 marches vs. ¢marches
...just one other thing about this:
It requires considerably more energy to play the longer notes in 6/8 time, because there is less time not playing, which means there can be a tendency to drag.
It requires considerably more energy to play the longer notes in 6/8 time, because there is less time not playing, which means there can be a tendency to drag.
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Re: 6/8 marches vs. ¢marches
This doesn't directly address the topic, but is an interesting look at "performance practice" for Sousa marches curtesy of the Pershing's Own US Army Band:
https://youtu.be/DetE5-cH6iE
https://youtu.be/DetE5-cH6iE
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Re: 6/8 marches vs. ¢marches
re: WaPo March...
He is having them accent the “hook“ figure the typical way (leaning on the quarter note on beat 2), but it sounds better - and attracts more attention to the “hook” figure - to lean on the very first eighth note of the figure. I only recently discovered this myself, and always played it the way they are playing in the video.
fwiw... No accents accents nor rfz’s are notated.
He is having them accent the “hook“ figure the typical way (leaning on the quarter note on beat 2), but it sounds better - and attracts more attention to the “hook” figure - to lean on the very first eighth note of the figure. I only recently discovered this myself, and always played it the way they are playing in the video.
fwiw... No accents accents nor rfz’s are notated.
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Re: 6/8 marches vs. ¢marches
Would it be possible that Paul Bierley attended this event? Audience members were seated on the stage and those of you with better eyes than mine, please take a look at the man with a full white head of hair in the light blue shirt seated with the band and having a folder open on his lap. I believe it is his wife sitting next to him. Just a shot in the dark probably. I certainly have enjoyed anything that he had written, including "The Incredible Band of John Philip Sousa".York-aholic wrote: ↑Wed Oct 28, 2020 9:08 pm This doesn't directly address the topic, but is an interesting look at "performance practice" for Sousa marches curtesy of the Pershing's Own US Army Band:
https://youtu.be/DetE5-cH6iE
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