May Contest: Gossip
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- D.H. MOD
- 17861 posts since 21 Jun, 2008
Let the noodling commence.
Last edited by D.H. Miltz on Fri Jun 01, 2012 10:19 am, edited 1 time in total.
No longer a moderator.
- KVRAF
- 7270 posts since 4 Apr, 2005 from here and there
mmhhh...
it looks like we must avoid arpeggiated stuf....
...unless it's muted maybe...
...unless it's muted maybe...
- KVRian
- 804 posts since 25 Apr, 2011
It's not quite clear what that means - does the 'underlying rhythmic texture' refer to rhythm in the melodic part (such as arpeggiation), or does it refer to an accompanying rhythm (eg drum track)? I can see the latter being invalid, but not sure about arpeggiation - I don't really know how you could avoid any rhythm in the melody....Monophony may not have underlying rhythmic textures, and must consist of only a melodic line.
Also, can the instrument providing the melody change? Eg singing, then whistling or something, so long as only one is present at a time?
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- D.H. MOD
- Topic Starter
- 17861 posts since 21 Jun, 2008
The last part's easier to answer: I don't see why not. For that matter, you could have more than one instrument at the same time, as long as they're playing the same thing (octaves included/allowed).kryptonaut wrote:It's not quite clear what that means - does the 'underlying rhythmic texture' refer to rhythm in the melodic part (such as arpeggiation), or does it refer to an accompanying rhythm (eg drum track)? I can see the latter being invalid, but not sure about arpeggiation - I don't really know how you could avoid any rhythm in the melody....Monophony may not have underlying rhythmic textures, and must consist of only a melodic line.
Also, can the instrument providing the melody change? Eg singing, then whistling or something, so long as only one is present at a time?
To me the part you quoted means above all No chords. And no accompanying rhythm track like a drum track either. Melody only is the idea.
Does that help?
No longer a moderator.
- KVRian
- 804 posts since 25 Apr, 2011
Thanks - 'no chords and no rhythm track' is pretty much what I thought, but when I saw Laguna's comment I wanted to make sure.
It will be fascinating to see what everyone comes up with - three minutes of pure melody feels like quite a challenge!
It will be fascinating to see what everyone comes up with - three minutes of pure melody feels like quite a challenge!
- KVRAF
- 7412 posts since 8 Feb, 2003 from London, UK
Oh, if I had time... Lots of room for careful use of richly-timbred instruments playing against each other... Flute and dulcimer, anyone? Does an organ count as monophonic? I can feel a piece in sections, cross-fading from one mood to another, all playing the one melody... The "call and answer" approach, maybe... Oh well.
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- KVRist
- 228 posts since 3 Sep, 2010
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- KVRian
- 567 posts since 30 Jul, 2006
Peter Weirs classic Picnic at Hanging Rock.
That haunting pan flute....May be that,it can not be mono in the strictest sense with that underlying stack swelling and subsiding........I just wanted to remember this classic. Most of you will be knowing about it. Some may get inspired
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gorgorgathgorgorgor gorgorgathgorgorgor https://www.kvraudio.com/forum/memberlist.php?mode=viewprofile&u=248278
- KVRian
- 555 posts since 19 Jan, 2011 from Texas
When I think of monophonic music, I think of the verious asian forms, but they typically include percussion (like tabla in Indian music) and a drone (tanpura). Another example would be bagpipes. There's melody and an unchanging drone, but no harmony. The strict definition provided for this comp is rather limiting. Lets see what we come up with!
- KVRAF
- 7270 posts since 4 Apr, 2005 from here and there
Yeah ! a challenge indeed.kryptonaut wrote:It will be fascinating to see what everyone comes up with - three minutes of pure melody feels like quite a challenge!
I guess it'll be a fun month
- KVRAF
- 7270 posts since 4 Apr, 2005 from here and there
Emerald Tablet wrote:www.youreallfree.com/music/1205EmeraldTablet-mono.mp3
Woow ET, that was fast !
(and it's nice)
A couple of years ago someone could have started a discussion complaining the reverb tails are too long...
- Narcissistic Messiah
- 4565 posts since 8 Apr, 2002 from https://soundcloud.com/remcoh
Thanks. All praise to Xoxos though for his "plucked" really
"plucked" is great because it behaves funny.
Reverb and delay tails can never be too long.
I always wondered what it is that makes us spot the difference between
a long note slowly fading away ... a tone with long decay slowly fading away ... and a fat reverb on 50% with a very long decay slowly fading away.
"plucked" is great because it behaves funny.
Reverb and delay tails can never be too long.
I always wondered what it is that makes us spot the difference between
a long note slowly fading away ... a tone with long decay slowly fading away ... and a fat reverb on 50% with a very long decay slowly fading away.
- KVRist
- 53 posts since 2 Mar, 2012
I can't see how an arpeggio could not class as a melody, provided two of the notes don't overlap, since it is just notes in a scale.
I have a thinking this month, I may be disqualified..... (I want a drone note probably!!!!)
I have a thinking this month, I may be disqualified..... (I want a drone note probably!!!!)
Music for films that will never be made
sineglidermusic.bandcamp.com
sineglidermusic.bandcamp.com
- KVRian
- 552 posts since 23 Mar, 2011 from Schwerte, Germany
Hm, may I use, say, some bass, flute, several drums, human voice. Playing one or two notes alternately as long as always only one note sounds?

- KVRian
- 687 posts since 21 Aug, 2010 from Cagliari - (Sardinia)
That has something to do with Schoenberg's "Klangfarbenmelodie".RuediRena wrote:Hm, may I use, say, some bass, flute, several drums, human voice. Playing one or two notes alternately as long as always only one note sounds?
from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Klangfarbenmelodie:
[...] splitting a musical line or melody between several instruments, rather than assigning it to just one instrument (or set of instruments), thereby adding color (timbre) and texture to the melodic line
interesting point, it's not in contrast with the rules, IMHO.