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  • How to Write for Percussion: A Comprehensive Guide to Percussion Composition

    How to Write for Percussion by Solomon, Samuel Z.;

    A Comprehensive Guide to Percussion Composition

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      • Publisher's listprice GBP 145.00
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    Product details:

    • Edition number 2
    • Publisher OUP USA
    • Date of Publication 28 April 2016

    • ISBN 9780199920341
    • Binding Hardback
    • No. of pages306 pages
    • Size 183x260x27 mm
    • Weight 819 g
    • Language English
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    Short description:

    How to Write for Percussion is a comprehensive resource that clearly explains and simplifies all issues that percussionists and composers face with respect to each other.

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    Long description:

    While composers and percussionists are working more closely than ever with one another, there are few resources that address this collaborative relationship in depth. However, Samuel Z. Solomon, himself a percussionist and teacher, offers a comprehensive examination of the issues that percussionists and composers encounter in How to Write for Percussion. The first edition, self-published in 2004, provided musicians and music programs the world over with practical and indispensible information about issues of notation, concert production, and much more. This new edition goes even further as Solomon offers more insights derived from his personal experience as a percussionist and teacher and from his collaborations with other musicians.
    The second edition of How to Write for Percussion expands the survey of behind-the-scenes processes-from instrument choice and notation to logistics, execution, and concert production-to uncover all the tools a composer needs to comfortably create innovative and skilled percussion composition. Solomon also includes more excerpts and performances as well as interviews with famous percussionists and composers that capture the intricacies of percussion composition. Moreover, the second edition features an expanded text with more instruments and more analysis, plus an extensive Online Video Companion containing over nine hours of videos with demonstrations, performances, interviews, and analysis to flesh out and clarify the material in the book. This updated edition of How to Write for Percussion will appeal to a wide swath of musicians including composers, arrangers, and percussionists. Those who have already utilized the first edition will welcome the upgrade, and those who have yet to benefit from Solomon's perspective will likewise find his insights illuminating.

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    Table of Contents:

    Table of Contents
    Introduction
    How This Book is Organized
    Instruments Covered
    Working with Percussionists
    Location Specifics
    The Value of Not Reading This Book
    1. General Framework
    A Dysfunctional Family
    Comparison of Family Relationships
    The Problem of Pitch
    The Pitches of Percussion
    The Validations and Limitations of Novelty
    Three Methods for Indeterminately Pitch Instruments
    The Written/Improv Divide
    Expanding the Color Palette (to Shrink the Setup)
    The Value of Improvised and Non-Notated Music
    Social Composition
    Write for People, Not Sounds
    Write What is Wanted, Not What To Do
    Working with Percussionists
    2. General Logistics
    Instrument Choice and Management
    Six Stories, Three Sad and Three Happy
    Why Use Fewer Instruments?
    How to Consolidate
    Inexpensive Instruments
    Exotic Instruments
    Electronic Percussion
    Multiple Options for a Specified Instrument
    Instruments Percussionists May Not Play
    Multiple Percussionists
    Section Setup
    Orchestra
    Wind Ensemble
    Broadway Pit
    Drum Corps and Marching Bands
    Specialists
    Non-Percussionists Playing Percussion
    Chairs and Stands
    Issues of Playability
    Excessive Polyphony
    How Fast Percussionists Can Play
    Unidiomatic Writing-Music that Often Requires Memorization
    Dynamics
    Reaching Instruments
    Instruments with Pedals
    Physical Exertion and Shaking
    Working with Headphones or Headset Microphones
    3. General Notation
    Basics of Percussion Parts and Scores
    Instrument List
    Instrument Key
    Setup Diagram
    Language
    Parts
    Cues
    Percussion in the Conductor's Score
    Dynamics
    Designing a Notational System
    Clefs
    Staves
    Noteheads
    Mixing Determinately and Indeterminately Pitched Instruments
    Key Signatures
    What Goes Where on the Staff
    The Chicken or the Egg?
    Unspecified Instruments (Indeterminate Instrumentation)
    How Much to Notate
    Systems of Notation for Which There is No Standard
    Return to a "Normal " Method of Playing
    Note Length, Articulation, and Phrasing
    Note Length Chart
    Exact or Inexact Note-Length Indications
    Muting (Muffling, Dampening)
    Dead Stroke
    Damper Pedals
    Rolls
    Notations that are Not Recommended
    Symbol Notation
    Altered Keyboard Notation (Timbre-Staff)
    4. Beaters
    To Indicate or Not to Indicate?
    Beater Lingo
    Logistical Beater Issues
    Sticks
    Mallets
    Triangle Beaters, Knitting Needles
    Brushes
    Rute
    Chime Hammers
    Superball Mallet
    Beaters as Instruments
    Hands
    Bows
    5. Keyboard Percussion
    Ranges and Construction
    Writing for Keyboard Percussion
    Stacked Instruments
    Multiple Players
    Extended Techniques
    Miscellaneous
    6. Drums
    Sticks on Drums
    Mallets on Drums
    Hands on Drums
    Playing on the Rim or Shell
    Beating Spot
    Mutes
    Pitch Bending
    Drum Size
    Two-Headed Drums
    Multiple Drums in Setups
    Idiomatic Writing for Drums
    Timpani
    Tom-toms
    Snare Drum, Field Drum, Tenor Drum
    Concert Bass Drum, Pedal Bass Drum
    Bongos, Congas
    Timbales
    Roto-Toms
    Frame Drums
    Tambourines
    Djembe, Doumbek
    Boobams
    Drumset
    7. Metal
    Cymbals
    Gongs
    Finger Cymbals
    Cowbells, Almglocken
    Temple Bowls, Mixing Bowls
    Brake Drums, Metal Pipes, Anvils, Bell Plates
    Thundersheet
    Junk Metal, Tin Cans, Pots and Pans
    Ribbon Crasher
    Spring Coil
    Church Bells
    Hand Bells
    Steel Drums
    Tambourines
    Sleighbells
    Metal Wind Chimes, Mark Tree, Bell Tree
    Flexatone
    Extended Techniques
    8. Wood
    Woodblocks, Templeblocks, Log Drum
    Wooden Planks
    Wood Drums, Wooden Boxes, Cajón, Mahler Hammer
    Claves
    Castanets
    Rute
    Guiro
    Slapstick
    Ratchet
    Bamboo Wind Chimes
    9. Miscellaneous Instruments
    Bottles
    Cabasa
    Conch Shell
    Crystal Glasses
    Maracas, Shakers
    Rainstick
    Rice Bowls, Flower Pots
    Sandpaper Blocks
    Sirens
    String Drum, Cuica
    Stones, Prayer Stones
    Thumb Piano
    Vibraslap
    Wind Chimes
    Whistles
    Wind Machine
    Appendix A. Repertoire Analysis
    Percussion Ensemble
    Edgard Var?se, Ionisation (1929-31)
    John Cage, Constructions (1939-1942)
    Iannis Xenakis, Persephassa (1969)
    Steve Reich, Drumming (1970-71)
    Steve Mackey, It is Time (2010)
    John Luther Adams, Inuksuit (2009)
    Ryan Streber, Cold Pastoral (2004)
    Nico Muhly, Ta & Clap (2004)
    Adam Silverman, Naked and On Fire (2011)
    Paul Lansky, Travel Diary (2007)
    Orchestral
    Bela Bartók
    Sergei Prokofiev
    Maurice Ravel
    Gustav Mahler
    Dmitri Shostakovich
    Leonard Bernstein
    Carl Nielsen
    Jean Sibelius
    Wind Ensemble
    Smaller Mixed Ensemble
    John Adams, Chamber Symphony (1992)
    Stephan Hartke, Meanwhile (2007)
    Jacob Druckman, Come Round (1992)
    Charles Wuorinen, New York Notes (1982)
    Pierre Boulez, Sur Incises (1996/1998)
    Percussion Solo-Drums
    Michio Kitazume, Side by Side (1991)
    Elliott Carter, Eight Pieces for Four Timpani (1950/1966)
    Casey Cangelosi, Meditation No. 1 (2011)
    Percussion Solo-Keyboards
    Jacob Druckman, Reflections on the Nature of Water (1986)
    Paul Simon, Amulet (2008)
    Steve Mackey, See Ya Thursday (1992)
    Steve Swallow/Gary Burton, I'm Your Pal/Hullo Bolinas
    Donald Martino, Soliloquy (2003)
    Percussion Solo-Multi-Percussion
    Iannis Xenakis, Psappha (1975)
    David Lang, Anvil Chorus (1991)
    Roger Reynolds, Watershed (1995)
    Four Pieces for "Setup
    1 "
    Nico Muhly, It's About Time (2004)
    Michael Early, Raingutter (2007)
    Marcos Balter, Descarga (2006)
    Judd Greenstein, We Shall Be Turned (2006)
    Percussion Concerto
    James MacMillan, Veni Veni Emmanuel (1992)
    Einojuhani Rautavaara, Incantations (2008)
    Steven Mackey, Micro-Concerto (1999)
    Orchestrating Native Sounds
    Appendix B. Sample Setups
    Appendix C. Extended Techniques
    Return to a "Normal " Method of Playing
    Manipulations of Timbre
    Striking Unusual Parts of an Instrument
    Unusual Usage of Beaters
    Dead Stroke
    Beating Spot
    Bowing
    Friction Roll
    Scrape
    Prepared Instruments
    Pitch Bending
    Vibrato
    Adding Mass
    Sympathetic Resonance
    Clusters
    Harmonics
    Appendix D. Pitch Specification
    Appendix E. Dynamics
    Appendix F. Register
    Appendix G. Beaters
    Appendix H. Percussion Family Tree
    Pitch Clarity Chart
    Note Length Chart
    Register Chart
    Sound Production Chart
    The Percussion Family Tree

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