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A simple and friendly guide to reading chant notation, the easiest
guide in print to make it possible to sight read Gregorian Chant in
a very short period of time. In Gregorian Chant notes are arranged
like a train....each note or grouping has a clear purpose and when
connected to its neighbors makes up a melody. This book teaches how
to see them, read them and sing them. It was created for
self-teaching, individual instruction, choir training or chant
workshops. Chant is the basis for all modern music notation. This
book shows the simple building blocks and teaches you to quickly be
able to recognize and sing the basic patterns of notes that make up
all chant, from the simplest ones to the melismatic Alleluias of
the Roman Gradual.
Book 4 Operation of the Organ Controls Exploring USER and Library
Access Stops. Here we study the controls of the organ that affect
registrations. We fully examine organ stops and their use. As a
reminder there are two large groups of stops on these organs, in
addition to the stops whose names appear on the stop tablets or
knobs, stops that are immediately available at all times to the
organist. Voice Palette stops are assigned to stop tablets or
drawknobs and tend to be from the same family as the stop name
engraved on the face. They may be tonally finished by your
technician or local person that does tonal finishing for your area.
USER stops on the Roland and Rodgers organs and Library Access
stops on Infinity Organ are available for you to choose, play and
tonally finish as well. When you select them, you will find a menu
that gives you the opportunity to make them sound exactly as you
wish. And these changes may be saved to pistons. You may then voice
it differently for another piece and save that to another piston.
Trying stops out could become boring, but we've eliminated that
possibility by including music that you will want to play. This
book prepares you to play not only church services, but also
recitals as we explore these stops with music by Pachelbel, Franck,
Dubois and two Bachs. To conclude the book we've included
showpieces by two Vierne's, Boelmann, Lefebure-Wely - all for
manuals only with optional pedals. Pachelbel may be known for one
piece, but we are beginning to discover that his music may even
rival Bach's for variety and depth. As we try a variety of stops we
play variations on a theme by Pachelbel. Throughout we offer advice
and guidance on playing the organ - choosing tempos, registrations,
techniques and more that will make your playing shine. The organs
also include some useful orchestral sounds - the Orchestral Oboe is
absolutely lovely - and we cover using them as well. Playing the
organ State Trumpet with the Orchestral Trumpet at a slightly lower
volume level work nicely as well. Theater Organ USER & Library
Access Stops Theatre organs are different than church organs, as
they are winded at a higher pressure (around 10) than the pressures
of church organs. Tremulant works letting a little air escape over
and over again. On theatre instruments a lot of air escapes so the
pitch drops and the volume drops, giving the organ a sobbing sound.
These tremulants are built into the USER/Library Access theatre
stops. You may enjoy playing these while using our Playing Silent
Movies book lessons.
Book 3 Building Stop Registrations Using Voice Palette Stops This
book goes into depth into more than just using more stops, instead
right along wiht the new stops you will be playing we investigate
techniques of combining stops as well as developing organ
technique. The organ can have just one keyboard, but this is sort
of rare. Organs have two or more keyboards and pedalboards so that
the organist is able to play more than one instrumental line and
sound at a time. The organ is one of the few instruments that makes
this possible. While pianists play, bringing out the bass melody,
then echoing it in the treble, it's all using the same sound.
Pianists must work hard to produce a difference in the tone while
playing - an organist just chooses a new stop Here we play music
that echos itself, music in which the organ accompanies itself, and
that use two different instruments playing against each other. We
also go into choosing tempos, stroking the keys for sparkling
playing, using our secret weapon - silence - to accent notes and
guides on how to choose stops by analyzing the music. Coupling -
playing stops on two keyboards at one from just one keyboard - is
used to build up the chorus sound of the organ, sort of like
combining two choirs for a special performance. More clues to
matching registrations are accompanied by music that makes it easy
for you to see and hear how this all works. Pedals remain optional
- and much of this music was written for organs without pedals as
composers understood that organists in smaller churches also had
money to buy music, so quite a bit of organ music appears in print
with and without pedals. We dig deeper into what the stops are and
how to use them as well as giving you all sorts of ideas for
creating your own stop settings. By the end of this book you will
understand the Voice Palette stops that are behind the engraved
stop tablets or drawknobs of your organ. They are like having the
ingredients for making a pasta dish not just Italian cooking, but
also German, French and even for American macaroni and cheese.
These organs today have stops representing many nationalities of
organ building and with these organs you are able to dip into each
style of organ building and experiment with registrations to make
the music sound just as you expect it to, very easily. 25 pieces
written for the organ including 3 fugues, three settings of the
choral "Jesu, Meine Freude" by Pachelbel, Bach and Bohm and four
settings by Walther. Learning stop families and traditional stop
combinations including the "cornet" are a lots easier when you can
actually play and hear them. "Scholarly Music" turns out to be fun
to play when you are using the stops it was written for by the
composer. Hear Bach how Bach heard it. New music that will serve
you and your church congregation for many years.
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