« The Universal Language | Main | Spooky's polar attraction - Austin 360 »
November 19, 2009
Drones and pedals
This week in Music History, Culture, and Creativity, our students must compose, record, convert to mp3 and upload their compositions to the class website. Their compositions are to feature a drone (a sustained bass note throughout a section or an entire piece of music), or pedal (as in when an organ holds down a PEDAL, a low note, while other music happens on top) with a melody. It may be for any instrumentation and in any style.
For inspiration I played several music videos from YouTube illustrating a wide variety of musics that use drones or pedals.
EFBJk">Habanera from Bizet’s Carmen has a bass line ostinato that changes chords throughout, but the bass line refuses go anywhere.
“Scotland the Brave” is a perfect example of a memorable melody over a drone. But, to paraphrase Stravinsky, the monster never breathes.
Originally posted by Roger Bourland from rogerbourland.com, ReBlogged by newmusicrebloggers on Nov 19, 2009 at 12:08 PM



