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Techniques of Polytempic Polymicrotonal Music Creation: My Portfolio of Scores at the Internet Archive, part VIII

Examples of Polytempic Polymicrotonal Music are found in my archive . Please explore my Internet Archive.  So, rather than take snapshots of sections out of context and paste them in each blog, I thought that the interested reader would rather look through my work to see how I have used Polytempic Polymicrotonality , polymeter , and polyrhythms and microtones in general.  List of Works in Score Thoegersen freely distributes his scores via the   Internet Archive . Scores for all the works below are available there. Dates indicate composition. Drumset 3:4:5:7, for Solo drumset #1 1995 Solo for Drumset #2 2022 Solo for Drumset #3 2022 Solo for Drumset #4 2022 Solo for Drumset #5 2022 Solo for Drumset VI 2022 STSOMA Drumsolo #7 2022 solo for drumset #8 2022 Solo for Drumset #9 2022 Solo for Drumset X: polymixtures 2022 Drumset solo #11 2022 Vocals and other instruments Always Sleeping 2006 Facebook Song Cycle: What's on your mind, 2017 Solo works Dreams Like Little Movies,...

Techniques of Polytempic Polymicrotonal Music Creation: What is Polytempo?, part VI

  What is Polytempo?   What is tempo? First of all, we must understand what tempo is. So I will explore this topic as deliberately, naively, and as guilelessly as I possibly can, to ask the most basic questions without the pomp, rhetoric, and expectations of my doctorate, telling both me that I damn well know what tempo is, when in fact, do I? Jean-Baptiste Lully thought he knew what tempo was when he accidentally crushed his toe with his staff, pounding the tempo onto the floor while conducting Te Deum . Lully was 'tempoed' to death. There is no more concrete example of tempo than this. Now imagine three more Lullys pounding the floor at different rates of speed with their staffs. This is polytempo, and hopefully not the accidental polydeaths of the three additional Lullys.  Today's version of this would not be so much the conductor, but perhaps a drummer? Or more precisely, the click-track pounds the tempo into the ears of hapless musicians via headphones for them to p...

Techniques of Polytempic Polymicrotonal Music Creation: Divisions of the Whole Note and Time Signatures, part V.i

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 "Irrational" Time Signatures What Is a Whole Note? Technically, it is assumed that a whole note lasts four beats. The whole note, lasting four beats, has been a law of music since mensuration was gradually developed and codified throughout the Middle Ages, up to the present day. We simply accept that the value of a whole note is equal to four counts, with one single beat lasting those four counts. This, then, becomes the entirety of the measure (bar) and is called Common Time , or 4/4 time . But the truth is that a whole note really does not mean anything at all. One could argue that a whole note lasts a full measure. But what does that mean? If we stipulate that a whole note, at 100 BPM, is the set tempo, then how do we really quantify the whole note? Each 1/100th part of this whole note lasts approximately .6 seconds.  Theoretically, the whole note could last forever. Ostensibly, a time signature is needed to give a quantifiable value to the whole note. Therefore, the wh...

Techniques of Polytempic Polymicrotonal Composition: Divisions of the Whole Note, part V

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 More on the Divisions of the Whole Note, in a Cowellian Sense " Decimal Rhythms " While in Champaign back in 2007, I was given a notebook. Since I had nothing but time on my hands, I began ruminating about the divisions of the whole note. Borrowing (as the best of us do) from Cowell , I wrote out a schema for a 'newer' approach to non-duple-based rhythms . I wrote this:           Figure 1. A figuration of Decimal Rhythms Figure 1 is a common-time bar of decimal rhythms: one third-note , at 33.3% of a whole note; one twelfth-note , at 1/3 of a third note of 11.1%; an eleventh-note , at 1/11th of a whole note, at 9%; a seventh-note , at 14.3%; and three tenth notes , obviously at 10% x 3 = 30% of a whole note. These add up to approximately. 97.7% of a whole note, or the 4/4 measure, is indicated. An outline of the Figure 1 decimal rhythmic measure is shown below in Figure 2.     Figure 2. An outline of the decimal measure is hidden   ...

Techniques of Polytempic Polymicrotonal Composition: fluid vs static tempi, part IV.i

More on Contrapuntal Tempi...  Polytempo as Static vs. Dynamic and Fluid Tempo has throughout Western musical history been thought of as a single-formed containment system for music, perhaps except the isorhythms of the Middle Ages, which actually had nothing to do with tempo, but marked the beginning of the awareness of the potential of several strands of musical thought working simultaneously, as in color and talea , that could conceivably be a thought-form precursor to polytempo . Additionally, and unrelatedly, many motets were written with differing text languages, also not related directly to polytempo, but actually more to polymicrotonality ; the different languages presented in polytextual works offered different vowels, phones, phonemes, and glottals--imperceptible at the time, but today would actually count as polymicrotonal by closer examination. It is here that I must declare that, for me, polytempic polymicrotonality is really nothing more than an attitude; an aesth...

Techniques of Polytempic Polymicrotonal Composition: the Syllabus, part III

  A Quasi Syllabus for this Blog Blog Ideas Contrapuntal Tempos, or a Counterpoint of Tempos  Divisions of the Whole Note  Divisions of the Whole Tone  Contour Creation/ Analysis of Polymicrotonal Lines Myriad New Intervallic Structures Harmony Resulting from Vertical "Cadence" Points- vertical structures Intervallic Compression of Polymicrotonal Systems Centricity Simultaneities Panmicrotonal Harmony: tonal vs atonal, or tonal sublation What is a Polymicrotonal Chord? Counterpoint of Microtonal Systems Pitch Organization   Pitch Cells vs Gamut Tetrachords Serial Techniques?  "Just Noticeable Difference" and Microtonal Hearing Composer Intent Nancarrow-Ives-Cowell-Marie-Xenakis Alternate Staves? Fatter spaces and lines for microtones?  Human Performance Strategies Manifold Electronic Realizations In many regards, these topics have already been broached in other blogs and may not require their own section...

Techniques of Polytempic Polymicrotonal Composition, part II

Preliminary Considerations Dividing the Whole Note into Non-standard Parts Many ideas under consideration for a compositional system for Polytempic Polymicrotonal music are not wholly new. I have been influenced by many composers, theorists, and authors of works that are common fodder in the more arcane areas of music theory. Henry Cowell comes to mind. Amazingly, much of Cowell's work still remains unused and unexplored. Something as simple as fifth notes , or pentuplets , up to today, 2025 -26, really should be standard rhythmic practice, just as triplets are. But, they are not. Nevertheless, the division of the whole note into parts other than the binary divisor 2 should be in common use now. Anyone should be able to play pentuplets, septuplets , and nonuplets , as nonuplets are essentially a nested rhythm of three sets of triplets...So, not quite complex nested rhythms, but not merely duple rhythms based on the number 2. Human limitations, of course, limit tempo and speed f...