ModPo at Duke 11/13/13
13 Wednesday Nov 2013
Posted NaBloWriMo, photograph, poetry
in13 Wednesday Nov 2013
Posted NaBloWriMo, photograph, poetry
in08 Friday Nov 2013
Posted music
inFor Tender Buttons featuring Gertrude Stein
Written and performed by Nicola Quinn
Produced by Mark Snyder
19 Thursday Sep 2013
Posted music
inSardines and Oranges, an original jazz piece composed and performed by Mark Snyder. Inspired by Frank O’Hara’s poem “Why I Am Not A Painter.”
17 Tuesday Sep 2013
Posted Coursera assignment, music
inTags
Al Filreis, Allen Ginsberg, Coursera, Howl, ModPo, soundscape
On “Howl,” an electronic composition by Mark Snyder created from the audio track of the ModPo ’12 lecture video on Allen Ginsberg’s “Howl.” Every sound in the piece is from the video; nothing has been added to the sound.
15 Sunday Sep 2013
Posted Coursera assignment, parody, poetry
inI wrote this post as a community TA for the Coursera course Modern and Contemporary American Poetry.
_______________
I intend to show here that Emily Dickinson documented her intentions to lead an alien invasion of Earth and become its overlord in the poem “I Dwell in Possibility.”
I dwell in Possibility–
She lives in her spaceship, optimistically named Possibility, awaiting the vanguard of her alien invasion force.
A fairer house than Prose–
Her alien army wishes to conquer Earth because they have ruined their own world with pollution and war. Their world, strangely enough, was named “Prose” (note the status of the planet’s name as a proper noun explains the mysterious capitalization).
More numerous of Windows–
They only use Apple products on their planet- never Microsoft- so they are technologically superior.
Superior– for Doors–
They are far too advanced intellectually to ever be interested in anything as banal as human music, such as classic rock or psychedelic music.
Of Chambers as the Cedars–
Their life support systems produce oxygen from photosynthesis, like trees do.
Impregnable of Eye–
There is a force field around her ship that makes it invisible.
And for an Everlasting Roof
The Gambrels of the Sky–
It is a spaceship, of course.. the sky’s the limit!
Of Visitors– the fairest
She sees her alien species (the Visitors) as superior to human beings. They’re therefore entitled to conquer the Earth.
For Occupation– This–
She intends for her invading army to quickly overwhelm human defenses and establish an alien occupation over “This-” the entire planet.
The spreading wide my narrow Hands
To gather Paradise
Her armies will sweep over the planet, taking it under her control and gathering up the “paradise” her species needs to survive (at the expense of humanity).
________
Please note: this is obvious satire. I am not making fun of either Emily Dickinson or this course.
This post is for everybody who feels intimidated in the Forum. Nothing you could possibly write could be more absurd than This–
so go for it.
29 Wednesday May 2013
Posted Coursera assignment, music
inTags
Memories of Tomorrow by Keith Jarrett. Guitar solo by Mark Snyder.
Not my best work, but I’ve been under the weather and hadn’t been able to practice. At least I got something to turn in.
19 Sunday May 2013
Posted Coursera assignment, music
inTags
500 Miles High, by Chick Corea. Performed by Mark Snyder on acoustic bass guitar with accompaniment provided by Gary Burton.
Completed for Assignment #3 for the Introduction to Improvisation course at Coursera.org.
09 Thursday May 2013
Posted Coursera assignment, music
in“What Is This Thing Called Love?” solo by Gary Burton
Introduction to Improvisation
Lesson 1 Analysis: “What Is This Thing Called Love?”
The presented improvisation on “What Is This Thing Called Love?” is a 32-bar improvisation in jazz style performed on a piano. The piece is in the key of C major, in 4/4 time at a rapid tempo, approximately 190 beats/minute. As a jazz piece, all eighth notes are swing eighths (played similar to a dotted eighth and sixteenth rather than two straight eighth notes).
The first eight bars are the exposition of the theme of this solo. The chord progression underlying the theme is v(mi7b5)- I7b9- IVmi- ii7b5-V7-I. The last three chords in the progression (ii-V-I) is a common progression used to resolve to the tonic chord at the end of a phrase. Melodically, the melody consists primarily of chromatic scales- downward in the first bar from the flat five of the v chord, then turning upward in the second bar (with accidental sharp 4 of the scale- which could also be expressed enharmonically as flat 5- flat 6, and flat 7), then down again in the third bar (with an accidental flat 5 and flat 4). In bar 5 we begin the turn toward resolving the phrase with another mostly-chromatic scale going upward(with accidental flat 5, flat 6, and sharp 7- C#, from the harmonic minor scale). Bar 6 begins with a quarter note 5 of the V7 chord, followed by a triplet figure that clearly sets us up for the final chromatic run downward to resolution with the tonic chord in bar 7.
The second eight bars are a variation on the theme presented in the first eight bars. We see two distinct variations in the first four bars of this improvisation. First, the dominant rhythm has changed from swung eighth notes to triplets alternating with eighth notes, with the second eighth tied to the first triplet eighth in the next measure, adding syncopation to the rhythm. The melody still remains primarily chromatic, but the eighth note features downward intervals of a diminished fifth or tritone (Bb to E, G to Db) in the first bar. The eighth notes in the second bar jump upward a perfect fifth (D natural to G), then down a whole step (Bb to Ab). In the third bar we drop a perfect fifth (C to G), then down a whole step- the same figure as the previous measure (Bb to Ab). The four bar phrase ends with a quarter note F, the tonic of the chord in that measure but the subdominant of the key of the piece (thus leading us into the next four bars). The final four bars of this section return us to scalar patterns rhythmically similar to the last four bars in the exposition, though the scales use more whole-steps than half-steps and are thus less chromatic, aside from the prominent Ab and Eb accidentals and the accidental D# and F# (sharp 2 and sharp 4) in Bar 7. Bar 8 ends the phrase with a quarter note tonic and three beats of rest.
The third eight bars (the bridge) changes the local tonality to C minor (the relative minor of the key of the piece). No key change is indicated, but the chord selections and the consistent accidentals of Eb and Ab are consistent with this change. The progression here is i(mi7), IV7b9, VII, VI, V7, the final chord being the relative major of the chord that begins the final four bars, facilitating the transition. Rhythmically we now have syncopation via eighth notes paired with quarter notes (bars 1 and 3) with intervals of a tritone (Eb to G) in bar 1 and a perfect sixth (D to F, C to Eb, Bb to D) in bar 3. The phrase ends with a whole note (tied to an eighth). The second four measures begin with the same syncopated eighth-quarter rhythm with intervals of a major sixth (Ab to F, Gb to Eb) in bar 5, then a chromatic eighth pattern in bar 6 reminiscent of the rhythm of the main theme. In bar 7 we recapitulate the end of the phrase in bars 3-4 of the bridge, then end with a syncopated eighth-dotted quarter figure that jumps a perfect fifth to the G (the root of the chord), thus resolving the bridge.
The final eight bars are a recapitulation of the the main theme, with chromatic scales similar to the exposition, with the subtle addition of a syncopated eighth-quarter figure in bar 2 that reminds the listener of the bridge. The piece resolves in bars 7-8 with a simple C major scale to end on the tonic.
_________________________________________________________________________________________________
Here is my improvisation on the same piece on bass guitar.
09 Thursday May 2013
Posted Coursera assignment, music
inTags
Improvisation in A Lydian b7 on bass guitar by Mark Snyder.
Completed for the Introduction to Improvisation course on Coursera.org.
08 Wednesday May 2013
Posted Coursera assignment, music
inTags
bass guitar, Coursera, F7 Altered, improvisation, music, solo
Improvisation in F7 Altered on bass guitar, by Mark Snyder.
Completed for the Introduction to Improvisation course at Coursera.org.
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