Pedal keyboard Essays

  • Bach Brandenburg Concerto No. 2 Analysis

    1013 Words  | 5 Pages

    Bach: Brandenburg Concerto No. 2 in F major, BWV 1047 The instruments heard throughout the concerto are violins, violas, a cello, a bass, an oboe, a recorder, a keyed trumpet, and a harpsichord. The first movement begins at a quick tempo. Sixteenth notes are played constantly and are passed around the different instruments. Throughout the sixteenth not passages or mordents and other embellishments. The keyed trumpet plays lip trills rather than p laying fingered trills. The phrases of the first

  • Informative Speech: The Effects Of Smartphone

    835 Words  | 4 Pages

    Specific purpose: To inform my audience about the effects of smartphone. Central idea: The phenomenon of smartphone addiction cause many effects in terms of enviromental, social, physical and mental. BODY I. One of the effects that will experienced by human when overuse the smartphone is physical effect. A. Nowadays, we are relying on our smartphone instead on using our brains and this action cause reduction to our brain’s function. 1. According to Gordon Pennycook (2015) state that "those who

  • What Is The Impact Of Music Education And Academic Achievement

    837 Words  | 4 Pages

    Tarek Amr Dr. Soad Khalil Eng 102 December 7, 2015 Research Paper: Music: The impact of music education on academic achievement Introduction: Music is a form of art that is expressed through sound that has been around for more than 55000 years, music has been found in every known culture and varied widely between time and places. Music has been around throughout all history until our present generation and will remain forever. Music education is a field of study where a person gets to learn the

  • The Piano: The Importance Of The Piano

    717 Words  | 3 Pages

    played by means of a keyboard. Widely used in Western music for solo performance, ensemble use, chamber music, and accompaniment, the piano is also very popular as an aid to composing and rehearsal. Although not portable and often expensive, the piano 's versatility and ubiquity have made it one of the most familiar musical instruments.Piano originated on Europe in the eighteenth century, Italian Bartolommeo Cristofori invented a instrument which similar to modern piano keyboard instrument. It has

  • Why Was Mozart Important Today

    1219 Words  | 5 Pages

    Imagine this: being three years old and knowing how to to play the piano, then at age five, writing a composition. “[He] played the keyboard at three and wrote his first compositions when he was five.” For Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, this was the start of something that would change music for centuries to come. The young age at which he started playing piano was remarkable then, and it is still considered remarkable today. Mozart is mainly known for being a child prodigy because he learned how

  • Frederic Chopin Research Paper

    678 Words  | 3 Pages

    to the keyboard which allowed him to utilise all of the piano’s functions that were available in the Romantic period. Chopin managed to create an almost unlimited number of new melodic passages and rhythmic figures – he was the first composer to understand truly the expressive nature of the piano, and therefore was able to write music according to this quality of the instrument. He set a certain standard for the piano as an instrument with inventions in fingering and his use of the pedals. (Hedley

  • Mozart Haydn Research Paper

    737 Words  | 3 Pages

    short pieces for the instrument. Many of these were written before Haydn secured the patronage of the Esterházy family and was earning a difficult score of income as a freelancer musician. Before Haydn, it was C.P.E Bach who systemised a structured keyboard sonata form. Bach’s efforts had a definite influence on Haydn, in whose hands established the classical sonata. Haydn’s piano sonatas are almost daunted by sheer number

  • D Minor N. 1-3 Analysis

    904 Words  | 4 Pages

    It is possible that the D minor Sonata has been drafted before the preceding opus 31.N.1 in G major, probably at the end of the year 1801 and the first months of 1802. It surely reflects more accurately the state of mind of the composer at those difficult times as the Testament of Heiligenstadt, dated 1802, testifies. According to Carl Czerny, the Allegro of the first movement is inspired by the gallop of a horse heard by Beethoven through his window at the end of the summer of 1802. Even though

  • Beethoven's Major Accomplishments

    1109 Words  | 5 Pages

    The life of Ludwig Van Beethoven starts on December 16, 1770 with his baptism in Bonn. His father was a musician with a weakness when it came to alcohol. His mother was a gentle, retired, sweet woman. Beethoven took an interest in music at a very young age. His father taught him to play more and more every day and night. At the age of 7, he performed his first public performance on March 26, 1778. His father announced that he was 6 years old which made him think that he was younger than he actually

  • Music Appreciation

    605 Words  | 3 Pages

    The baroque sound is very strict on Tempo and articulations. In Baroque musical works each note must be played clearly. Baroque music is often Polyphonic, which explains why they have so many keyboard instruments. Unlike most Classical and Romantic musical works, the baroque period hardly uses any pedals. Baroque music has somewhat of a hard strong sound to it. Classical music doesn’t have such as a hard sound like baroque music. But both musical periods, classical and baroque, are the exact same

  • Concert Observation Essay

    639 Words  | 3 Pages

    I learned that the pedals on the bottom of the harp change the pitch of each string. While Abigail was playing I also noticed how the harp and her body shared a motion. Abigail played two pieces, Cadena and Aria from “Lucia di Lamnermoor” composed by Gaetno Donizetti. Throughout

  • Reflective Essay: The Pipe Organ

    375 Words  | 2 Pages

    My hands glide up the keyboard; my feet dance on the pedals. I tame the boisterous, three manual instrument that overwhelms the sanctuary. The pipe organ is magical and soothing. It calms me and provides contentment. For seven years, I have been blessed with the opportunity to learn to play an instrument that, in essence, is a quadruple piano. An instrument capable of producing countless combinations of sounds to fit any mood. When I practice, I experiment with various stop combinations. The sounds

  • College Admissions Essay: Songs, Smiles And Solitude

    633 Words  | 3 Pages

    Since then, piano has continued to play a key note in my life by being my stress reliever, building my character and providing many opportunities. Sitting on that leather stool, pressing on those black and white keys, and stepping on that golden pedal is what I long to do

  • Mozart Classical Concerto (Piano Concerto)

    790 Words  | 4 Pages

    are idiomatic to the piano and allows the pianist to show off his technique. Bridge The bridge passage starts off with tutti as before. At bar 86 (beat three), the piano takes over the upbeat and continues with rapid scales up and down the keyboard while strings hum quietly on sustained

  • Social Medi The Black Lives Matter Movement

    477 Words  | 2 Pages

    distance closer together, through a screen and a keyboard.

  • Write An Essay On Hammond Organ

    544 Words  | 3 Pages

    Basic information The Hammond organ is an electromechanical keyboard musical instrument that is an electric organ. Hammond organ Modern digital signal processing and sampling technologies make it possible to accurately reproduce the original sound of Hammond instruments. There are also a number of electronic organs and synthesizers that qualitatively emulate the Hammond organ. However, players appreciate Hammond's original electromechanical instruments for their special feel and feel. Hammond

  • Bach Well-Tempered Clavier Analysis

    1462 Words  | 6 Pages

    The pieces were intended as pedagogical exercises to give keyboard players experience in working with the chords, scales, and arpeggios in each key as well as illustration of polyphony. Every book has a series of 24 Preludes and Fugues organized chromatically ascendant these preludes and fugues were completed by

  • Music During The Elizabethan Era

    719 Words  | 3 Pages

    Different styles of music consisted: of church, court, town, street, and theater music. Church music was peaceful and is always in relation to religion. Court music was made up of strings and keyboard instruments. It also ranged anywhere between slow and fast tempo. Town music was played when nobility arrived, special occasions, or events. Each town also had their own band called waits. Waits normally played wind instruments like the shawm. Street

  • Beethoven Grande Sonata N. 3 Analysis

    1865 Words  | 8 Pages

    by the composer. It is the second longest Sonata, after the Hammerklavier Opus 106, and lasts for more than half an hour. With this sonata, the entire piano style of Beethoven enters in what may be called the "Symphonic Piano". It is where the keyboard gets its new identity, abandons "old" idioms and starts to simulate an entire orchestra. The first movement, Molto allegro e con brio, starts with a packed energy by the animated

  • Miles Davis's Jazz Revolution

    992 Words  | 4 Pages

    Miles Davis arrived on the New York jazz scene in 1944 around the same time that a jazz revolution was beginning. The style bop or bebop was a direct attack against big bands, racial in equality, and restrictive sound of the current style of jazz of the time. Davis contributed a major role in the revolution not as a founding father but as a large portion of the change itself working with people such as Charlie Parker and Cannon Ball Coleman. He learned the intricate language of bebop by imitation