How a Bach canon works (nothing to do with NWC, but musically interesting) 2013-02-09 10:45 am Nothing to do with NWC, but this link will interest many NWC users. It's an animated manuscript playing a single musical sequence played front to back and then back to front.http://www.openculture.com/2009/09/how_a_bach_canon_works.html Quote Selected
Re: How a Bach canon works (nothing to do with NWC, but musically interesting) Reply #1 – 2013-02-09 11:10 am Very cool! Thanks David. Quote Selected
Re: How a Bach canon works (nothing to do with NWC, but musically interesting) Reply #2 – 2013-02-09 02:14 pm Many thanks! Just posted the link to the video on Facebook. Quote Selected
Re: How a Bach canon works (nothing to do with NWC, but musically interesting) Reply #3 – 2013-02-09 05:09 pm Wonderful! I've copied Warren's example. Quote Selected
Re: How a Bach canon works (nothing to do with NWC, but musically interesting) Reply #4 – 2013-02-11 11:34 am Thank you David! It's really fantastic. It's a further proof of the genious Bach. I'm spreading this link among all my contacts. It's a further proof of the genious Bach.Raffaele Quote Selected
Re: How a Bach canon works (nothing to do with NWC, but musically interesting) Reply #5 – 2013-02-11 12:55 pm You can check it out yourself; it is available on Scriptorium. Create a new staff, copy one of the existing staves to it, force accidentals, run the retrograde tool, then audit enharmonic spelling. Compare the result with the existing staff--does anything look familiar? Quote Selected