Tuesday, May 26, 2009

Metal Monday

I know, it’s not Monday. I’ve been revisiting many of the bands that I listened to in high school. I was excited because Kreator was going to be in Lubbock on Sunday (!), but they didn’t show up. Exodus was there instead. I’ll write about both of those bands later, but I wanted to kick off this series with the most extreme metal band I can remember, Nitro. Here’s there video for “Freight train,” their only real hit (and I use the term loosely):

Nitro comprises Jim Gillette on vocals, Michael Angelo Batio on guitar, T.J. Racer on bass, and Bobby Rock (not the producer) on drums. Everything about Nitro was remarkably overdone. Gillette boasted a five-octave range: according to Wikipedia, they were signed to a record deal after he shattered three wine glasses with his voice at a gig. Batio was (and still is, I think) a hero to shredders everywhere: his over-and-under left hand technique (see at the beginning of the video) and the infamous quad guitar that descends from the heavens at about 2:18 into the video set him apart from other metal guitarists at the time. And, let’s face it, the hair is second to none.

Gillette is now married to the first lady of heavy metal, Lita Ford. Batio has a solo career and has been releasing instructional videos such as this one:

Watch Michael Angelo Batio VERY INFORMATIVE shred lesson !!!!!!! in Comedy  |  View More Free Videos Online at Veoh.com

2009 Fulkerson Prize

It seems 2009 Fulkerson Prize is awarded to the following paper.

This is the fourth time for Paul Seymour, third time for Neil Robertson and second time for Robin Thomas. The list of past winners is here and here.

Sunday, May 24, 2009

My Other Blog

I started a new blog (exclusively for technical posts) using wordpress. I like latex-editing features of wordpress much better than blogger. I will continue to use this blog for quick theory-related announcements, puzzles and other fun stuff.

Saturday, May 23, 2009

Valiant's 60th Birthday Celebration

The program for Valiant’s birthday celebration is listed on STOC 2009 website. Next week (May30th to June 5th) is an exciting week. Valian’t Birthday celebration, followed by STOC 2009, followed by complexity workshop. I am glad that I will be attending all of them.

Wednesday, May 20, 2009

Godel Prize 2009

Via My Biased Coin….

The 2009 Godel Prize is awarded to Omer Reingold, Salil Vadhan and Avi Wigderson for their work on Zig-zag product of graphs. Here are the related papers :

Magical double bass?

In doing some research on (i.e., Googling) the double bass in Russia, I stumbled across this, which is old news, apparently:

Tonya Grotter and her Magical Double Bass

It’s a Russian parody/unauthorized copy/cultural adaptation of the Harry Potter books (which I’m proud to say I still haven’t read, despite working at a Barnes and Noble at the height of their popularity). But it’s totally different–the girl attends Abracadabra Magic School and flies around on a Double Bass.

The book is (not surprisingly) not available in English translation. I’m not going to get into all of the legal problems surrounding it. I did manage to find an unauthorized (!) translation* of part of it:

Chapter 4: “They forged Rvakli?”

“Tsviang!” hummed the string third from the end, which Tanya pressed
closer to the middle of the fingerboard. Hardly had the sound faded
when on the loggia sprang up a fat round head in a copper helmet. It was
about the same size as a decent cauldron, and fearsomely rotated its
gaze. The head’s appearance, frankly, was like a robber’s. Its curved
nose had at some time been dented by a fist, and on its cheek it
displayed a long scar.

“They forged Rvakli?” it asked, when its gaze settled on the little
girl.

“They didn’t forge Rvakli…I made a little mistake….” mumbled
Tanya, attempting to hide behind the double bass.

[...]

Tanya backed up in fright and, hoping the head would disappear,
quickly ran the bow across the neighboring string.

“Bzhiangg!” droned the string thickly. No, the head didn’t
disappear. Instead there immediately arose another right alongside,
even more bandit-like than the first and adorned with fluffy feldwebel
whiskers.

*Do two wrongs make a right? What about my unauthorized reproduction of the unauthorized translation of the unauthorized parody/copy?

Saturday, May 16, 2009

STOC 2009 and Complexity Workshop at Princeton

I am attending STOC 2009 and this workshop titled “Complexity and Cryptography: Status of Impagliazzo’s Worlds” at Princeton. It is scheduled right after STOC 2009. I am planning to drive to STOC (Maryland) and then to princeton. Looking forward to one week of excellent theory talks !!

Anybody in and around atlanta (or) on the way to maryland, let me know if you want to join the drive. I have two more vacancies in my car.

STOC 2009 and Complexity Workshop at Princeton

I am attending STOC 2009 and this workshop titled “Complexity and Cryptography: Status of Impagliazzo’s Worlds” at Princeton. It is scheduled right after STOC 2009. I am planning to drive to STOC (Maryland) and then to princeton. Looking forward to one week of excellent theory talks !!

Anybody in and around atlanta (or) on the way to maryland, let me know if you want to join the drive. I have two more vacancies in my car.

Tuesday, May 12, 2009

Proofreading

I’ve been reading quite a lot of student papers this past week and I’m bothered (as I usually am) by the lack of proofreading that takes place. Students–proofread your papers! Read them out loud. Print them out and read them and mark them with a red pen. The best thing, I’ve found, is to have someone else proofread it. Some recent favorites:

  • I attended a performance of Candied by Leonardo Bernstein
  • After the first half of the concert, there was a fifteen minute intervention

Something else that I’ve noticed in quite a few papers is sudden changes in font size and/or style. For me, this is an immediate red flag that plagiarism is afoot.

Here’s Taylor Mali on the the impotence of proofreading (WARNING: this is rated PG-13, at least):

If you’re still not convinced, here’s a real-world example. I was on the search committee for the recent theory/composition opening that we had here at TTU. We had around 95 applicants for the position. When you have to wade through 95 CVs and cover letters, you look for just about any reason to eliminate one of them. One of the first people I ruled out was someone who thought that he would be a great fit for the University of Alabama School of Music.

Monday, May 11, 2009

Twitter

So I’m on Twitter now. I initially didn’t see the appeal of it, but I found that I can follow news, sports (all of my favorite pro cyclists, for instance), friends, and LOLcats all on one page. Now of course I’m trying to find pedagogical uses for it. I was thinking perhaps of using it to post homework assignments and tips–perhaps creating a different account for each class, or one generic “Professor Berry” account.

Do any of you use Twitter? For pedagogical applications? For vaguely pedagogical applications?

BTW, if you want to follow me, I’m (not surprisingly) ttutheory.

Twitter

So I’m on Twitter now. I initially didn’t see the appeal of it, but I found that I can follow news, sports (all of my favorite pro cyclists, for instance), friends, and LOLcats all on one page. Now of course I’m trying to find pedagogical uses for it. I was thinking perhaps of using it to post homework assignments and tips–perhaps creating a different account for each class, or one generic “Professor Berry” account.

Do any of you use Twitter? For pedagogical applications? For vaguely pedagogical applications?

BTW, if you want to follow me, I’m (not surprisingly) ttutheory.

Saturday, May 9, 2009

Synchronizing Research Documents

I have been using dropbox for the last two months and am very happy with it. Dropbox is an online service to synchronize your files across your computers. I use it to synchronize my research documents. Here is a quick list of features I liked :

  • Simple interface. Adds a folder in your file explorer (windows/mac). This folder can be used like any folder on your computer.
  • Automatic synchronization. Modify files without worrying about synching them. Drag and drop to add new files.
  • Saves the files locally and on the dropbox server. You can also access your files online from any computer using web-browser.
  • Uses CVS like protocol (sending only the diff-file to the server). You can recover older versions of your files.
  • You can create shared folders with other friends. This helps a lot when you are collaborating. You can share the files, without emailing them back and forth.
  • You can essentially use dropbox as a CVS server.

For more information visit Dropbox Wiki.

Wednesday, May 6, 2009

Marking one's part

This past weekend I had the opportunity to play The rite of spring with the Lubbock Symphony Orchestra. Technically (for the basses, at least) the piece isn’t very difficult. There are a few unusual harmonics that are called for, but most of the notes could be played by a junior-high-school student. The difficulty of this piece lies in the counting. There are a variety of rhythmic techniques used by Stravinsky to make life difficult. In an effort to make it through some of the rough patches, my stand partner and I marked the daylights out of our part. This is particularly important when rehearsal time is limited and the orchestra is not one that plays together every day. Below are two pages from the bass part with our markings.

The first example comes from the Danse Sacrale near the end of the work. The problem here is that Stravinsky’s beaming does not correspond to either the grouping (i.e., sometimes there is a rest between what appears to be a pair of notes) or the time signature (i.e., sometimes notes are beamed across the barline). The trap here is that the strings and horns all have this same rhythm and that no one is playing in the rests. It’s very easy to fall in one of the holes, so we marked every rest with a long vertical slash, and put brackets with the number of notes in each group above the beams. We made it through both performances without falling into any of the rests.

Arrows at the end of the system indicate that the figure continues onto the next line (i.e., we play on the downbeat). We’ve indicated the rests from the previous page at the top of the system to facilitate page turns (there are many nasty ones in this particular edition). The markings to the right of the staff are indications for setting the low-C extension on the bass (I don’t have one; my stand partner does).


In the second example, we detected an ostinato pattern that transcends the bar lines. For the most part, the notes are grouped in a 3+2 sixteenth-note pattern, which we indicated with brackets. There are a few abberations–4+2 and one 5+2–but generally we were able to focus on the underlying 3+2 pattern and (don’t try this at home) ignore the conductor at this point. Shortly after rehearsal 198, the pattern shifts to a purely duple grouping, 2+2, at which point we’re basically home free.


Incidentally (and I’m embarrassed to admit I never noticed this as a theorist and/or bassist), the last chord in the double basses–D E A D.

Marking one's part

This past weekend I had the opportunity to play The rite of spring with the Lubbock Symphony Orchestra. Technically (for the basses, at least) the piece isn’t very difficult. There are a few unusual harmonics that are called for, but most of the notes could be played by a junior-high-school student. The difficulty of this piece lies in the counting. There are a variety of rhythmic techniques used by Stravinsky to make life difficult. In an effort to make it through some of the rough patches, my stand partner and I marked the daylights out of our part. This is particularly important when rehearsal time is limited and the orchestra is not one that plays together every day. Below are two pages from the bass part with our markings.

The first example comes from the Danse Sacrale near the end of the work. The problem here is that Stravinsky’s beaming does not correspond to either the grouping (i.e., sometimes there is a rest between what appears to be a pair of notes) or the time signature (i.e., sometimes notes are beamed across the barline). The trap here is that the strings and horns all have this same rhythm and that no one is playing in the rests. It’s very easy to fall in one of the holes, so we marked every rest with a long vertical slash, and put brackets with the number of notes in each group above the beams. We made it through both performances without falling into any of the rests.

Arrows at the end of the system indicate that the figure continues onto the next line (i.e., we play on the downbeat). We’ve indicated the rests from the previous page at the top of the system to facilitate page turns (there are many nasty ones in this particular edition). The markings to the right of the staff are indications for setting the low-C extension on the bass (I don’t have one; my stand partner does).


In the second example, we detected an ostinato pattern that transcends the bar lines. For the most part, the notes are grouped in a 3+2 sixteenth-note pattern, which we indicated with brackets. There are a few abberations–4+2 and one 5+2–but generally we were able to focus on the underlying 3+2 pattern and (don’t try this at home) ignore the conductor at this point. Shortly after rehearsal 198, the pattern shifts to a purely duple grouping, 2+2, at which point we’re basically home free.


Incidentally (and I’m embarrassed to admit I never noticed this as a theorist and/or bassist), the last chord in the double basses–D E A D.

Monday, May 4, 2009

A Compendium of PPAD-complete problems

Motivated by my recent paper (joint work with Laura J. Poplawski, Rajmohan Rajaraman, Ravi Sundaram, Shang-Hua Teng) and a suggestion of Noam Nisan, I created a compendium of PPAD-complete problems. Please let me know if you see any additions/corrections.

A Compendium of PPAD-complete problems

Motivated by my recent paper (joint work with Laura J. Poplawski, Rajmohan Rajaraman, Ravi Sundaram, Shang-Hua Teng) and a suggestion of Noam Nisan, I created a compendium of PPAD-complete problems. Please let me know if you see any additions/corrections.

Wednesday, April 22, 2009

Instrument families

I was just creating a new file in Sibelius and I noticed that in the “Add instruments” dialogue, among the “Others” available are theremin and helicopter. I’m glad these are available, in the event that I wanted to transcribe this:

Tuesday, April 21, 2009

I Just Do Theory

Via Aaronson’s blog. This is song called ‘I Just Do Theory’ is aaaaaawesome.
Here is an mp3 file and pdf file of lyrics.
My best line in the lyrics is ‘Playing games in PPAD’ because that’s what I am doing now.

I guess the next step is to make a video :)

Thursday, April 16, 2009

Complexity 2009 accepted papers

Complexity 2009 accepted papers list is out. Almost every paper sounds interesting to me.

Wednesday, April 15, 2009

Why I do what I do

I wanted to title this post “If I gave a paper at a conference and no one was there to hear it, does it still count on my CV?” but that seemed a bit long.

I gave a paper at a conference on campus the other day. I was excited for two reasons: a) this was not a music conference and b) the conference took place about 100 yards from my office. I saw this as a bit of a challenge: can I communicate fairly sophisticated musical ideas to a non-musical audience? I also liked the money I saved by walking to the conference. I thought about getting a hotel room just to replicate the authentic conference experience, but ultimately decided against it.

Anyway, I’m generally not one to procrastinate writing papers, and I typically present the finished version to students and faculty here a week or two before the conference to get feedback. But this paper got away from me. My presentation was Thursday and as of Saturday, I only had three pages. I worked furiously all weekend and generated about twelve pages, which I then found far exceeded my allotted 20-minute time slot. So I worked on shaving it down, and shaving it down, and shaving it down. And I edited my PowerPoint show and kept trimming the musical examples–would 10 seconds of opera be enough to make my point? I was up until 11:30 on Wednesday night and finally called it quits. The paper was going to run about 23 minutes, but I simply couldn’t cut any more.

I had ignored grading homework, winged a few lesson plans, put off responding to a bunch of e-mails, and strayed from other more mundane routines to devote every free minute this week to this paper.

On Thursday I stumbled into the room where I was to give my talk. I had made a point of requesting audio equipment, figuring that that would be a special request for a non-music conference. No audio hook-up at all. So I used a small pair of computer speakers that I had brought from my office. As long as everyone sat near the front of the room, I figured I’d be fine.

The session started at 1:00. Two of the four presenters did not show up. There were three people in the audience, the moderator, the other presenter, and four students he brought along to read a scene from a play. Not even ten people, and six of them had to be there.

I guess the bright side is that it was then rather informal and I didn’t feel rushed. We had plenty of time for discussion and questions. I got what I wanted, which was some good feedback from non-music types about my work.

The point of this whole rant is that for the amount of time, energy, etc. that most of us put in to conference presentations, articles, and the like, what purpose does it serve if no one is there to hear it (or read it)? Is a line on the CV really worth that much work (and, occasionally, frustration)? I’ve been to several other conferences where this was the case. One conference was overseas and I was on the last session of the last day of the conference. The room had more than nine people in it, but most of them appeared to be there out of some sense of obligation and not interest. My paper was poorly received (looking back, it was far from my best work) and then I hopped back on the plane and went home, again, after putting considerable time, effort, and (in this case) money into the thing.

I certainly hope to get more mileage out of this paper: I have submitted it to a big music conference and ideally would like to get an article out of it. I guess you have to start somewhere…

Wednesday, April 8, 2009

ICALP 2009 accepted papers

April 8, 2009 8:01 pm

ICALP 2009 accepted papers

ICALP 2009 accepted papers list is out. Matching my research interests, the following papers sound interesting to me :

  • Adam Klivans, Phil Long and Rocco Servedio. Learning Halfspaces with Malicious Noise
  • Neeraj Kayal and Timur Nezhmetdinov. Factoring groups efficiently
  • Barna Saha and Samir Khuller. On Finding Dense Subgraphs
  • Harry Buhrman, Lance Fortnow and Rahul Santhanam. Unconditional Lower Bounds against Advice
  • Michael Ummels and Dominik Wojtczak. The Complexity of Nash Equilibria in Simple Stochastic Multiplayer Games

I wish ICALP and other theory conferences follow the recent trend of FOCS/STOC/SODA of uploading the abstracts of the accepted papers.

Thursday, April 2, 2009

Memorizing music

April 2, 2009 8:01 pm

Memorizing music

I teach a few private double bass students on Wednesdays and something that has come up in both of their lessons in one form or another is memorization. I’ve been thinking about this a lot lately in terms of how to teach them to memorize music. Here’s what I’ve come up with so far. I’m sure these ideas are a) probably not new to me; b) useful to people who play other instruments as well; c) related closely to the goals of most aural skills curricula; and d) related closely to different learning styles.

As I see it, there are basically three ways one can memorize a piece of music that he or she is playing. I will call these three types of memorization aural, visual, and tactile. To memorize something aurally is to memorize how it sounds and to be able to reproduce those sounds on your instrument (and probably by singing as well). To memorize something visually is to memorize how the notes look on the page. If you’ve visually memorized a piece of music, you should be able to sit down with a blank sheet of manuscript paper and rewrite note-for-note, dynamic-for-dynamic what appears in the sheet music. Tactile memorization involves muscle memory. In the absence of sheet music and/or an aural memory of the sound, your hands/arms/legs/vocal cords should remember what to do to create the particular sequence of sounds that constitute a piece of music.

As with learning styles, most people are probably more adept at one form of memorization than the others, but I think that with practice anyone can develop the other types to be nearly on par (if not on par) with their primary mode. If all three are strong and one of them fails, you can rely on the other two. It seems to me that eliminating one of the methods (perhaps initially the primary method) forces the other two to compensate, thereby strengthening them. Forcing a student to play a solo without sheet music (particularly early in their study of a piece) makes their auditory and tactile memory work overtime.

I should also mention that I’m not interested in having them memorize for the sake of memorization. Warren Benfield, a giant in the bass world once played something like a half an hour of orchestral excerpts on a TV morning show from memory (no doubt captivating television). The host was amazed and asked how he managed to do that. Benfield replied to the effect of, “There are two ways to play: either you know it or you don’t.” I’m sure he had the bass parts in front of him when he played the pieces with orchestra, but I think that if you truly know a piece, you have it memorized, whether you set out to memorize it or not.

Next on the agenda is developing some good activities that develop these different areas.

Thoughts? Opinions? Ideas? Anyone seen something like this before (I can’t imagine it’s novel with me)?

American Idol blogging, or Terms: Part II

April 2, 2009 8:01 pm

American Idol blogging, or Terms: Part II

I used to blog about American Idol a lot, but I don’t anymore. I think it’s lost a bit of what the French call that certain… I don’t know what. This season I like Danny Gokey.

A few posts ago, I posted a list of musical terms that all music students should know. Studying this list is even more imperative since Paula Abdul has apparently turned into an aural skills teacher, dropping all sorts of music theory words during her post-performance comments.

Says Whitney Pastorek, a writer for Entertainment Weekly:

The elders of Journo Row were plenty depressed by Allison’s comment that she “grew up” listening to “Don’t Speak,” as well as by Paula’s use of the word “axe” in her critique. This is where I started to suspect that Ms. Abdul had accidentally stumbled across the thesaurus we bought for Randy, and the new words — she’d also employ legato, cadence,and aborted tonight, using exactly one correctly — were starting to trip her up.

In a previous episode she marveled at the high A’s one of the singers hit, and she’s been dropping a variety of other music-related terms all season. Keep an ear out, and be sure to have your music dictionary nearby!

Friday, March 27, 2009

What's in a number?

March 28, 2009 2:00 am

What's in a number?

I’ve recently been thinking a lot about the numbers that we use in music performance/composition/analysis. My students seem to be confusing several things and their confusion got me to thinking about how to disentangle some of these ideas. I welcome any comments or suggestions on how to understand these things.

1. Figured bass. Figured bass uses Arabic numerals (1, 2, 3, etc.) under (or sometimes over) a given bass note to indicate which diatonic (that is, in the key) intervals are to be played above (i.e., in the right hand) that bass note. Any note you add above a bass is unaltered unless there are accidentals in the figured bass.

Many students try to reverse-engineer the figured bass symbols by trying to figure out the chord/Roman numeral first. This is a bad idea because figured bass symbols alone tell us nothing about chords or harmony. Once you add the notes above the given bass note, then try to figure out the harmony/Roman numeral. The example below highlights this. The A in the bass has a figure 6 underneath it. In the key of F major, this produces a first-inversion tonic harmony. In the key of G major, it produces a first-inversion diminished vii chord. In the key of D major, it produces a first-inversion minor iii chord. In the key of C major, it produces a major subdominant chord.

I often tell my students that figured bass evolved as a shorthand notation for species counterpoint. That is, figured bass actually suggests lines, not chords. Consider the example below:

If you look at those examples without worrying about vertical sonorities, the figured bass makes quite a lot of sense. Once you begin trying to assign Roman numerals, the task becomes a bit muddier. In the first example, we can easily understand the E-F motion in the soprano as some kind of neighbor motion or perhaps as the beginning of a passing motion. I prefer that interpretation to one which says the first chord is a root-position tonic and the second chord is a first-inversion submediant. In the second example, we see a collection of upper neighbors above a pedal bass. Sure, the notes on beat two add up to a iv chord, but is it really a chord or just a collection of neighbor notes? In the last two examples, we see suspensions notated in figured bass, complete with accidentals that tell us to raise the leading tone.

In short: figured bass tells us diatonic intervals above the bass and nothing else. If notes are to be altered, the accidentals will appear in the figured bass. Figured bass is simply a shorthand for linear motion.

2. Roman numerals. Roman numerals tell us quite a lot about a particular harmony. They tell us how the chord functions in a particular key. They can tell us quality (major chords typically get upper-case Roman numerals; minor and diminished chords typically get lower-case Roman numerals). They tell us the scale degree that forms the root of that particular chord.

Many harmony textbooks seem to favor a micro-managed approach to Roman numerals: every vertical sonority should probably have a Roman numeral. If you can’t determine the Roman numeral for a given slice of music, then there’s probably a non-harmonic tone stuck in there somewhere. I personally prefer a broader view, more in line with Schenker’s concept of Stufen, where a Roman numeral is used to indicate the prevailing harmony of a passage. Other intermediate harmonies are accounted for in terms of passing chords, neighboring chords, etc. Such an approach draws attention to the prevailing linear organization of most music.

3. Inversion symbols. Inversion symbols are Arabic numerals affixed to Roman numerals that tell us which element of the chord is in the bass. They have a lot in common with figured bass symbols, but I think they differ in significant ways. The cadential 6-4 chord is perhaps the most glaring example of the confusion that can arise when these symbols try to play nice together. Consider the example below, which includes several different ways of indicating a cadential 6-4.

The first example suggests that the C and the E of the first chord are suspensions over a dominant harmony. The C and the E have pushed the chord tones out of the way and are creating a lovely dissonance over the bass. This example shows the linear nature of the cadential 6-4. The second example labels the first chord as a tonic-functioning harmony that just happens to have the fifth of the chord in the bass. We were probably taught somewhere along the way that this chord is consequently unstable because the fifth is in the bass. Here, the Arabic numerals attached to the chord say nothing of the linear behavior of the upper voices. The third example is a kind of fusion of the first two: it labels the individual chords as such, but the bracket underneath suggests that both chords are in the service of an overall dominant harmony. (I don’t much care for this approach, since it looks too much like a secondary dominant.) The final approach again suggests two discrete entities, but highlights the instability and structural weakness of the first chord by not assigning it a Roman numeral.

A related example (and the one which sparked this whole train of thought) comes from a common cadential figure in Bach chorales:

(From chorale no. 9, “Ermuntre dich, mein schwacher Geist”)

Here, the Arabic numerals are purely figured bass: they can’t be confused with a chord inversion like the cadential 6-4 examples above. I think this is where my students’ (and, to some extent, my) confusion began. Is there a way we can disentangle these closely related symbols without reinventing the wheel? Any thoughts?

UPDATE: We started talking about modal borrowing (a.k.a. modal mixture) today and this brought up another instance of number confusion: the bVI and bIII chords. When you borrow a mediant or submediant chord from the parallel minor and bring it into major, the root of the chord is lowered. I advise my students to interpret the Roman numeral as “in the major key, lower scale degree 3 and build a major triad on that root.” The flat before the Roman numeral is an operation that applies to the root of that chord.

From the Top

March 28, 2009 2:00 am

From the Top

Last night, Texas Tech hosted a live taping of the radio program From the Top. The program features talented young classical musicians in performance, and includes interviews with the students in an effort to show that many classical musicians don’t fit the stuffy stereotypes.

This rather informal format–musical performances interspersed with interviews, dialogue, and humor–seems to me an interesting approach to not only radio programming, but concertizing in general. Who wouldn’t want to see a chamber music concert where the members of a string quartet (for instance) talked about why they chose the piece, why they chose to study music, etc. I’m not suggesting that all concerts should be this way, but it might be a good way to bring in the skeptics. One girl last night, a cellist, spoke about her love of snowboarding which has so far resulted in a broken arm and a broken leg. She delivered quite a performance of the first movement of Shostakovich’s first cello concerto (limbs intact), not a stuffy piece by any means. One of the other performers played some classical guitar pieces by Barrios, then proceeded to wow us with his flamenco skills, and a Jimi Hendrix cover. He was nine years old.

Also of interest was the type of music that these students played. The concert featured five performers playing Prokofiev, Shostakovich, Lutoslawski (!), Barrios, and another composer whose name escapes me at the moment (it sounded very much like one of the Paris Conservatory test pieces for flute, probably from the 1920s). All of this music is pretty serious 20th-century music, which I didn’t think most people–let alone (most) teenagers–would be interested in.

It seems like this year in particular, we have quite a lot happening musically in Lubbock, a town which usually gets passed over by big names. We’ve had Mark O’Connor recently, and Mark-Andre Hamelin (an alumnus of my alma mater, Temple University) will be here in October.

The program will air sometime in mid-December. Tune in and you might just hear members of the TTU Theory faculty applauding.

Partwriting help V

March 28, 2009 2:00 am

Partwriting help V

Today I’ll write a bit about secondary dominant chords, which are also called applied chords in some textbooks. Secondary dominants temporarily make the chord that comes after them sound like a tonic, albeit briefly. We call this phenomenon tonicization. Very often, you’ll see secondary dominants at cadence points as a method of intensifying the forward motion to the cadence.

Any major or minor diatonic triad can be preceded by its secondary dominant. Diminished triads (viio in major and iio in minor) cannot be tonicized because they cannot serve as the tonic chord in any key.

Secondary dominant chords come in several shapes and sizes. Most commonly, perhaps, is the secondary dominant seventh chord. One can have a secondary dominant triad, but if the purpose of the chord is to intensify the motion to the next chord, the chordal seventh in conjunction with the leading tone really drives the progression forward. Secondary dominants also include chords built on the leading tone, like viio, viio7, and their half-diminished brethren. When I say secondary dominants, I’m using “dominant” in the broader sense–that is, I’m referring to dominant-function chords.

One of the most commonly encountered secondary dominant chords is the dominant of the dominant. To determine what this look like, let’s first find the dominant of C major, which is G. The dominant of the dominant will have a root that is five diatonic steps above the root of the dominant: in this case, the root of the dominant of the dominant is D. We also need to find the leading tone that will propel us to the dominant chord. In this case, the leading tone to G is F#. Notice that F# is not in the key of C major. We’ll need to be sure to add this accidental in our exercises. To round out the chord, we need to construct a major-minor (dominant) seventh chord using D as the root and F# as the third. An A and a C complete the chord. We would label this chord V7/V, indicating that it is the dominant seventh of the dominant.

The same resolution tendencies apply to secondary dominants that apply to ordinary dominants. The chordal seventh must resolve down; the leading tone must move up by step to the “tonic,” unless it’s in an inner voice in which case it can leap down to the fifth of the following chord. It may help you to think about resolution in terms of complete/incomplete chords: usually, either the V chord or the I chord must be incomplete in order to avoid parallels and obey the resolution tendencies.

As I said earlier, any triad can be preceded by its secondary dominant. We can find V/iii chords, or V7/IV chords using the same method detailed above. The chords would then be labeled accordingly.

A few helpful pointers:

  • Secondary dominants will almost always require at least one accidental, usually applied to the leading tone.
  • Secondary dominants may resolve deceptively. I’m not going to get into that in this post for various reasons. Consult your local theory textbook for more information.
  • The vast majority of pedagogical approaches do not allow for things like ii/III or VI/VI. If your “numerator” (the Roman numeral above the line) is not V, V7, viio, or viio7, it’s most likely incorrect.
  • When writing a V/IV (in major or minor) be sure always to use a V7 chord. The dominant of the subdominant is equivalent to the tonic chord. The added seventh will distinguish the chord from a plain vanilla tonic triad.
  • You might wish to think of secondary dominants as substitutes for their diatonic partners. A V7/V chord will stand in for a ii chord, and it actually looks quite a lot like it: D F# A C vs. D F A in C major. A V7/IV chord looks like a I chord; a V7/vi looks like a iii, etc.

If I have time, I’ll add some score examples later. Stay tuned!

Theory calisthenics

March 28, 2009 2:00 am

Theory calisthenics

On Friday, one of my colleagues happened to mention a composer who got up every morning and harmonized a chorale, much like someone doing a crossword puzzle with their morning coffee. Every day he picked a different style in which to harmonize it. One day might be Bach; another, Schoenberg.

Over the weekend, I graded a particularly bad crop of homework assignments. I have a class of sophomores and we were in the midst of talking about secondary dominants. The assignment asked them to harmonize “Jesu, meine Freude.” Not only were the secondary dominants used in very strange ways, but there were tonicized diminished chords, ii-i progressions at cadences, doubled leading tones all over the place, and the like.

I can’t take every other class period to re-teach the rules of part writing to my students. But it seems to me that if we borrowed this composer’s idea, that might be a good way to help the students practice their part writing.

So next week we’re going to start theory morning calisthenics. At 8:00, we’re going to meet at the coffee shop on campus–faculty, graduate students, undergraduate students, etc.–and we’re just going to work for 45 minutes on harmonizing a chorale for the day. No pressure, no grade–just something to get the theory juices flowing first thing in the morning. My plan is that everyone gets the same chorale and can work on as much as they are able using whatever vocabulary is available to them. I might suggest the graduate students and composition majors harmonize in the style of _____. Then we can compare notes (pardon the pun) after about 45 minutes and see who did what. I’m hoping that the less experienced will take advantage of the more experienced and look over our shoulders, ask for help, etc.

We’re going to pilot this for two weeks, meeting Monday and Wednesday mornings (I doubt anyone–myself included–wants to get up early on Friday and do theory). We might add Tuesday-Thursday if it looks like there’s a demand. I think I’ll advertise it on Facebook, too, so that it looks cooler than it really is.

Our trumpet professor does 7:00am (I think) trumpet warm-ups every morning and they’ve been pretty successful, as far as I can tell. Hopefully the theory calisthenics will be equally as helpful.

Meta-post

March 28, 2009 2:00 am

Meta-post

I just finished adding tags to many of the older posts here on TTU Theory. I don’t know that it’s something I could have done at the genesis of the blog (at the very least, I don’t think that Blogger offered that capability). But now, I get to survey the 130 posts that I’ve written and see how they organize themselves. I ended up with about 14 categories of posts:

American Idol
Famous People
Humor
iPod
Listening

etc.

It occurs to me that in organizing my posts, I just created a sort of theory in much the same way music theorists do. I surveyed a body of work (in this case, my collected blog posts), observed patterns in that body of work, and then tried to group those patterns under some kind of common heading. Some posts don’t fit neatly into any of my categories: let’s call them non-harmonic posts, or maybe non-functional posts, or maybe passing posts.

If you’re interested in reading everything I’ve written about iPods, you can click on the “iPod” heading and all of the related posts will be retrieved.

Now, I could have come up with 130 category labels for my 130 posts, but that wouldn’t be terribly useful, would it? And there are some posts that really don’t fit neatly into one category, but can be understood as somehow belonging to two (or more!) categories. These are a bit like pivot chords.

Look for some partwriting help later this week…

Free Online Video Lectures

March 28, 2009 2:00 am

Free Online Video Lectures

From my bookmarks : here are some great websites with video lectures :

  • Research Channel : Awesome site with lots of theory talks. Most of the theory talks are either from University of Washington (or) Microsoft Research. I used it extensively during my first year of PhD.
  • Last but not the least, Academic Earth covers many areas with good quality video lectures.

Did I miss any good sites ? Please leave a comment if you know other websites with free video lectures.

Dick Lipton's and Noam Nisan's Blogs

March 28, 2009 2:00 am

Dick Lipton's and Noam Nisan's Blogs

There are two new theory blogs…..

  • Dick Lipton’s Gödel's Lost Letter and P=NP : This is an awesome blog. During my first semester at GeorgiaTech I took Dick’s course on ‘Open Problems in CS theory’. What an excellent course that was !! In every class, Dick proposed at least three open problems along with possible ways to attack them and required references. Since, it was my first semester at Gatech, some of these problems intimidated me. Nevertheless, I maintained a special notebook and scribbled each and every problem and references he mentioned, hoping to revisit them later. I am gald that all his open problems are being documented in his blog.

Complexity of Ken Ken Game

March 28, 2009 2:00 am

Complexity of Ken Ken Game

I came across this puzzle named Ken Ken. It is Sudoku-type puzzle with arithmetic constraints. Here is a complexity question :

  • Is solving n x n Ken Ken puzzle NP-complete ?

NP-completeness results are known for similar games like Sudoku. Here is a paper on mathematics of Septoku. Here is David Eppstein’s list of games with complexity results.

Sloan Fellows 2009

March 28, 2009 2:00 am

Sloan Fellows 2009

Sloan Research Fellows for the year 2009 are announced. The list can be found here. For a list of theory Sloan fellows (and related comments) follow this post on complexity blog.

2008 ACM Turing Award

March 28, 2009 2:00 am

2008 ACM Turing Award

ACM has named Barbara Liskov as the winner of the 2008 Turing Award…… “for contributions to practical and theoretical foundations of programming language and system design, especially related to data abstraction, fault tolerance, and distributed computing.”

Free Algebraic Curves Book

March 28, 2009 2:00 am

Free Algebraic Curves Book

William Fulton’s Algebraic Curves book is available free online. What distinguishes it from other books is the excellent set of exercise problems.

STOC 2009 accepted papers

March 28, 2009 2:00 am

STOC 2009 accepted papers

STOC 2009 accepted papers list is here.
Here is a list with the abstracts

Train Probability Puzzle

March 28, 2009 2:00 am

Train Probability Puzzle

The probability of observing a train in 30 minutes on a track is 665/729. What is the probability of observing a train in 5 minutes ?
Hint : Shoot for an elegant solution.

Linial-Nisan Conjecture

March 28, 2009 2:00 am

Linial-Nisan Conjecture

As most of you already know, Linial-Nisan Conjecture is settled by Mark Braverman. This settles a major open problem. Read the following blog posts for more details :

Braverman’s paper is on his homepage.

Pure Mathematics

March 28, 2009 2:00 am

Pure Mathematics

This comic strip from Abstruse Goose is simply aaawesome !! Click the image to enlarge.

Long Live Pure Mathematics…..