Re: [Harp-L] fugue state



Richard Hunter wrote some very good stuff on this subject a few hours ago. Here are some ideas of my own.

1. Studying counterpoint is very worthwhile for any harp player who plays with other musicians. At some point you can start 'hearing' some very good parts that weave contrapuntally with other instruments in an arrangement. The best session cats on any instrument often counterpoint with one instrument for a few bars, and with another for a few bars, and that's one way that an arrangement gets more and more integrated.

2. Learning how to play contrapuntally on a harmonica seems to me to be a worthwhile endeavor, though I have not ever tried it. ANY attempt to develop big technical skills can also make you a better player with a much larger vocabulary.

2a. Playing contrapuntally on the harmonica will only impress other harp players. Nobody else will have the slightest clue that you're walking on the moon. Playing beautifully, with or without technical pizazz is what knocks an audience out. If you come up with some beautiful contrapuntal lines, that's where playing counterpoint on the harp would be meaningful. However, on the way to playing beautiful countrapuntal lines you may have to develop some that are not beautiful at all. So if you want to go down that road, keep it to yourself until the music is strong and affecting.

3. I'm sure Richard Hunter knows this, but in case others do not: counterpoint and fugue are not one and the same thing. Counterpoint is the technique of combining several melodic voices in harmony. Fugue is a very structured musical form that requires counterpoint as its main ingredient.




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