Differences between version 5 and previous revision of NonharmonicOvertones.

Other diffs: Previous Major Revision, Previous Author

Newer page: version 5 Last edited on March 8, 2013 8:09 pm. by
Older page: version 4 Last edited on March 8, 2013 8:02 pm. by
@@ -35,9 +35,9 @@
  |^ 9 | 2nd Harmonic |Octave|^ 4' | White 
  ?> 
  
 <br> 
-The following schemas additionally require transposing the key of the music, and sound best with both hands on the same manual, but the pedal (if used) is not to be transposed. For solo work, transpose or improvise the manual part where the new drawbar registration to be used so that it is played in a different key from the other manual part and bass. Players familiar with polytonality will have no trouble with this, though the result will not sound polytonal at all. Players using a chord-system will find the system easiest of all. 
+The following schemas additionally require transposing the key of the music, and sound best with both hands on the same manual, but the pedal (if used) is not to be transposed. For solo work, transpose or improvise the manual part where the new drawbar registration to be used so that it is played in a different key from the other manual part and bass. Players familiar with polytonality will have no trouble with this, though the result will not sound polytonal at all. Players using a chord-method will find the system easiest of all. 
  
 Also, in these transposing-schemas, the colors of the drawbars are effectively reversed. Some black drawbars sound the octaves (and probably will be pulled out further), and the white drawbars always sound non-octave pitches. The white drawbars, especially, must be used only in trace amounts. All the sounds available this way are very novel indeed, and combine well with the [Percussion]. 
  
 Playing a fifth lower (play this system in F when the music is otherwise in C)~: 

The content of this page is Copyright (C) 2000, 2001, 2002 Geoffrey T. Dairiki and the other authors of the content, whoever they may be.
This is free information and you are welcome redistribute it under certain conditions; see http://www.dairiki.org/HammondWiki/opl.html for details.
Absolutely no warrantee is made as to the correctness of the information on this page.