The League music
Wildwinter (talk | contribs) m (moved The League Music to League Music) |
|||
Line 2: | Line 2: | ||
===Style summary=== | ===Style summary=== | ||
The League is a combination of different cultures and its performance traditions reflect that. High art (opera, masked theatre, courtly dance) combines with low culture (comedy song, street magic, and clever rhyming). For the music of the League, look to European classical music, particularly Italian and German including arias, lieder, and classical instrumental music, and folk music with the theme of deals, cunning, trickery, flamboyance, or loyalty. | |||
===Commonly known songs=== | ===Commonly known songs=== |
Revision as of 14:50, 31 July 2012
The Music of The League
Style summary
The League is a combination of different cultures and its performance traditions reflect that. High art (opera, masked theatre, courtly dance) combines with low culture (comedy song, street magic, and clever rhyming). For the music of the League, look to European classical music, particularly Italian and German including arias, lieder, and classical instrumental music, and folk music with the theme of deals, cunning, trickery, flamboyance, or loyalty.
Commonly known songs
Pick a few examples from the list below to specifically promote as well-known within that nation. Provide lyrics and score/chords. Preferably in a range of difficulties.
A musical tradition
Suggest how the music fits into the cultural behaviour in general (e.g. battle hakas, wassails).
One for the kids
Further examples
More examples for keen bards.
Songs
- Treggajoran Wartha
- Say Gentle Ladies
- Flower duet?
Instrumentation
Other performance traditions
How to adapt your repertoire
- Sing in a tongue in cheek way, have a game or a joke with your audience.
- Sing in an operatic way, up the drama!
- When playing folk tunes, try to pick ones that are a bit classical or baroque sounding, a good example is The Gale by Susan Conger
Our sources
Credits, links to artists, further material etc.