How King Dorian United His KingdomMain MenuKing DorianThe Journey BeginsKing Dorian Tries Greek NotationNotation Exercise No. 4Elizabeth Murraydfa7007276f34b592c5fda4ee04e6921e4c7bb97
King Dorian Tries Neumes
12017-05-10T15:46:53-07:00Elizabeth Murraydfa7007276f34b592c5fda4ee04e6921e4c7bb97182075Notation Exercise 1 & 2structured_gallery2017-05-10T15:54:32-07:00Elizabeth Murraydfa7007276f34b592c5fda4ee04e6921e4c7bb97King Dorian continued mimic the styles of the past. While studying neumes, King Dorian tried to use the techniques of neume notation to recreate both the popular children's nursery rhyme John Jacob Jingle-Heimer-Schmidt and the Gregorian Chant Puer Natus Est Nobis. In the nursery rhyme King Dorian tried to remain as true to the neume structure as possible using small shapes across a horizontal space with the vertical direction of notes indicating pitch. In the Gregorian Chant piece, King Dorian tried to expand the possibilities of the neume by connecting the shapes and forming lines based on the vocal melody.
12017-05-12T10:41:26-07:00AnonymousNotesDr. Davis1plain2017-05-12T10:41:26-07:00Image 2 is sideways and is messy, while Image 1 does not have good resolution.Dr. Davis