The
"Art" of Music Copying
Excerpt
from the "Lizard's Guide to Music Copying"
by Lee Monroe
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I
have read many accounts from copyists at different stages of the
profession who love to talk about the "Art" of music copying.
I am often amused because I have always approached copying, particularly
as a hand copyist, from a strictly utilitarian point of view. I was
drawing dots and at the pace I had to work, there wasn't much time for
anything else. I didn't have time to try too many fancy things or
try to get something to look "artistic", it had to be fast and
it had to be correct. |
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Looking
back now though, I'm a little more philosophical. Whenever I talk to
a former hand copyist that has been in the grind and had to produce under
harrowing circumstances, I have a greater appreciation for what it took
(and takes) to be a music copyist.
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There
are things that are hard to quantify and the rules don't always apply.
Occasionally I hear it from one of my copyist, "but you
said...", and my response is usually something like "that's when
this happens" or "this situation is different" or the
always effective "Do you want to get paid for this gig or not?"
Often something will come up that breaks the rules and you have to use
your imagination to make things work. |
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I
am convinced that Finale copyists that were hand copyists originally are
much better at this than someone who just learned how to copy on the
computer. I have some excellent copyists who were not hand copyists,
they know Finale up and down and often discover little things that I did
not know about. Yet every once in a while I will be looking at their
work and see how they laid a part out. It is then that I realize
that there are things that they still don't get. |
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As
a hand copyist, when I received a score I went through the entire score
and mapped out the basic layout for each of the parts. The primary
thing that I would have to consider were page turns. Many of the
sessions or performances that we did were sight read or nearly so.
Performers didn't have time to learn the arrangement front and back, they
would just read it down. Page turns would take precedence over
practically all other considerations. We could not be concerned with
page counts or such, it was vital that the music be as plain and readable
as possible for the performers. |
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After
going through the scores for the basic layout, I would then blue pencil
everything and plan out unisons along with deciding what instruments
shared similar layouts. For example, if the brass were all playing
at similar places I would do a generic layout with no clefs. I would
put in as many bar lines, bar numbers, multi-measure rests, Tempo
markings, etc... as I could to minimize duplication of effort. I
would then copy (Sepia) these parts into another generation. For the
trumpets, I would add a treble clef, key signatures, and unisons, or
anything else that would save me scratching out something again - for the
lower brass I would do the same. Often I could even go another
generation breaking the parts down to Trumpets 1 & 2, Trumpets 3 &
4, Trombones 1 & 2, Trombone 3 & Tuba, etc. As a hand
copyist that would stay up for days on end to finish a project, I lived
for these short cuts.
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What
you would start to develop through this exercise is an "eye" for
immediately recognizing layouts and could scan scores in a heartbeat to
see where you could save some time. I don't know about other
copyists, but I didn't spend a lot of time analyzing scores from a musical
point of view - I was all about appearance. In today's world of
computer copyists, there are those who think that they can program in
layout concepts and all they have to do is extract, well I say that's
nonsense. While occasionally you will have a chart that will fall
into place with a minimal amount of tweaking, those are the exceptions and
this is where I usually can determine if you were originally a hand
copyist. No offense, it's just the way it is.
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On
the other hand, the advent of computer notation has brought a dimension to
copying that wasn't there before - "Ear Proofing." Before,
unless an arranger's mistake was notation in nature, I could care less
what it sounded like. As long as the evidence was on the score that
what I wrote was there, I wasn't concerned. I was getting paid to
copy, not to analyze. Ear proofing not only allows me to check my
own work, but helps to identify problems with the orchestrators work as
well. My company did a project last year involving several very
talented LA orchestrators, it was a crunch project to be recorded in
London, full orchestra and it was one big chart. Three different
orchestrators were working on this one chart. We got the material
piecemeal and there were many revisions. We were able to identify
over 100 mistakes in this score because of either ear proofing the work or
comparing the notation of each of the orchestrators (all of the copyists
would paste their work into the master score at the end of each day).
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The
computer is a powerful tool and brings many advantages to music copying
but you should still try and learn the eye that most hand copyists have
developed for layouts. I was fortunate to learn most of what I know
from a copyist named Sonny Annis, he had a great eye and never seemed to
be as much concerned about the "rules" as we was the layout or
the look. |
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Just
because the computer will allow you to put six bars a line of eight note
runs doesn't mean you should. As an exercise, you might try and go
through a score ahead of time and do a little mapping, then compare to how
the computer laid it out, it might prove enlightening. Strive to
find the right balance between economy and function, usually they are very
closely related.
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Take care!
Lee Monroe
Lee
Monroe is the owner of Express Music Services. He has been a
fulltime copyist for 19 years and was strictly a hand copyist for the
first 15. You can check out his hand music font by following this
link - LeeMusic.
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©
Express Music Services, Inc.
Not to be reproduced without written
permission from Express Music Services. |