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<font face="Calibri">None of the answers to this question appears to
have raised the problem that Trevor's students, apparently playing
the bass in the left hand and the other voices in the right one,
appear to see the inversion as the position with respect to the
tenor!<br>
<br>
I find this puzzling on two counts:<br>
1) Is it normal to play harmony with only one voice in the left
hand? I think to remember that during my studies, we played
chorals with two voices in each hand; I often played continuo in
the same way.<br>
2) As many of the previous answers here have shown, several of us
would believe that the upper voice, rather than the tenor, is the
most important after the bass for determining the chord position.<br>
<br>
In any case, I think to remember that in my classes (or at least,
in my own usage), we used the following French terminology:<br>
– <i>renversement </i>(inversion) for the inversion of the
chord.<br>
– <i>position</i> for its upper note: a triad in any inversion
could be in 3–, 5– or 8–position (but for the fact that a triad,
say, in first inversion and 3-position would double its 3d, an
unlikely disposition).<br>
I must say that I rarely bothered which note was in the tenor and
which in the alt.<br>
<br>
Nicolas Meeùs<br>
<br>
<br>
<br>
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<div class="moz-cite-prefix">Le 18/03/2014 20:23, Trevor de Clercq a
écrit :<br>
</div>
<blockquote
cite="mid:67E6F1F0-0E86-4710-8515-FF29CDE13121@gmail.com"
type="cite">
<pre wrap="">Hi all,
My students with some piano background often confuse chord inversions with what their right hand is doing, such as a "first inversion" chord means that the chordal third is played by the thumb of the right hand, even if the root is in the bass (left hand). This misconception seems to be something derived from their previous piano pedagogy as far as I can tell.
My question: Is there a technical term for different voicings of the right hand? I realize I can't retrain the piano teachers of the world to use a different term. But does something like "first voicing," "second voicing" exist? Maybe this is more a thread for the keyboard world, but it impacts my music theory teaching.
Oh, and dear fundamentals textbook authors, PLEASE stop explaining and drilling inversions of chords using only the treble clef. It reinforces this misconception and leads others down the same path. I realize it's a convenience thing (cost of paper and ink), but it unnecessarily confuses so many of our students.
Best,
Trevor de Clercq, PhD (Music Theory, Eastman 2012)
Assistant Professor
Department of Recording Industry
Middle Tennessee State University
Murfreesboro, TN 37132
(office) Ezell 104A
615-898-5821
<a class="moz-txt-link-abbreviated" href="mailto:trevor.declercq@mtsu.edu">trevor.declercq@mtsu.edu</a>
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