9

Wondering how complex a single piece of sheet music can get, and what it looks like. For example, on the guitar, theoretically you could define the following:

  • a chord
  • bend from another chord
  • bend to another chord
  • hold for 3 beats (dot)
  • wiggle string

I don't have the music software to write the notation at the moment, but a chord might look like:

enter image description here

or

enter image description here

I'm wondering if you also took into account the following, how complex you can make it look while still being readable and realistic:

Those are just some ideas to add to the complexity of the sheet music. But basically I'm wondering how complex sheet music can get when it tries to encode every feature possible.

By "complex" I just mean the visible look of the notation, rather than how hard it is to play. Doesn't matter the instrument, just whatever results in some of the more complex notations you can construct.

5

2 Answers 2

27

It's interesting you use the word "complex." I was hesitant to answer for fear that this question was too opinion-based (and it might still be), but your use of this term made the answer very clear: consider the music (and notation) of the New Complexity movement.

To quote directly from an opening line of the Wikipedia article:

Though often atonal, highly abstract, and dissonant in sound, New Complexity music is most readily characterized by the use of techniques which require complex musical notation. (emphasis my own)

Take, for example, this excerpt from Brian Ferneyhough's "Unity Capsule," which only involves two instruments (played by one performer!):

enter image description here

Ferneyhough is one of the leaders of the New Complexity movement, and any score of his you find will be among the most complex out there.

1
  • 1
    Note that you can find this online. It sounds like a constipated budgie farting into a bucket of water. Jan 8, 2021 at 13:59
3

Among other things, the sheet music might indicate

  • a tempo indication (in bold above everything else) e.g. Allegro
  • a mood indication e.g. espressivo
  • an absolute dynamic, e.g. mf
  • a relative dynamic, e.g. poco cresc.
  • a phrasing slur
  • an articulation mark e.g. . (staccato) or - (tenuto). You sometimes get . and - combined.
  • which finger to use
  • which string to play on
  • (for vocal music) the words

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge that you have read and understand our privacy policy and code of conduct.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.