Topic: "Etude of Rhythm and Harmony" (for Solo Piano)

"Etude of Rhythm and Harmony" (for Solo Piano) by Hugues Bedouelle is entirely composed in the unusual octatonic scale (C, Db, D, E, F, Gb, Ab, Bb) or (0, 1, 2, 4, 5, 6, 8, 10) in digital writing, which is invariant by inversion (palindromic) around Eb. The 70 tetrachords that can be formed from this scale were partitioned into two progressions of 38 tetrachords each that are complementary, are related by the inversion and have only the three invariant tetrachords in common. These progressions are presented in their direct, retrograde, inverted and retrograde inverted forms. The music uses four almost maximally even rhythms of three onsets in eight pulses: [3,2,3] used in the Beijing Opera; [3,3,2] or Tresillo, from sub-Saharian Africa; [2,3,3] or Bossa Nova and [2,4,2] or Caterete both used in Brazil. The transitions between the different rhythms are marked by dynamic (nuance) variations. The score was interpreted with the K2 Grand Piano of Pianoteq in Studio Recording BA mode. The recording is available at:
https://soundcloud.com/hugues-bedouelle/36hb22

Last edited by Hugues Bedouelle (06-03-2026 11:37)

Re: "Etude of Rhythm and Harmony" (for Solo Piano)

very cool.  have not played much with this scale.  Herbie Hancock probably would like it.  actually jazz players use the term octatonic (sometimes) for what is typically called the diminished scale i.e. (0, 2, 3, 5, 6, 8, 9, 11) or (0, 1, 3, 4, 6, 7, 9, 10).  but this one is a new one for me. 

is there a score available?

Re: "Etude of Rhythm and Harmony" (for Solo Piano)

Hugues Bedouelle wrote:

"Etude of Rhythm and Harmony" (for Solo Piano) by Hugues Bedouelle is entirely composed in the unusual octatonic scale (C, Db, D, E, F, Gb, Ab, Bb) or (0, 1, 2, 4, 5, 6, 8, 10) in digital writing, which is invariant by inversion (palindromic) around Eb. The 70 tetrachords that can be formed from this scale were partitioned into two progressions of 38 tetrachords each that are complementary, are related by the inversion and have only the three invariant tetrachords in common. These progressions are presented in their direct, retrograde, inverted and retrograde inverted forms. The music uses four almost maximally even rhythms of three onsets in eight pulses: [3,2,3] used in the Beijing Opera; [3,3,2] or Tresillo, from sub-Saharian Africa; [2,3,3] or Bossa Nova and [2,4,2] or Caterete both used in Brazil. The transitions between the different rhythms are marked by dynamic (nuance) variations. The score was interpreted with the K2 Grand Piano of Pianoteq in Studio Recording BA mode. The recording is available at:
https://soundcloud.com/hugues-bedouelle/36hb22


Wow!  Thank you Hugues Bedouelle for encouraging me to  taste and appreciate unusual chords and harmonies.
This is interesting. New ”genre”. For me.
I think I can like this as a contrast to Bach’s music and other composers. Get to broaden my musical taste again.

Best wishes,

Stig

Re: "Etude of Rhythm and Harmony" (for Solo Piano)

Hugues Bedouelle wrote:

"Etude of Rhythm and Harmony" (for Solo Piano) by Hugues Bedouelle is entirely composed in the unusual octatonic scale (C, Db, D, E, F, Gb, Ab, Bb) or (0, 1, 2, 4, 5, 6, 8, 10) in digital writing, which is invariant by inversion (palindromic) around Eb. The 70 tetrachords that can be formed from this scale were partitioned into two progressions of 38 tetrachords each that are complementary, are related by the inversion and have only the three invariant tetrachords in common. These progressions are presented in their direct, retrograde, inverted and retrograde inverted forms. The music uses four almost maximally even rhythms of three onsets in eight pulses: [3,2,3] used in the Beijing Opera; [3,3,2] or Tresillo, from sub-Saharian Africa; [2,3,3] or Bossa Nova and [2,4,2] or Caterete both used in Brazil. The transitions between the different rhythms are marked by dynamic (nuance) variations. The score was interpreted with the K2 Grand Piano of Pianoteq in Studio Recording BA mode. The recording is available at:
https://soundcloud.com/hugues-bedouelle/36hb22

Wow, Hugues,

What an intriguing and unique sound this harmonic study has...
I'm a bit new to these unique harmonies...
Interesting
Greetings from Italy
Carmelo