Music
     Transcriptions for the piano
    NOTE: These transcriptions for the piano follow a style I like where
    the upper and lower staff strictly contain the notes for the right
    and left hand, respectively. That is, if the melody needs to move
    from the right to the left hand, it moves from the upper to the
    lower staff. Especially in complex pieces like a fugue, this strict
    grouping helps me learn the part more quickly.
    
      -  Air (on a G string) from Orchestral Suite in D [pdf] [midi]
        - J. S. Bach, transcribed for two hands
-  Little Fugue in G Minor [pdf]
        [midi] - J. S. Bach, transcribed
        for two hands
-  Fugue from Tocatta and Fugue in D Minor [pdf] [midi] - J. S. Bach, transcribed for
        two hands
-  Greate Fugue in G Minor [pdf]
        [midi] - J. S. Bach, transcribed
        for two hands
-  BWV 639 [pdf] [midi] - J. S. Bach, transcribed for two
        hands
-  BWV 156 - Arioso [pdf] [midi] - J. S. Bach, transcribed for two
        hands
- Brandenburg Concerto No. 6 in B flat - 2. Adagio [pdf] [midi] - J. S. Bach,
        transcribed for two hands
- Violin Concerto in A Minor - 2. Andante [pdf] [midi] - J. S.
        Bach, transcribed for two hands
-  Adagio for Organ and Strings in G Minor [pdf] [midi]
        - Albinoni, transcribed for two hands
 Original works
    
      -  Two Part Canon [pdf] [midi]
-  Three Part Canon [pdf] [midi]
- Calypso [pdf] [midi]
 
- Music of Changes [pdf] [midi]
- Pleased [pdf] [midi]
- Sounds in the Music [pdf]
        [midi]
- When I'm 64 Times 4 [pdf]
        [midi]
 This piece is what you get when a nerd is stuck in front of a
        piano during covid lockdown. It follows the binary pattern for
        counting to 16:
 1
 1 1 1
          1 1 1 1
          1
 1 1
          1 1   
                 1 1 1
          1
 1 1    
          1 1     1
          1     1 1
 1   1   1
              1   1  
            1   1   1
 This pattern of counting to 16 repeats in each measure of
        the bass clef. In the treble clef, each measure introduces the
        pattern of the next number, counting to 16 measures. So there
        are 256 patterns, which is also 64 times 4 to make a cute title.
        The final measure repeats the bass line. As an extra bonus, the
        metronome is 64 beats per minute.
 
 
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