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Words: | Submitted: Wed Oct 05 2005
... left hand mainly playing quavers to balance them. There are a number of perfect cadences in the piece, these give the impression that the piece has ended. The first of these can be found just fourteen bars into the piece. Although the piece is in the key of C, everything up until the first perfect cadence is written in G major, as every F is sharpened so therefore the chord at the perfect cadence is a G major chord (first inversion.) The piece then continues in the same way that it started, the left hand imitates the right hand for four bars and then continues in G major following the pattern of a full bar of semi quavers in the right hand. For the main body of the piece, the left hand consists of two quavers and a crotchet in a bar, or a full bar of quavers, or one crotchet ...
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