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Re: change ringing, was: dual loop technique?
My apologies for the delayed response. Hope this isn't too much info.
Change Ringing
--------------
(Most of this stuff is from "The New Grove Dictionary of Musical
Instruments.")
Change ringing is traditionally performed by multiple ringers, one ringer
per bell. When a
ringer sounds a bell during change ringing, he or she pulls the bell rope,
the bell rings
once and returns to a resting position. Hence the bells are strictly
controlled as to when
they sound.
Given a set of bells, change ringing consists of sounding the bells in a
predetermined
order. Various techniques are used to produce a sequence of ringing. A
"plain hunt" on a
set of bells, named 1, 2 and 3 appears as:
1 2 3
-----
2 1 3
2 3 1
3 2 1
3 1 2
1 3 2
1 2 3
Three Bell Plain Hunt
This means that the pattern begins on the first row with ringer 1, then
ringer 2, and then
ringer 3. Continuing with the second row ringer 2 sounds, then ringer 1,
and then ringer
3. This continues until all the changes have been rung.
Draw a line through any given bell in the pattern above and you will see
the bell wander
through the pattern in a serpentine manner. This is characteristic of the
plain hunt. A
plain hunt is generated by flipping the order of adjacent pairs of bells
and alternating
which pairs are flipped. With the set of three bells above, we have two
transformations:
1) (ABC->ACB) where the last pair is flipped and 2) (ABC->BAC) where the
first pair is
flipped. We alternately apply transform 1 and 2. The second row of the
Three Bell Plain
Hunt is generated by transform 1 from the first row, the third row is
transform 2 from the
second, and so forth.
With four bells, we flip the two outer pair and then the one inner pair:
1 2 3 4
-------
2 1 4 3
2 4 1 3
4 2 3 1
4 3 2 1
3 4 1 2
3 1 4 2
1 3 2 4
1 2 3 4
Four Bell Plain Hunt
Notice again, the path of any one bell through the pattern. Bell four,
for example:
1 2 3 /
-------
2 1 / 3
2 / 1 3
/ 2 3 1
\ 3 2 1
3 \ 1 2
3 1 \ 2
1 3 2 \
1 2 3 /
However, with four bells a plain hunt produces only 8 combinations of the
possible 24 (4! =
24). Many techniques can be used to produce all the combinations. The
Plain Bob is
probably easiest to follow. (note: Bob has one o, not two.) With the
Plain Bob, the Plain
Hunt pattern is used until a repetition would result, then a dodge occurs.
A dodge
exchanges the order of the last pair. Hence every eighth row of a Plain
Hunt has a dodge
inserted. (Are you still with me on this? Shheessh this is terse...wish
I could make it
clearer.) A Four Bell Plain Bob looks like:
1 2 3 4 (start Plain hunt)
-------
2 1 4 3
2 4 1 3
4 2 3 1
4 3 2 1
3 4 1 2
3 1 4 2
1 3 2 4 (Dodge 2 and 4, otherwise we'd get 1 2 3 4)
1 3 4 2 (Plain hunt again)
3 1 2 4
3 2 1 4
2 3 4 1
2 4 3 1
4 2 1 3
4 1 2 3
1 4 3 2 (Dodge 3 and 2, otherwise we'd get 1 3 4 2)
1 4 2 3 (plain hunt again)
4 1 3 2
4 3 1 2
3 4 2 1
3 2 4 1
2 3 1 4
2 1 3 4
1 2 4 3 (Dodge 3 and 4, completes the changes)
1 2 3 4
So I've been experiementing with this to generate looped patterns.
Traditionally, each
bell sounds the same duration (time-wise). If you weren't using bells,
say some stacato
sound instead, the pattern might sound syncopated depending on the
instruments, etc.
I find it fascinating because it is highly structured but, depending on
the length of the
changes, the mind has difficulty grasping the pattern.
- Dennis Leas
--
dennis@mdbs.com