All Activity
- Past hour
-
PeterthePapercomPoser started following Archeangel
- Today
-
Henry Ng Tsz Kiu started following This Chord...
-
This Chord...
Actually, a polychord; Eb Minor against F Major. Can anyone write a piece based on polychords like this? Hint: think counterpoint, but in chords. If no one takes me up on this, I'll do it myself. This Chord... Free Sheet Music by Outis for Piano/Keyboard | Noteflight
-
Churchcantor started following This Chord...
-
Archeangel
Thank you, sincerely, Interlect. This program has been a passion project of mine for the last 3 years. It began with a simple modulator, then transformed slowly to all the features on the site. No, it's not classified information. Since you asked nicely, I can tell you, actually! 😃 So, I've been following Ai and its strength is analysis, while its weakness is physics. Physics, is just not there yet. If you ask Ai to analyze anything, it will give you information that is great to bank off of and further reason with comparable inference. I made this program with Copilot, then Claude, then Perplexity, then Claude Code. Ai kept fabricating my findings with implementation; so if you want to make something like this, do it a day at a time. I didn't use any Altered Chords, but I did create a method that composes with serial intent. Check out the website. It has the ability to export to midi if you want to collaborate with me?
-
PeterthePapercomPoser started following REVERIE | (classically inspired rock album) and Organ variation on a Czech Hymn
-
Sonata no 23 in F sharp major ( Binary form )
@Vasilis Michael Yes, Yes. It is nice to hear when someone mixes different styles and forms together. I would love to see a binary form using harmonic langauge of listz. That would be interesting. Or cyclic sonata using classical harmonies. the sky is the limit. ;)
- Yesterday
-
Henry Ng Tsz Kiu started following REVERIE | (classically inspired rock album)
-
Fruit hunter started following Ziiav747
-
Sonata no 23 in F sharp major ( Binary form )
My dear friend, thank you very much for your kind words. I composed this sonata in just a few hours over the course of two days. It was a moment of inspiration, and everything came very naturally. I’m truly very happy that you enjoyed it.
-
Sonata no 23 in F sharp major ( Binary form )
Hello my dear friend, First of all, thank you for taking the time to listen to my sonata, and I’m truly happy that you enjoyed it. I thought it might be nice to share with you how I conceive these sonatas in my mind. The truth is that I have blended many different elements into binary form with the intention of creating something personal—my own voice through binary form. Structurally, it is indeed binary, as expected. What I do differently is to approach it with a more Classical sense of transitions and dramatic development. So in essence, my sonatas are fundamentally binary, but with a Classical morphology, featuring clear transitions and the sense of dramaturgy found in the Classical era. Harmonically, I would say it is a mixture of many influences—primarily Classical, with touches of early Romanticism. I absolutely love binary form. Domenico Scarlatti has been an incredible inspiration to me, and I decided that I, too, wanted to create a vast musical diary of binary sonatas—works that truly feel like my own personal musical journal. At the same time, this form encourages me to be bolder, more innovative, and more adventurous compared with other genres. Once again, thank you, my dear friend.
-
Whale and the Whaler - MAJOR CHANGES 5/7/26
Some Guy That writes Music replied to Some Guy That writes Music's topic in Orchestral and Large EnsembleBumping so people can hear the changed endings and edits.
-
Sonata no 23 in F sharp major ( Binary form )
I'm impressed both by your light touch playing this, and the lack of scratching out on your handwritten copy. If I wrote that way, it would be all chaotic scribbled out former ideas. The interplay between your first and second sections works very well! A very satisfying piece to listen to!
-
REVERIE | (classically inspired rock album)
Reverie is an instrumental rock album with some classical and jazz inspiration. Me and derek are 18 years old and wrote this off and on over the course of a little over a year. We would appreciate any feedback! Here is the link: https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLm46fu2fz3P-KbwFXlgfJNEN3QV4wlHT_&si=DomOQDTKYdKJnohw
-
Ben Callender started following REVERIE | (classically inspired rock album)
-
Vals No.1
This is such nice music! Thanks for sharing 💜 This is such nice music! Thanks for sharing 💜
-
-
Organ variation on a Czech Hymn
Hello everyone! How are you? I would like to share my latest composition with you. This time, it is a variation on an old Czech hymn "Vstalť jest této chvíle". I’d really appreciate it if you gave it a listen. Thank you! https://youtu.be/GESxy63t9HE?is=-6dZ675dvwSZbBlv
-
A Thread for My AI-Assisted Creations
I daresay this one sounds to my ears pretty epic.
-
Walzer in G-dur.
"Thanks for the honest feedback! I'm glad the music itself sounds good to you. I will try to improve the visual spacing in my next pieces."
-
Archeangel
Absolutely WONDERFUL I looked at your PDF , and iv never seen ANYTHING like it....... how do you create the program that does this stuff ? or is that "Classified-Information"......if so then i do understand you cant share that . One of the reasons i joined this forum was to study and comprehend The ......... "ATONALITY" "CLUSTER" Concept But i still cant figure it out.............I presume your using ALTERED Chords in this composition ?
- Landscapes - Soundscapes - Spring 2026 Composition Competition
- Ambience
-
🎬 ★𝑺𝑻𝑹𝑬𝑬𝑻 𝑳𝑰𝑭𝑬™ | Main Theme + Opening-Closing Credits : Combined
Highly mesmerizing. Highly entertaining. Is this going to be a full fledged show?
-
Archeangel
"Archeangel," is a Fractal Fugue developed from my website: www.atonalfugue.net The matrix is: [0,2,9,3,7,11,4,8,10,1,5,6] It's based on, Webern's Symphony, which has no transformations according to my theory of matrix modulation. It moves at 30 BPM, and follows Mason's rules of composition, albeit serialism, at that tempo. Attached is a complete analysis of the numbers. You can tell, according to the galactic harmonics, how much thought was put into that matrix. I Joke. However, looking at the analysis, there are some interesting inferences: 64. GALACTIC FREQUENCY ANALYSIS ▸ COSMIC ACOUSTIC SIGNATURES Milky Way Frequency Drift....... 0.9305 Andromeda Collision Sonic Reflection 0.5836 Dark Matter Interaction Tone.... 0.2100 Supernova Remnant Frequency Mapping 0.3495 Pulsar Waveform Analysis........ 0.9389 Black Hole Sonata............... 1.0000 Neutron Star Collision Harmonics 0.2377 Galactic Echo Sonification...... 0.6505 This is what I'm jamming on now. It's said that we are composing the very thing that the universe's materials encompass. It's only fair to analyze it as such, too. I mean, we don't have to agree - there is room for independence in what I have to offer in the website. So, what do the numbers mean? Numbers, are often static. When paired with music, the numbers become realized through motion. In this case, as each number permeates through a representation of music, the numbers become more viable. That's expensive to convey, and data intensive; I guess it just means that the numbers are a symphonic glade of information that is easier to ingest than learning about it. I hope it sounds good, in any case. Based on the acoustic signatures, I can conclude that there is a weak correlation to Dark Matter, but there is a strong correlation to Pulsar Waveform Analysis. I do like the idea of Galactic Echo Sonification, in my music too. I hope you have fun with the website, empowering your music, too. Archeangel.mp3 Archeangel.mid WebernSymphony_Analysis_AtonalFugue.pdf
- Piston
-
Sonata no 23 in F sharp major ( Binary form )
Hello @Vasilis Michael It is refreshing to see a binary sonata form. Binary was primarily used by baroque period composers before the proper form took off. In the A section, you would have your primary theme in tonic. Followed by contrasting B section in the Dominant. What makes binary stand out: the lack of transition between the two sections. Or maybe there is one(?) We can tell there are two major sections. One that repeats and one that follows after repeat of first section. Ergo. binary! I love how the main motive is used thorough out the entire piece. It moves so flawlessly. As usually, your writing is on par! I could not hear anything wrong. :)
-
Sapphire744 joined the community
-
Nipohc joined the community
- Last week
-
Walzer in G-dur.
Hi Tristan, This sounds very nice! I would suggest finding a different composition software to use, however. The spacing of the notes on the page is a bit all over the place, which makes this challenging to sight read. Musescore is a good free option that sorts that out for you automatically. I haven't used Vocaroo, but I understand it has some AI features for editing recordings?
-
A Thread for My AI-Assisted Creations
I love how this one turned out. It's remix of a piece about the art of magic and the magic of art.
-
Walzer in G-dur.
For the first time in my life, after watching a few harmony videos, I wrote this waltz. I'm curious to hear your opinion. https://voca.ro/1juGRRVoFhLh Walzer in G-dur.pdf
-
Tristan25 joined the community
-
Blog #2. Timbre Quality of the Woodwind Section / Instrumentation / Orchestration
@Asgarzade Music School Fancy seeing you here. To answer, Henry question. Possibly yes. :) @Henry Ng Tsz Kiu if you know members who earning to learn this, @Asgarzade Music School is great.
-
🎬 ★𝑺𝑻𝑹𝑬𝑬𝑻 𝑳𝑰𝑭𝑬™ | Main Theme + Opening-Closing Credits : Combined
This Concludes the | Trilogy Template Series...................This one's My Favorite Part 2 of the TRILOGY Template-Series :
-
Arragement of exert of Max Meger Humorquse no.2
Not normally, no. They are standard in our industry. The only time it would be broken is when you have a larger ensemble or other instrument combinations that are not standard. In this case, it’s not about orchestral order, it’s about highest-> lowest instrument for the layout.