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PeterthePapercomPoser started following Taking Control of my Creative Process
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A+ for presentation, something I lack around here. I love how detailed your score was, and that you posted multiple versions to appease any taste in reading along. I preferred the color coding, as I'll admit I got lost in the thick of dissonance trying to find synergy with the theme, but your score made it very clear and more enjoyable for me. I was really intrigued by the chromaticism and dissonance. It sounded too harsh at times, but the more I listened I got used to the language and texture and it flowed really well for me. Forgive my ignorance, but I've never really been into fugues. I don't know/forget all the intricacies involved, but your ledger of HOW you wrote it was very helpful and dare I say educational for me. The amount of effort you put into detailing your music was enlightening as well as lovely to hear. Thanks for posting this, as well as being involved in the forum! I can't speak for everyone, but the music I post here is barely heard by the people around me, and a community that is aligned with my passion AND that I get to help grow has a special place in my heart. It's people like you that help keep YC alive 🙂 Cheers friend, well done
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Award Request Thread
Thatguy v2.0 replied to PeterthePapercomPoser's topic in Announcements and Technical Problems
Just playing around 🙂 Glad there's interest in the badges, I forget about them 😄 -
yeah, but once you confer with the pianist you'll be able to make necessary edits if need be. It does seem pretty difficult, but I'm curious how it turns out 🙂
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Taking Control of my Creative Process
Thatguy v2.0 replied to johannhowitzer's topic in Composers' Headquarters
I like the idea of logging your progress, it'll help you and probably teach others. Welcome back! - Yesterday
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Henry Ng Tsz Kiu started following Taking Control of my Creative Process
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nathanstravinsky joined the community
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Hey y’all! I’m nathan and here’s a bit about me for u guys to have more insight for my organ piece to u. I’m a 14 year old composer living in Philly in PYOMI and I’ve had the pleasure of working with some dear composers and finding out more about the organ through organists and the AGO conference in NYC. I hope you’ll stick around to listen to my piece, as I love sharing with everyone. Hope everything goes well for uuuu 😉 https://drive.google.com/file/d/1r7_C0-58hUB1GVor1YU8SKCfQVdWnclL/view?usp=drivesdk
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Hello @mossy84! Thank you for your advice not to end a fugue subject on the tonic. (And this is, in fact, a good advice which avoids that the subject sounds „too finished“ and there is not enough momentum for the next voice entries.) But in this particular case, I violated this „rule“ - albeit rather unconsciously – in order to follow the rules for crafting a fugue subject in the style of Palestrina, especially having only one „leap“ in the opening fifth which is immediately followed by stepwise motion in the opposite direction. And I wanted to have a Brevis note in the subject to highlight its „renaissance“ character in the score visually. 🙂 However, I must admit that there is a kind of „rest“ in bar 4 where the subject comes home to its tonic key G flat for an entire Brevis – but that’s intentional and emphasized by the „messa di voce“ (which is challenging to be played on the piano at all... 😃). By the way, looking into another of my fugues with a similar, short subject (here is a YouTube link, I haven’t presented it in the YCForum yet), I noticed that I exactly did what you suggested, I started the answer a beat earlier, creating a kind of „stretto“ even in the exposition.
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luderart started following Piano Stream No. 5
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This is my "Piano Stream No. 5", composed in August last year. In 2013, 'Stream' was the name I had found would best describe pieces of mine composed in a style that ‎seems to me to recreate the unique experience of watching a stream in nature. It is a type ‎of fluid music, a type of music where the texture is always changing and is never the ‎same, that does not have an identifiable rhythmic pulse, that is in constant, ever changing ‎flux. A 'stream' is a rather happy, relaxed, spontaneous, and flowing piece. It is often in ‎variational form. A stream is more about creating a certain impression, rather than ‎introducing and/or developing specific themes. This fifth piano stream of mine is also my twentieth composition in the 'stream' form. With my previous stream (String Quartet Stream No. 3, Op. 288) composed all the way back on December 26, 2016, this stream marks my return to the form after a break of more than 8.5 years.
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It's been a long time! I used to frequent this forum in my 20s, now I'm 42 years old, living abroad, haven't really written any music in the last decade, but I never fully gave up on writing music. It's time to fix my writer's block. I'm setting up this topic as a challenge to myself. Writing music in my 20s was something that came very slowly and painfully as I am a massive perfectionist and not terribly disciplined. So this plan is designed to cure me of that. - Only writing fragments for now. No aiming for completed pieces. - Focusing on practicing use of musical elements I like, experimentation over destination. - Loosely tracking my time in order to force something out the door, rather than get stuck on revisions. - Long term learning goal is to build the skills to write hybrid electronic/orchestral music for games. If anyone wants to take on this challenge with me, feel free, and you are welcome to post things here. For my part, the pacing is starting at one small post per week. As I feel able, I may increase that. Music will be hosted on flat.io and eventually Soundcloud, and linked here by Sunday evening USA-Eastern time, which is Monday morning my time. Feedback is welcomed, but I will be trying to take feedback lightly and focus on quantity of music creation, on volume, rather than refining the quality. First entry: https://flat.io/score/69930d12f4b7f4206442ca2c-sus-slash?sharingKey=4f68cd0e43730c91e48416b8978810ab0c63680a3161fb07fbfcbc75e85c135b02a6f15102ff10978621f147508f16a2ade8791783c86664bb7ed9f0e3b671f9 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=14lZ2g_oCxI For this eight-bar melody, I chose the musical element described in the above youtube video - suspended chords above a slash bass note, essentially sparsely voiced tall chords. I wasn't following any particular progression principles, just whatever sounded good, but trying to follow the structure of the chords described in the video. Couldn't quite nail down the last chord, sorry it's unsatisfying, but according to the rules we are moving on!
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Henry Ng Tsz Kiu started following Bright Morning Stars
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pycul started following Night Stalkers
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The intro really captures the exact vibe you're going for — I’m excited to see how you continue to explore these effects. At 1:30, the melody is spot on. I just wish it stood out a bit more and cut through the background more clearly. Around 2:30, I felt like it might have been stronger to further develop the 1:30 melody instead of introducing a completely new one. You used sound changes in the melody very effectively — it adds depth and rich layering, especially when the parts overlap.
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pycul joined the community
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PeterthePapercomPoser started following improvisation 2 and Bright Morning Stars
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I put together this arrangement of Bright Morning Stars in 2015, but just made a new score demo video for it. Enjoy! Bright morning stars are rising, and day is breaking in my soul. Where are our dear mothers? They're down in the valley a' praying, and day is breaking in my soul. Where are our dear fathers? They've gone up to heaven a' shouting! And day is breaking in my soul!
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I’m trying to improve at improvising, I feel like currently I repeat the same ideas too much. I’d appreciate any feedback.
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Imperial Rome The Fall of the Roman Empire, I wonder which Country is Next ? Imperial Rome.mp3
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Hi all 🙂 As a new born violonist (started the instrument in october 2024), I thought I would give it a chance at composing a concerto for violin and orchestra with my humble technical skills knowledge (far from pushing the instrument to its limits 😉). Here it is. Three movements : allegro moderato / lento / allegro. There are various themes inside, main ones being : Theme 1 : enunciated straight at the opening (bars 1-4), it's developed further by various sections as well as by the soloist under several forms, Theme 2 : appears first bars 219 to 225 at the end of the first movement, then in second and third movements under several forms Theme 3 : bars 31 to 71 in second movement, then reappears in the conclusion of the concerto at the end of the third movement. Other leitmotivs (don't know if it's the appropriate term) emerge throughout the piece. The third movement is an allegro but strongly slows down at the end for a quiet, peacefull, opened ending mainly reusing colors from the second lento movement. In the attached pdf score : Allegro moderato : page 1 Lento : page 69 Allegro : page 102 Here's the video (let me know if it's better that I attach MP3s) : 0:00 : Allegro moderato 8:32 : Lento 15:57 : Allegro (timeline also in the description of the video) Best regards 🙂 Marc
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Hello, friends! How are you doing? I am happy to present my latest composition to you. This one is more challenging to listen to, full of contrasts and wildness that are typical for me, even though I try to incorporate a certain system into my music, which may not be obvious at first listen. Thank you to everyone who decides to support me by listening, and I wish you every success in your creative endeavors!
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Hilary Coombes joined the community
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original compostion The Birth of Inspiration
interlect posted a topic in Orchestral and Large Ensemble
The Birth of Inspiration A Burst of Creative artistic endeavors, without thinking. The Birth of Inspiration.mp3 -
original compostion The Death of Conformity
interlect replied to interlect's topic in Orchestral and Large Ensemble
Thankyou Peter, im very happy to see your review of my composition. heterophonic texture !!! wow i had to look that one up. Thankyou once again for making my day a Happy one, There's another Composition waiting , but not in a waltz style I dont know if that one also has a heterophonic texture ? , ill have to analyze that word in depth, Thankyou. -
Bohemian Rhapsody- Orchestral cover
TristanTheTristan replied to Tunndy's topic in Orchestral and Large Ensemble
Hi. You are welcome! Oh! Now it makes more sense. 🙂 you too! -
Hello On this occasion, and to increase my skills with regard to brass instruments, I have orchestrated a song by Mendelssohn, Op. 19 No. 3 (Hunting Song), originally for solo piano. The ensemble consists of four French horns, two trumpets, two trombones, and one tuba. I had to improvise to resolve some passages where the registers were very high, but it is not a literal copy, rather a version with certain liberties taken. I have respected the original key (A major, which is not bad for brass). But another might have been better, such as B flat major (but some notes were too high for me). Everything is untransposed and in separate systems (I am working on condensing it with the programme, but it's a bit of a nightmare...).
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herry brook joined the community
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Favorite Musical Book Quotes?
PeterthePapercomPoser replied to PeterthePapercomPoser's topic in Composers' Headquarters
Another musical quote from "The Occult" by Colin Wilson. Let me know if you agree or disagree! And if you've gotten this far - thanks for reading! -
original compostion The Death of Conformity
PeterthePapercomPoser replied to interlect's topic in Orchestral and Large Ensemble
Hi @interlect! Welcome back to the forum! I actually really like this piece! It has a sort of hypnotic/mesmerizing repetition which makes it really dreamy/magical to me. I love how the melody is scored as well; sometimes with solo lines; other times with a more heterophonic texture. Great job and thanks for sharing! I can't get enough of it! -
Bohemian Rhapsody- Orchestral cover
Tunndy replied to Tunndy's topic in Orchestral and Large Ensemble
Hello Tristan :3 thank you so much for the compliments. I would say though, I think I wasn't as bad in orchestration as you thought I was back than. I just really did not care about the quality of the pieces that I made in my youtube videos, so I would resort to copy pasting most of the time. with that being said, this is definitely a piece I could not compose last time we've talked have a great day -
Bohemian Rhapsody- Orchestral cover
Tunndy replied to Tunndy's topic in Orchestral and Large Ensemble
oh great points I didn't notice most of that and yeah I tend to lean quite a lot to the string section thank you so much for the reply -
Bohemian Rhapsody- Orchestral cover
Tunndy replied to Tunndy's topic in Orchestral and Large Ensemble
to be frank I actively avoided making this piece too diffrent from the original, as I share the proccess of creating my piece on youtube, and people really want to hear something the recognize instently. I appreciate the kind words a lot though, thank you so much. -
Bohemian Rhapsody- Orchestral cover
Tunndy replied to Tunndy's topic in Orchestral and Large Ensemble
totally fair points, I might fix it in the future thank you so much! funny people here follow after my youtube I'm now kind of regretting I didn't bother making that piece playble though -
original compostion The Death of Conformity
interlect posted a topic in Orchestral and Large Ensemble
The Death of Conformity What's Acceptable in This Century, was not Acceptable in the Last Century Proving that "The Death of Conformity" , is not a Fantasy but a Reality. The Death of Conformity.mp3
