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Hi @Henry Ng Tsz Kiu and thanks for your kind comment ! I'm really glad you enjoyed this first movement. You're right about the motivic themes ; I might have been influenced by a short menuet for string quartet that I had written just before as a training in order to learn to use Dorico which i recently acquired. Have a nice day !
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Hi @Layne! This is an impressively exciting track. I really love the intense opening and the sliding figure in 0:29, reminds me very much the dangerous scene and music in the famous shower scene of Psycho. The 1:00 theme reminds me of both the finale of Tchiakovsky's Fourth Symphony and Prokofiev's 6th Piano Sonata. You also provide contrast in 1:40 with the bassoons and flute as well as other quieter instruments. What I love most is that you don't go for a clichetic gradual crescendo till the end as many boring and uncreative trailer music does, as the music ends quietly with confusion and mysteries at the end! Thx for sharing, I like this! Henry
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Hello @Marc Deflin! I really enjoy this classical style movement. I love the imitation between instruments in the piece, particularly when you give the theme to viola, the poorly neglected child in a quartet in b.17! In theme C in b.61 you give the theme to cello which is a great variation to me! Also your usage of pizzicato is good, I love it. Maybe one thing is the melody of the piece, as both themes A and B is more motivic and less melodic, but this is personal. Thx for sharing! Henry
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Nocturne in C-sharp minor, No. 1 'Tears'
Henry Ng Tsz Kiu replied to Frank Normandy's topic in Piano Music, Solo Keyboard
Hey @Frank Normandy! C-sharp minor is always my favourite key; any piece in that key will also be a plus 50 for me lolol! A lovely nocturne. 1:30 provides a good contrast by modulating to major key areas, and moving to high register in 1:50 sounds a nice variation to me! Also I enjoy the polyrhythms in the piece to kind of controlling the pace and emotion. The ending really gives some hope by ending on a B major chord, as well as having the piece less final which sounds good to me. I think @chopin will enjoy this with the beautiful melody and the polyrhythms in the piece! Thx for sharing! Henry -
Hey @Alex Weidmann! I really enjoy this Vaughn Williams like piece! I enjoy your modal style very much as always, and your pacing and spacing is always great for me as they are not always following the same formula or having suffocating full sound all the time as in many film music and trailer music. I absoultely love the way you allocate the themes to different sections. However within the different sections I hope there will be even more variety for allocating the themes, as now it's usually the flute, Horn and 1st violin carrying the theme! I think especially for the woodwinds you can have at least the oboe and clarinet carrying the theme, while for strings you can have cello for a low register presentation of the theme! Nonetheless I enjoy it. Thx for sharing! Henry
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Henry Ng Tsz Kiu started following String quartet - 1st movement and Raptors in the Grass
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Henry Ng Tsz Kiu started following Nocturne in C-sharp minor, No. 1 'Tears'
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Layne started following Raptors in the Grass
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Hello all! I'm here with another piece, this one titled "Raptors in the Grass". As I composed this piece, the imagery I "scored" in my mind was a chase scene, leading to a moment of unreliable calm, that leads to a dramatic end! In my mind I imaged scenes akin to those in the "Jurassic Park" franchise with Raptors hiding and chasing through the tall grass. For this piece I am using a new VST. This is composed entirely using Native Instrument's Symphony Series (which is on sale at the moment at steep discount.) This was my first composition using the more advanced articulations and options available in this set of instruments and I am excited to get to do more. I was extremely pleased with the quality of the samples and how they come across in this piece. I tried to capture more momentum, especially in the first half. Wanting to keep up that "chase" but continue to vary and change the sonic environment to fit the changing actions of characters, such maybe getting in a car and driving or trying to fight back. With that unreliable calm coming in at the second half and a final crescendo when our characters get surrounded by the beasts they were trying to avoid. I would love to hear your impressions from listening and what story it tells for you. Looking forward to the feedback and hope you enjoy the listen.
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It's getting better and better. Have a listen to the work of me and the latest iteration of the program I designed:
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Marc Deflin started following String quartet - 1st movement
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Hi folks, I'm back to composing after an inspiration drought of several months, that I attempted to break this week 🙂 This is an allegro moderato, first movement of a string quartet that will have three of them. It's not aimed at being technical or something, just pleasant to one's ears. Regarding the structure, I wrote 2 main themes A and B, which you'll find in A B A C B A structure Regards Marc
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Frank Normandy started following Nocturne in C-sharp minor, No. 1 'Tears'
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Nocturne in C-sharp minor, No. 1 'Tears'
Frank Normandy posted a topic in Piano Music, Solo Keyboard
Hello everyone, Times have gotten... bumpy these past few weeks, which gave me inspiration to create this reflective piece for solo piano. It depicts an image of a person shedding tears of emotional pain, whether because of unrequited love, loneliness, helplessness, overwhelming hardships, etc. Musically, I was somewhat influenced by Chopin (of course), David Orr's Nocturne, other YouTube composers writing in a similar style, among others. Some addenda: For now, I decided to post my more recent compositions mostly on here, while I'm trying to figure out how to make better visuals for my YouTube channel's original composition videos. If any of you have suggestions for creating visuals, do tell me! I really appreciate it. So reflect on yourself to this music! And like always, feedback is welcome! ~Frank- 1 reply
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Henry Ng Tsz Kiu started following One Last Dance - suite for concert band
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You're right; there was no melody. Due to an error in my code, the input melody got translated into a sustained unison throughout the entire piece. I fixed that problem. Now, as you can see in this five-voice piece, there is some melody involved, albeit only simple melody because I'm still in the testing phase:
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I'm sorry I didn't hear any melody in it. It's this electronic music? Henry
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Over the last couple of hours, I have vastly improved on the functioning of the program I designed. Here is a sound file to prove it:
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It's actually taken directly from the original track itself! I've used a website to separate the vocal from the instrumental. If you listen carefully, you could actually hear the imperfections in it, such as at some point, you could hear piano doublings on the vocal. That's because throughout the whole track, the piano always doubles it an octave above. Here's the ost: Anyways, thanks for the kind words! Really glad that my time spent on actually learning orchestration has paid off!
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Hi @ferrum.wav! What a delight to hear this arrangement! The orchestration is masterful and dense and complex but retains a simplicity that allows it to be accessible and easily palatable as a song. Speaking of which, did you record the alto singing the words? It sounds like a real singer. I'm thinking you must have extracted just the voice part from the original song and inserted it into your arrangement? Or did you use some kind of software to render the words? That seems unlikely given how easy to understand the words are. Thanks for sharing and I'm glad you completed this wonderful rendition!
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I designed a wonderful computer, still a work in progress, that helps me with music composition. I put in a melody, and it elaborates on this melody by changing it up and adding harmony and counterpoint as rich and dense as I wish it to be. It's still in an early stage of development, but the results are extremely promising. I have indeed hit upon some of the deepest secrets behind music composition, after years of studying, experimenting, and thinking about the nature of music. Here is an early song my computer program and I composed. More and better is yet to come:
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Dang, two new(-ish) pieces in a month? That's crazy. Tbf the main materials here are from a preexisting song, and the other piece is a full revision. Then again, I had to learn orchestration stuff for this and that took a very long time. aaaanyway, really happy about how this has turned out anndd imma just gonna quote the description from the progress update thread you could find the progress update thread here: also @Henry Ng Tsz Kiu, I'm really glad I could be the first one to ever quote one of your themes! When I was sketching that section, I thought of wanting to quote, and I thought of your specific theme. Again, really happy that it fits really well. Also also, those syncopated rhythms are actually from the original song itself. But, I do agree that it fits this "cover" and the original song. Glad you liked my orchestration too! (vocal by Jillian Ashcraft, taken directly from the OST)
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Joke in A-flat major
Henry Ng Tsz Kiu replied to Henry Ng Tsz Kiu's topic in Piano Music, Solo Keyboard
Well I’m very used to a Beethovanian Scherzo marked in three in a bar so I just retain that! Henry -
Joke in A-flat major
Henry Ng Tsz Kiu replied to Henry Ng Tsz Kiu's topic in Piano Music, Solo Keyboard
Haha yeah, given how lame the Ab major sections surrounding it! I definitely need more HUMOR in my life, whether it’s the joyous mood or the body fluids lol! Henry -
PIANO QUARTET IN C MINOR STUDIO RECORDING!
Henry Ng Tsz Kiu replied to Rich's topic in Chamber Music
Thx for your information! It’s really useful! I guess I won’t have my Sextet performed by them given the cost lol haha. Oh I also just finished a Violin Sonata commissioned by @expert21 and also feature dance rhythm…… 😛 Henry -
Thanks for your comments, Henry--and yes, if you're writing chamber music, nothing compares to a live performance--the strings were so much more detailed and nuanced, emotive. This is very helpful for me to remember and to write with this in mind. I was shocked at how much Derek brought out of the piano part! The Cost?! A lot! The musicans were $100/hr. x4 hours for the recording session. The studio was $75/hr. This included the enigneer and access to the glorious Yamaha C-7 (7.5 ft conservatory grand) freshly tuned. I spent 3 hours in post-production for splicing and mixing. It was a $2k day. This is summer vacation money for a family for 5 or 7 days. This is how I choose to spend my treasure-- I rationalize it by calculating that a composition degree and access to musicans would cost $60k-80k (easily) at university. I hope to write something substantial each year and go to studio in the late spring /summer--at least untill I have internalized the lessons to be had from working with real musicans and recording. Next: A violin sonata (violin+ piano) which will be cheaper by almost half! I want to do a full-on string quartet after that.... The musicans: They were great! NO auto-tune here. A few pitch issues but really very, very good. All University of MIchigan trained string players. Master's degreed. Derek is a fresh graduate of Wayne State University, and has a great career ahead of him. He prepped this in 7 weeks, where 3 months would be the norm... I just googled for string players. They gave me the lead on the pianist... I think I got lucky... I think I'm going to start the violin sonata and back track and do the last movement of the PQ-- a tarantella tempo piece with a Siciliano B section (my mom was Sicilian). Up-tempo and a bit more adventerous...
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Re-hearing the piece I was thinking if you could also use 3/8 at a slower tempo or 4/4 but all the crotchets here are then in triplets - since counting this fast may be challenging and unnatural, then I suddenly realize why you chose 108 per dotted minum, which makes complete sense - but again, just personal notational preferences at the end of the day I guess.
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hahahahaha lol!!
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PIANO QUARTET IN C MINOR STUDIO RECORDING!
Henry Ng Tsz Kiu replied to Rich's topic in Chamber Music
Hey @Rich! The live version is so so so much better than the computer version. The sadness already contained in your music is a million times enhanced here, as I had listened to both versions and can easily listen the difference! Those subtle tempo rubato would not be possible in a computer rendition at all, as well as the very detailed changes of tones . There's one (two actually lol) question for me, how much is the cost for hiring the entire ensemble and also the production team? They are really professional here! How did you find them in the first place? Thx very much for sharing your precious live recording of your own movements! Hope you will also submit the other movements to them too so we can enjoy (free-ridingly lol) more!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Henry -
At last, I can post the studio recording of my Piano Quartet in C minor. The two movements were recorded in a 4 hour session on 5/23, and spliced/mixed today 5/30. I've learned so much, and am very happy with the result, as solo strings are not good on ANY VST, compared to professional string players. The pianist stepped in on short notice and did wonders humanizing the piano part--the chorale and 2nd movement theme sound fantastic! Now I have a concrete reference for what my writing sounds like with actual musicians. I plan to do another pass over the score, as there are things that need improving on my part. A worthwhile and important step in my DIY musical education!.... The artists: Fantastic musicians, and they all helped me consider my writing, score/part preparation and musical issues in new ways!---- Violin: Dan Winnick Viola: Chloe Thominet Cello: Michelle Kulwicki Piano: Derek Szlauer Recorded and mixed and Big Sky Recording, Ann Arbor, Mich. Geoff Michael, Engineer. 5/23/25 and 5/30/25.
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What do you think about my two latest compositions?
Henry Ng Tsz Kiu replied to Eric N's topic in Piano Music, Solo Keyboard
Hello @Eric N! The Invasion sounds like a chic version of a Bach Prelude which I like, with a 3+3+2 rhythm throughout the music. I personally love the eclipse more, it's more colorful with some effects on it. I think you can simply learn orchestration yourself! Never say you are only good at A or B, you won't be good at C had you not attempted on it! Thx for sharing. Henry