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  2. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bachelor_of_Music "FAILING 2 PLAN...is PLANNING 2 FAIL" So Johnathan, where do you go from here ? , have you any future goals,dreams,ambitions ? Where do you see yourself in 5-10 years time ? Executive producers/Film&TV Directors/ Script-Consultants, within the Industry are always looking for Music-Degree-Qualified composers,that Bring Immence value to there Cinematic Film productions. If you play your cards right, Your "Bachelor of Music" Academic-Degree, could lead you to a Very Lucrative Future. Either way i wish you Luck.........................
  3. Today
  4. Hi!!! This a different post from the usual, I trieed making collage art and I kinda liked so I decided to translate it to music! Its my first time writing incidental music but I believe I achieved the mood I wanted to express!!! https://drive.google.com/file/d/1NKk3dLrDa8q4Rh_rVZ-36o9bmbVITTU3/view?usp=drive_link
  5. hahahahahaha. I am much used to A-R-J-U-N-A motif now as I'm composing Arjuna's @expert21 Violin Sonata now, first 3 movements completed and working on the last movement of variation! Henry
  6. Hi @cloud10000! To be honest I enjoy this much more than your previous microtonal pieces! Also, given the slightly out of tuned Japanese instrument microtones can still be found there! I always have some likings in Japanese music, though not familiar with it at all. Really like this, thx for sharing and teaching some Japanese music knowledge! Henry
  7. Hi @jejrekmek! Nice guitar piece my man. I don't know much about guitar playing, maybe my boi @Thatguy v2.0 will know it much more, but I really enjoy your playing and composition. Although those sound effects in 2:30 quite scare my shit out tbh! Nice ending with your(?) singing! Henry
  8. Hi @Alant! I listen to your revised version with your real performance. The first section really reminds me of Liszt Consolation plus Schubert op.90 no.3 plus Chopin op.25 no.1. I love how you change the texture and accompaniments for varities, at the same time maintaining the simplicity of the music. Lovely music and lovely playing as well! Thx for sharing and your updates! Henry
  9. Hey @Mooravioli, I relisten to your waltz and man there's so many bittersweet moment here. The opening LH figure reminds me of the 2nd mov of Chopin's 2nd Piano Sonata. Very nice change of register in b.83! Like the improvisation at the end too! Thx for your update! Henry
  10. Hey Pabio, Out of the meaingless drama, let's move on to the music itself: I enjoy this one thoroughly Pabio! I feel like you are really allowing yourself to express yourself fully here. The most lovely thing is that you still maintain your control of counterpoint and you are really using those counterpoint for great emotional effect here. All the dissonances are so well handled and I love all those Mahlerian dissonances, and to be honest your prelude here really reminds me some of the first movement of Beethoven's mop.131 with the sadness and tragedy you portray here, It also reminds me Ivan's great prelude posted not long ago: Thx for sharing this great expression! Henry
  11. Hello @Jonathanm! Welcome to the forum! I really really love your modulation in b.8, so beautiful!!! I love b.9-15 too, and also the A section itself, however I think the transition from the serene passage before it can be longer and more well-prepared. Again I love your modulation to Ab major in 1:53! I love your transition to section D, very well done, and the bass clarinet is greatly used there! I love your cor anglais in section E too, and also when the flute join and after that the strings!! The all strings passage after feel so warm to me. B.90 passage is wonderful with the harp and the texture is very rich. The cello melody plus flute countermelody in section H sounds fascinating as well, and I absolutely love the b.133 passage after it! The climax to J section is really well prepared here! And a lovely peaceful ending! Your ochestral and harmonic colour is really really well done, congrats on that!! I really love how you allocate melodies to different instruments for their own timbre. Maybe for me the only shortcoming would be the coherence, since I feel like the whole piece is beautiful but the ideas are all new in each section for me. Nonetheless, this piece is very well done and enjoyable, congrats on that! Henry
  12. Hi @user011235! I like the classical style sonatina, very Mozartean. I love the energy in it. For it I would probably stay long in a single key in the development section like you did here, as the music lingers in Bb minor b.21-47, almost the same length as the repeated exposition! I would probably keep modulating for more harmonic moving forward. The 12th interval in the LH of b.31 would be too big for pianist to be played together. I would also prevent the augmented seconds such as in b.35, since it sounds a bit weird under a classical style sonantina personally haha. The retransition in b.54 is quite short for me as well for a dominant preparation back to Eb major tonic! Despite being nitpicky I like this. Thx for sharing! Henry
  13. He was also criticized for not writing very well/idiomatically for voices. Critics said that he wrote for voices as if they were instruments. Probably accounts for why he only had one opera!
  14. SU-PAR Let me be one of the 1st to congratulate you on a MOVIE-SOUND compostion...............Well done Johnathan. "Bachelor in music"................. My God , you must be extremely Intelligent........that's something i could never achieve.
  15. Another piece from 2018, in a style that... well, i'm not really sure. It's got bits that sound classical, bits that sound romantic, and to me some portions even sound more modern like new age, folk or pop. I wrote it in 4 days so everything kind of just flowed. What do y'all think? Any feedback is welcome
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  16. Lmao! Your own B-A-C-H motif, perhaps? πŸ€”
  17. That's what would make it fun for teachers to inflict it on their students. πŸ™‚
  18. @Henry Ng Tsz Kiu @PeterthePapercomPoser Thanks you guys, that's helpful to hear. Peter i didn't know that about beethoven! Wow even he had insecurities
  19. Yesterday
  20. Yeah Thinking functions are the weakest for INFP so it would be really to build up theories for you guys, unless your mind tell you you must learn those theories or you love them, then you would really learn them well! Given the secondary Extraverted intuition keep exploring new music and getting insights by brainstorming would really help you find your fav. theory learning method! Btw. I guess there are a lots of INFPs on the forum as well! Henry
  21. Haha thx! Tho here it repeats more than usual for humorous effect, as a joke told more times it should it becomes a lame joke!πŸ˜› Henry
  22. Excellent! Needs to be given to beginning music students so they can learn to follow repeats. πŸ™‚
  23. Hi everyone, I composed this piece as part of my bachelor in music. I hope you enjoy it. Leave a like or a feedback if you want! 😊
  24. Thanks a lot Henry. Appreciate the comments. Yes INFP, so not only introverted feeling, but that combined with extroverted intuition. It means the intuition is naturally stronger and the capacity to learn theory is naturally weaker, so for me it's a choice between going against the grain and trying to learn in the conventional way anyway (which would likely kill my process), or try to find a different way (difficult as it's so rarely talked about....).
  25. Hi @guy500! I find the production of your video really nice! Also, nice face reveal! For the practical side I actually take your approach exactly. I write to learn instead of learn before write sometimes. For example I only learn how to write fugues when I tried a five part fugue in the 3rd movement of my Clarinet Quintet. I think only by writing you will know what you really need to learn from those theories. Although I love music theory myself to be honest haha. However, learning theory and using them in composition is completely different things. You have to be so familiar with those theories so that when you compose you can forget them completely and use your intuition (guess what, my MBTI is INFJ and so my primary function would be introverted intuition, as you mention MBTI in your video) to compose. That’s why I think learning theory, no matter drily or with love, is crucial. I guess you are an INFP because you weigh introverted feeling so strongly in your video? Thx for sharing btw! Henry
  26. I've really struggled to get my head around music theory - the way it's currently presented - since I started composing last summer. So, I've been giving some thought as to alternative ways of presenting it that might make it more accessible to new untrained composers, especially those who use DAWs and samples rather than manuscript. This video is meant as an exploration only - not suggesting better or worse approaches, or taking a position - only considering alternatives that could work for some people. Hope it's helpful. https://youtu.be/O_SSqvaVKDA?si=QXuksfXovuawS3Tf
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