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  2. Yo Peter, This one is so goddamn mesmerising just like love. It’s tricky, addictive, dreamy, a bit horrible, just like your music here. It’s so amazing that you come up with so great of the harmonic colour and timbre for a random theme. Like Vince I am in awe with the theme and left hand piano, but I am also in awe with the flute and dreamy echoing right hand of piano. The only thing I love less is the voice haha. I mean, even a gamelan would have been better than the voice!!😝 Thx for sharing! Btw hope Jamie finds his true love! Henry
  3. Hi @Some Guy That writes Music, I finally have time for this one! I had longed for listening this one but I had to compose my music so I reviewed nothing here. The beginning section sounds peaceful, but you introduce a lot of colours here and make it interesting. As we are both featured in Mike’s video, I really love the Ab modulation Mike quoted. I have to note that, you do prepare for that modulation introducing an Ab in b.90. And it’s fxxingly beautiful here. For me the section is more in F Aeolian. It’s so fresh here and the themes are so beautiful. Maybe in b.204 the sustained brass like the trombone is a bit too loud and overshadow the woodwinds and strings, until b.218. The 218 passage is so grand and I love it very much! The military theme is less in my liking, but again b.285 theme is so freakingly beautiful. B. 308 bassoon is nice! That modulation back to C major is so goddamn beautiful!!! One thing is that I think the F minor section is somewhat a bit too long and suppress the original C major too much for me, but that’s subjective. The ending struggling is really great and push that one final climax at the end! One of the great things here I think is that I never feel boring in any of the 18 minutes despite knowing that there are repetitions. Your orchestration is so good to create the aura and atmosphere! The themes are simple, but the effect is so great. I am in awe of this piece, congrats for this achievement! Thx for sharing! Henry
  4. Today
  5. Thanks for your comment. I appreciate your perspective. The song is more focused on Faust's inner struggles rather than his romantic relationships. I aimed to create an epic metal song that delves into his inner turmoil.
  6. Hi @pateceramics, We have countertenor, and thx to you we now have countersoprano! I love the modal feeling here. Those parallel fifths and octaves add the feeling of it. It’s so English here. I like this! Thx for sharing. Henry
  7. Hi @olivercomposer, Even though I didn’t read Goethe’s Faust, I like Faust and Mephistopheles. They are cute. They really represent Western culture and thoughts, even though they are extreme version of it. On the music using Bb minor and Neapolitan sixth is great for the evil theme. Btw where is Gretchen? And where is Helen? I find their love with Faust great! I remember watching an old silent film on Faust and Gretchen’s love and I loved it so much. Thx for sharing! Henry
  8. Hi @ajd6553, The music is quite yummy to listen to! It will be perfect if it’s background in a restaurant! I wanna eat! Henry
  9. Hi @Cafebabe, I find the first movement quite Mozartean. It certainly reminds me his A minor Piano Sonata. I think in the development you can invite more modulations, instead of lurking around in A minor for a long time! It’s the key of the 2nd subject so it will be somewhat less interesting staying in that key for a long time. The end of the development is very much like the end of the development of Mozart’s A minor Sonata. Modulating to tonic major in recapitulation before going back to tonic minor in the 2nd subject is quite interesting. The second movement is very much like pieces in “the Children Pieces” which I use to teach my students! It’s light hearted. Using Subtonic major as 2nd movement key is quite interesting. The third movement is quite exciting. The modulation around b.75 is interesting, but the move to six flat key signature is not necessary. Is the movement in rondo form? I find the materials in there is somewhat less organized. For example I find the chorale section in b.127 quite unrelated with the movement! The vivace fugato is quite confusing as the transition to it and from it is quite abrupt. The ending however is quite exciting! I am quite nit picky here, but you probably compose much better than when I was 16 years old! Congrats for writing a multi movement work! Henry
  10. Hi @mazeth, I think the piece is quite Baroque with many sequences and similar figuration. The hand crossing is interesting. I love your attempt for the modulations, for example in b38, but I think they can be smoother rather than just having a chord! For b.90, maybe having an A#-A natural bass will be smoother. I think the Db in the first section should all be C# since it’s in d minor! I think some of the expressions can be deleted since only one is enough for each staff! Thx for sharing. Henry
  11. You're welcome. Sounds like you're making great progress! Adding those finer details will really bring out the nuances in your piece. And you're right about the title, leaving it open to interpretation can add depth to the listener's experience. Keep up the good work!
  12. I've been introduced to a very interesting and enlightening new philosophy book by my friend Lisa. On the surface "The New Existentialism" by Colin Wilson doesn't seem to be a book very much concerned with music but I assure you that it has much to say about creativity and music some of which I share below. (The book was published in 1966 - read all the way to the end for a short discussion of Beethoven and Wagner.)
  13. Hi, Nazariy! This is a beautiful piece of work. I really enjoyed all the dynamic contrast in the B section. There are moments like 2:25 where I wish I could hear the clarinet just a bit more, but perhaps it was your choice to have it so closely intertwined with the piano. Thank you for sharing! I can hear the joy.
  14. Yesterday
  15. Hi all, I wanted to share my latest composition, hoping for some feedback! Enjoy the listening 🙂! Julien PS: Scores and midi files are available here: https://imslp.org/wiki/Tableau_No.5_(Piaser%2C_Julien) tableau 5.mid
  16. Hi all! This is my first post, and I'm looking for a little advice! For context: I've been playing piano for 11+ years and I'm taking AP Music Theory right now. My theory teacher is having us write a composition using traditional 18th-century techniques, with four voices (I've opted for a traditional string quartet). This is my first time ever writing a piece of music for a class (everything else I've done is just playing around on guitar and piano), so I'm super unsure of where to start. I would be incredibly grateful for any advice on how to begin! Best, EB 🙂
  17. Hey there I've listened to this along with your other posts. Very nice start to a theme here. Care to share anything more about this or yourself? It sounds like the start to something, are you looking for feedback on where to go? How to extend? Orchestration treatment? (since this is where you posted, I'll move this to unfinished music) I'm not sure about the Grenade cover, was it a test to replicate as a new orchestration? Feel free to offer some input here as well, as there are fantastic people to get to know that would help a fly find a turd. I get the gist that you're younger, which is great! Lots of people of all ages roam this forum on the prowl for knowledge and advice. Thanks for sharing, and welcome 🙂
  18. Many thanks to you both for your comments. I didn't really think about what mood I was trying to set; just let the piece evolve organically. I'm planning to elaborate the piano part some more, and still need to add all my articulation, expression marks etc... Need to be careful not to over-egg the pudding though! The title is open to interpretation. It could simply be about the contrast between night and day; or perhaps about the cycle of history, alternating between periods of calm and periods of turmoil (sometimes called the Saeculum).
  19. I feel the same way as well... a very interesting, interactive balance - yet each part is not overblown on its own or when together
  20. Yes indeed, the violin part was melancholic, but I find the piano part to be particularly interesting as it balances the melancholy of the violin.
  21. Very melancholically beautiful... a sense of hopelessness yet also acceptance, calm and even hope!
  22. Last week
  23. Hey Guys, I would like to present my latest metal single, "Faust". Feel free to share your opinion, and leave a comment! Between my thoughts of despair, I made a deal, with the hell, With Mephisto in the night, I traded my soul for endless might. I played with the hell's hot flame, I wanted knowledge, youth, and fame, But the price I paid was high, I will fall down after I reach the sky. Promises of power, promises of gold, But the emptiness within is so cold, Bound by chains of my own horrible desire, I’ll be lost in the realm of eternal fire, oh. Between my thoughts of despair, I made a deal, with the hell, With Mephisto in the night, I traded my soul for endless might. I played with the hell's hot flame, I wanted knowledge, youth, and fame, But the price I paid was high, I will fall down after I reach the sky. Now I roam these streets alone, Haunted by the seeds I've sown, The echoes of my despair ring, In the song the devil sings. Promises of power, promises of gold, But the emptiness within is so cold, Bound by chains of my own horrible desire, I’ll be lost in the realm of eternal fire, oh. I danced with the demon's flame, I wanted knowledge, youth, and fame, But the price I paid was high, This is the ruthless lesson I learned, My name is Faust and I will burn.
  24. That sounds like an exciting project! Original melodies can be elusive, but I'm sure yours will shine through with your unique voice as a composer. Keep up the great work!
  25. The clarinet and piano complements one another very well, whether it is the give and take, question or answer, or use of chords and arpeggios for the piano, or runs in the melodies for the Clarinet. the feeling of general ease is well-balanced with the slightly more mysterious phrases. This works nicely as both as a piece in itself, a background music piece or even a programmatic piece. Have you thought of modulating this to A maj or any other key for contrasts?
  26. I found another pop song that never hits the tonic! It's very well known and cycles through the same four chords throughout the whole song LoL! I also noticed that a lot of these songs that I'm posting have very weak harmonic motion. The chords are as follows: ii | IV | vi | V | (in A major) Ultimate Guitar Tab.com claims that this song is in B minor because it starts on the B minor chord - but if so then the song would be considered in Dorian mode - but to me it doesn't sound like it's in Dorian - it sounds like the D major chord in the second bar is definitely a sub-dominant.
  27. Hey there! Today I submit my latest work. I'm not composing much lately but I managed to come up with this being somehow a reflection of thinking about the happy moments lately. It has some similarity with that highly expressive Rachmaninov style, that somehow represent for me really well this type of feelings. I hope you like it!
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