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Showing content with the highest reputation since 04/26/2024 in Posts

  1. Hi! @arpeggia. I really enjoyed this piece too! the chromaticism, dissonance, the use of accents which makes it sound as if the strong and weak beats subverts what is typical of a waltz, yet still stay consistent enough to be easily recognizable as a waltz, which makes it a very interesting and engaging! A lot of drama within a short span of around one and a half minutes. Well Done! I agree with @PeterthePapercomPoser that would be a good extension if you want, a middle, contrasting part to what already is there. Thks for sharing!
    2 points
  2. Hello @arpeggia! I really like this piece! To me, I don't see a problem with the title as I think it really fits the pathos of the piece - I would also describe it as perhaps "demented". I think for a piece with only one main section it still manages to stay interesting and create contrast with changes in dynamics and how you subdivide the beat. If you ever think of extending the piece I think it could work as an ABA form with the B section as maybe a slower and more eerie waltz in another key. I can definitely imagine that. Thanks for sharing this really enjoyable demented dance!
    2 points
  3. Hi, it was a bit of a challenge to categorize your style/work: impressionist - minimalist; however, I agree with the above insight as pointillist. I wonder what was your idea/purpose in integrating the choral work? By the way the orchestra has a wonderful texture/color. Mark
    2 points
  4. Hi all of you, I come back with this little steal to submit to you. The text is a dialogue, in this form of popular speech of the beginning of the century (last)... I wanted to make this alternation between the woman's love exaltation (With the complicity of the church organ) and the squeaky violence going crescendo of the man, while evoking the turn of a street song.In the end, we will hear the organ of barbarism to which the last word belongs... I sing the vocal line, which is not simple... Thanks !
    1 point
  5. Thank you! I really do appreciate your words. I actually am still working on the sadness and sorrow prompt. I have an idea with a different tonal system in mind, but I've been struggling to find the balance between sadness and tonality. I find the prompt words of sadness and depressed to be quite specific, with the picture in my head to be sort of empty, with a disheartening melody. Finding this melody has been the challenge for me lately. So I'm taking so time to find examples that complete the picture in my head. So far the most similar compositions to what I'm imagining are atonal works be Webern, and more minimalistic expressionists. This is a very different style than what I wright so finding the sweet spot has been a challenge. It may take me some time to complete the prompt I believe.
    1 point
  6. Thank you very much. After reading yours and @MJFOBOE comment, I am going to study/listen to some music that is overtly pointillistic music so that I can immerse myself in that style more purposefully. Yes, the gospel choir joins right at the end. It was not planned beforehand. The idea just came to me at that moment. I could hear Amazing Grace in my head - and I did not not want to ignore what I could hear just because it wouldn't make immediate logical sense. If it came into my mind whilst composing, then I trust that it makes sense, somehow. Indeed, that they connect by being in the same key is merely a coincidence. If the two sections were in different keys, I would still be ok with it. "mostly quite enjoyable" makes me smile. (hopefully there is an added emphasis on the 'mostly!').
    1 point
  7. MP3 Play / pause Butterfly Net - Caroline Polachek 1:11 4:46 volume > next menu Butterfly Net - Caroline Polachek > next PDF Butterfly Net - Caroline Polachek That's a very lovely work.
    1 point
  8. Hey guys, a couple weeks ago I posted a study called "luscious" for string orchestra. Today I have it here as an expanded piece. The beginning is nearly the same, expect with an accelerando in the A'' section, so that when the A'' section appears at the end, it has more impact. There are many pieces of advice taken from others, importantly modulation. frankly, these are not fabulous examples of the modulation you have been asking for, as they don't don't happen on the climaxes of melodies, which does not come to me naturally. I'm working on another exercise which will hopefully do that in a convincing manner, however this was more of a brain itch than an effort to improve.
    1 point
  9. Thank you for giving it a listen and describing what you liked about it. It seems like you understood and appreciated my piece the most at the parts I also cared the most about. Thank you for listening! I appreciate your feedback from before, helping me get this piece right.
    1 point
  10. Hello @Aw Ke Shen! This piece held my interest much more consistently and really took the idea of repetition with variation to heart. I'm glad you're taking this avenue in your development and I'm enjoying it very much! I think there is still a spot where you sequence a certain figuration by walking up the scale step by step - for me that was still a bit predictable. But there are styles of music where more repetition or sequencing is expected such as minimalism. And there's ways of making that work if you want to explore that. Btw - I loved the canonic imitation between the right and left hands - a great example of repetition that enriches the listening experience because of a shift in the metric placement of the material. Thanks for sharing!
    1 point
  11. I wrote this back in June 2012 while playing around with dissonant and chromatic tones. This was one of the few pieces that had a dedicated title (I called it "horrible" at the time and just stuck with it). I largely forgot about this until early this year, when I revisited my list of unfinished compositions and discovered that I had already finished this one. I went ahead and revised it (the original was completely unplayable and I had to tone it down, with some refinements of course), and decided to share it with you guys. I hope you enjoy it!
    1 point
  12. I agree on both counts. It does seem like 6/8 is a better fit. And, overall, it does seem to me that there are a lot of things that don't seem to come up again. That doesn't go very much with the style of the work. One thing I think you have to watch out for is the textural changes. Suddenly there are two-voice chords, suddenly there are 4 or 5.... You can do all that but I think it requires some kind of preparation.
    1 point
  13. Here's another scherzo for y'all's - Brahms Scherzo in Eb minor Op. 4:
    1 point
  14. Firstly, the audio rendering is superb and the orchestration engaging. You created a wonderful musical space to sit in and be. As for the which composers influence you ... I personally hear the late romantics as they move into the 20th century. Yes, a bit of Mahler towards the climax of the work as well as others in that specific time reference. Mark
    1 point
  15. Totally! You may use my piece in any way to help create an educational video.
    1 point
  16. I've been reading Kent Kennan's Counterpoint book. But besides that I decided to re-read "The Music Lesson - A Spritual Search for Growth through Music" by Victor L. Wooten. Victor Wooten is hailed as "the Carlos Castaneda of music." Here are a few fragments from the beginning of the book: If you've gotten this far, thanks for reading!
    1 point
  17. Hi @Symphonic! Very cool - pointillistic sometimes. There is definitely a recurring theme to this although it was quite unusual and disjointed. Or at least very fragmented/dissolute. I like also all the polyrhythms going at different rates. I was going to say - "but where's the gospel choir?" LoL But is this your own arrangement of Amazing Grace or a performance of someone else's arrangement? Either way the performance is quite good! You also don't really explain how the Palette piece is supposed to be connected/related to the Amazing Grace song. At the point at which they connect they're in the same key - at least that much is audible though. Overall this was mostly quite enjoyable! There were a few spots where I felt like you kept me as the listener waiting for something though. But other than that it was great! Thanks for sharing.
    1 point
  18. liked it very much. the only thing I hate is the mechanical computer-generated playback
    1 point
  19. I have a silly suggestion, but I guess this may work. You can download the song as an mp3 file using Youtube premium maybe.
    1 point
  20. Hey there First off, what a cool song 😄 I've never heard it before, but there was a lot of neat percussion stuff going on, like banging on things in the kitchen. She's got a great voice too. Nice mode mixture stuff, EDM effects in the bass, it's all great. Ever get the melody to work for the mp3? I use Sibelius unfortunately. What if you just copied the notes into a new file or something? I'm sure it's just a weird bug. What you have seems promising though. Looks like you emulated the guitar rhythm nicely with the string accompaniment. All the transcribing you did looks spot on
    1 point
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