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Showing content with the highest reputation on 06/19/2026 in all areas

  1. Hello fellow composers! I wanted to share a short piece I wrote called Morning Meadow. This is part of a broader goal I have of writing short, simple pieces. With this one, I was trying to focus on melody, color, and restraint — something peaceful and dreamlike, but still gently expressive. The instrumentation is solo flute, harp, and violin section, with the harp providing a soft arpeggiated texture, the flute carrying the main melody, and the violins entering later with a slow countermelody. I kept the harmony fairly simple and color-focused, and I was more interested in creating a clear atmosphere than building a large dramatic form. I’m happy with how the piece turned out overall, but I’d really appreciate outside ears. I’d love feedback on the composition, orchestration, mockup realism, balance, phrasing, or simply whether the mood comes across the way I intended. Thanks in advance! Morning Meadow - Concert Score Ver1.pdf
  2. A very, very beautiful piece. With a touch of Baroque or galant inspiration, I’d say. It’s brilliant that, with relative simplicity and just a few instruments, you’ve created such a dreamy and nostalgic atmosphere.
  3. Hi everyone, I'm new to this group and am excited to have found the community. I recently began writing original music for concert band. What feedback do you have for me regrading the piece below. My primary goal in writing March of the Fire Brigade is to learn and get better. My students may end up playing it this next school year as well. Thanks for any critiques you can give me! March of the Fire Brigade
  4. Wow!! These are great! I only wished that you posted these separately, as I hope these pieces get the attention they deserve being all together. I love this one, the drama in it is set up nicely with the climax, and the chord colors are wonderful. Great too, I maybe would have made bar 46 twice as long to really set up the cadence. Beautiful in it's simplicity, I like that you spread out the difficulty in the set, letting some be much easier to play than others. It gives a better flow to the pieces as a whole as well. Part of the arpeggios are in the right hand, correct? I would have notated that in the score. I really like the drama in this, and even though it wasn't my favorite theme, you developed this really well. I like the texture change in the middle. Lol mock serious swagger :D This was super fun! The jazziness was a welcome change after the first 4 pieces. What about marking "freely" at bar 27? Do you want the RH rhythms right on the dot? Or is there an improvisatory aspect you're going for? It might be cool to let the player syncopate the rhythms to go with the steady walking bass. I like that this one broke away from the ABA style, I like the evolving part of the form. like an ABAB, textures markings the sections. I really like those ethereal RH figures with the low bass. Awesome fun! Kind of reminded me a bit of Baba Yaga, Mussorgsky piece. The ffffff is kind of excessive, but I'm guessing it's for playback purposes. Loved this one! Much needed after number 8, as overall these preludes are on the heavier side. It sounds sweeter to my ears after the last one. Ended with a bang, the drama is great here! I must say, that overall I really loved the order of this set. Not sure how intentional it is, but it really made listening to this as a set more fun and enjoyable. Your talent is massive, I wish we heard more from you! Life is busy, but I'm glad you find the time to stop by and share what you've been working on. There's some small editing errors, nothing major that jumped out at me (copyright 2025, stuff like that). Your style is right up my alley, and I immensely enjoyed these. Thanks for sharing, friend.
  5. 21st: The Most Innovative Composers In the 21st century, music has become remarkably fragmented compared to previous eras. Yet, as in every age, there are composers who stand out as groundbreaking. Who do you consider the innovative composers of the 21st century? Here are my examples. 1 - Richard D James I consider him to be the greatest composer of the 21st century. His innovativeness has evolved with the times, influencing Mike Paradinas, Tom Jenkinson, Thom Yorke, Björk, and countless others. What deserves particular mention is his use of high-speed, computer-generated rhythms alongside a consistent body of work. From Syro (especially XMAS_EVET10) to Drukqs, and across aliases including AFX and Polygon Window, each release is characterized by detailed sound texture construction. This level of craft places him apart from most contemporary composers. His process of immersion in sound itself appears central to the results. (Related: Tom Jenkinson. Not confined to bass or jazz, he deploys rhythms to develop a distinct style, as heard in his recent Kammerkonzert.) 2 - Georg Friedrich Haas While I am not someone who can analyze and discuss music in a strictly technical sense, starting with In Vain and continuing through subsequent works, there is a distinct originality in how he incorporates conceptual elements — including performance in complete darkness. His style differs from Ligeti's, but the logic of his ideas and his ability to realize them compositionally are notable. 3 - Michael League As producer, leader, and bassist of Snarky Puppy, his compositional work merits attention. He may not belong to the category of historically canonical composers, but tracks such as Somni and The Curtain represent a high level of cross-genre craft. His solo work occupies a distinct space, making use of jazz harmony and a particular tonal quality that is difficult to classify. 4 - Ludwig Göransson Active primarily in film scoring, his work shows consistent originality. Black Panther stands out within his output: rather than simply placing African music within an orchestral, his use of sound reverberation and electronic tones within individual tracks represents a specific compositional decision worth examining. His trajectory outside of film scoring remains an open question. 5 - Ambrose Akinmusire Beyond his work as a trumpet player, his compositional approach is notable for the integration of classical strings and explicit social content. The string writing contributes to a fluid quality in the compositions, and certain rhythmic passages — in combination with the drum writing — share something with Hania Rani's approach. He stands as one of the more genuinely contemporary voices currently active. (These are just my current opinion.) What do you think? Who do you consider to be innovative composers?

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