April 3, 201115 yr The theme for an upcoming children's film I'm scoring involving pirates and of course, buried treasure... Swashbuckler
April 5, 201115 yr wow nice! totally immersing, i love how you've developed it on about half the piece, you got a fine flow of ideas, and production is pretty nice too, i think those unison flutes and strings were abit too "synthy" but its probably unnoticed with a picture. well done, and welcome to the forums!
April 13, 201114 yr absolutely perfect, the ideas fitted the concept of pirates so well and im looking forward to hearing more, how did u learn to compose like this? and wat notation software and sound libraries are u using???
April 14, 201114 yr Great staccato string sounds. Fun theme. Strong pulse with this one. 0:56 is pretty sweet. I may have been bouncing my head. Nice soft transition at 1:47. The harp sounds hanging over the final chords is a little lame. You should cut that out. Great track, TRK. My only complaint is that the strings sound a little synthetic when they do their runs at 0:10. Other than that, solid! -John
April 15, 201114 yr Are you using a Casio for sounds? I think that I hear every other B-grade- pirate soundtrack in here... why not try something original? Lay off of the quantize button a bit as well and let it breathe, besides the MIDI sounds as well as the hum-drum "swashbuckling" harmonies (nausea) of the past 100+ years of film scoring, it has no "human" feel to it. Back to the proverbial drawing board? Yeah, I think so, maybe just throw in the towel as well...
April 17, 201114 yr I cannot help but hear a LOT and I mean a LOT of Pirates of the caribbean on this one. Especially the beginning. That being said, I think you did a nice job at production, but music wise it seems like a redone PotC score.
April 17, 201114 yr I cannot help but hear a LOT and I mean a LOT of Pirates of the caribbean on this one. Especially the beginning. That being said, I think you did a nice job at production, but music wise it seems like a redone PotC score. I personally heard John Powell, in particular the recent "How To Train Your Dragon".