Musicman_3254 Posted December 14 Posted December 14 (edited) Here is my submission: https://musescore.com/user/89049631/scores/29505320/s/jl-md7 And here is the pdf: https://drive.google.com/file/d/1oi66fwxpfjm4bvBB6mYQ9d5GGz-afdB2/view?usp=drivesdk I hope you enjoy it! ( ╹▽╹ ) Edited Saturday at 05:39 AM by Musicman_3254 I have tried to add a few layers but I just remembered right now that a I somehow corrupted this score so no one would try to steal it and I have no idea how to fix it 2 Quote
PeterthePapercomPoser Posted December 14 Posted December 14 Hello @Musicman_3254! Thank you for your submission! Would you please grant us permissions to view the PDF score? Thanks again! 1 Quote
TristanTheTristan Posted December 15 Posted December 15 Nice piece! Some nice use of a 'rare' dissonance. It is definitely inspiring, your effort, that you took to make a 'beethoven symphony 9' sized orchestral work. Choir, Orchestra... 1 Quote
Musicman_3254 Posted December 15 Author Posted December 15 Hi @PeterthePapercomPoser I have made it viewable for anyone! 2 Quote
Henry Ng Tsz Kiu Posted December 20 Posted December 20 Hello @Musicman_3254! Welcome to the forum and thx for joining the Christmas event! That's a really long submission and honestly I only listen to the first few minutes for it haha. It's nice to use an orchestra for it. Base on what I heard, maybe you can add some more layers in the music! Thx for sharing. Henry Quote
chopin Posted Wednesday at 05:03 PM Posted Wednesday at 05:03 PM Listened to the whole piece. This is a very deep composition with various themes and fun styles throughout. This must have taken you awhile to create! Quote
Luis Hernández Posted Thursday at 06:41 PM Posted Thursday at 06:41 PM A work of symphonic proportions. It’s the kind of piece where it’s a shame not to have more realistic sounds, given how colorful it is. Quote
Wieland Handke Posted 1 hour ago Posted 1 hour ago Hello @Musicman_3254, thank you for sharing your contribution. As far as I remember, your piece is dedicated to the fallen soldiers in WWI who decided to stop fighting for a few days at Christmas 1914 and gather to play soccer. I think I read such a description, but I can't find it anymore. Although the mood doesn’t really remind on the peacefulness of Christmas, I think it is a serious choice to present it here and remembering on that what happened 111 years ago, taking into account that the same terrifying things happen again in Europe in the 21st century. Using a special orchestra with all conceivable wind instruments and percussions forecasts somewhat the sound of big bands but is on the other hand an onomatopoeic description of the short period of silence between the fire trenches. In bar 49 I guessed to listen the referee’s whistle. As I mentioned in a post to @TristanTheTristan, I would appreciate if you would also share it as MP3 audio file, too (for the next time). This would make it easier to listen to it several times, which would be absolutely necessary to thoroughly review a piece of this length. Quote
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