robinjessome Posted November 5, 2010 Posted November 5, 2010 I'm curious to see how other people work, and always find it fascinating to look back at the scraps of paper that evolved into a final piece... How do you do it? Show us your creative process... Here's how I get from point A to point B... ...some of it's a mess, some not so much. It's pretty random, but it makes sense to me, at the time ;) rj-process.pdf PDF rj-process Quote
MiggTorr Posted November 5, 2010 Posted November 5, 2010 Here's how I get from point A to point B... ...some of it's a mess, some not so much. It's pretty random, but it makes sense to me, at the time ;) Haha, wow. I'd love to see the final product. Is this anything you've uploaded yet? Quote
SYS65 Posted November 5, 2010 Posted November 5, 2010 once, I made a swf about how do I compose, where can I upload a swf so you may see it ? (I don't have a host now.) Quote
robinjessome Posted November 5, 2010 Author Posted November 5, 2010 Haha, wow. I'd love to see the final product. Is this anything you've uploaded yet? Nothing yet.... welll...my Vagabond was a product of this, and I think there's bits of what evolved into Tell The Truth in there.... Esentially, that pdf contains a smattering of fragments and notes for the tunes that eventually became the 8 completed tunes that make up my soon-to-be-released-as-yet-untitled debut record... Quote
Morgri Posted November 6, 2010 Posted November 6, 2010 haha, robin, reminds me of looking at Beethoven's sketch books. As soon as I find a scanner I'll shall upload my process. :) Quote
The J Posted November 7, 2010 Posted November 7, 2010 i never got how people write scores, is anyone here actually writes something he hears in his mind before he plays on his instrument? Quote
robinjessome Posted November 7, 2010 Author Posted November 7, 2010 i never got how people write scores, is anyone here actually writes something he hears in his mind before he plays on his instrument? Certainly not me.... What you see there is the result of many rounds: Robin vs. piano. I spent a lot of time (obviously) testing, retooling, developing...usually the piano wins.... Eventually, I win!! Quote
Salemosophy Posted November 11, 2010 Posted November 11, 2010 i never got how people write scores, is anyone here actually writes something he hears in his mind before he plays on his instrument? I do. But it's actually a much slower process (and for me, more enjoyable than randomly sketching ideas I haven't taken time to develop in my mind first). Eternal (see my sig) brewed in my mind for probably 8 months before I ever actually started writing it. I wrote my Time Traveler suite thingie dealio dugamaflachi in almost no time because once I had the core theme, I built off of that, taking snippets of material to generate a working model in my mind of how the piece would actually sound (and it helped that I had something to draw from already in terms of a model/form for the piece)... which all happened with minimal sketching or writing of any sort before I wrote the score. I really do like short-hand scoring, tho. I think it's pretty cool to take a sheet of maybe five or six staff lines (which represent, say, an orchestra) and divvying out ideas to different sections. Ear training helped me learn how to do it, more or less. I'm not sure it's all that helpful, as it is time consuming - even if ideas could just come to you and you be able to work them out independently from a sheet of paper or notation program, it's still "work" that needs doing and takes time. But yeah, I totally do this... a lot! Quote
Violetta Posted November 11, 2010 Posted November 11, 2010 ...Here's how I get from point A to point B... ...some of it's a mess, some not so much. It's pretty random, but it makes sense to me, at the time ;)rj-process.pdf What would you say to such notes then? :P , Lovely, isn't it?) Btw, it's real work:Moritz von Schwind. Die Katzensymphonien, 1868 As for me, i rarely handwrite notes myself, jotting down spontaneous bursts from time to time. but that's it :) Quote
neurotechnics27 Posted December 24, 2010 Posted December 24, 2010 I usually do most of the work in my head first and then put it down on paper (I don't like to notate and transcribe more than once). I also tend to work on multiple music pieces at the same time. I find that when you hit a writing block on one work, usually if you switch gears (and tempos and time signatures and keys and moods) by working on a different piece, you end up making progress on that one and when that one gets blocked it is usually because original writer's block is now open. This way, you are always productive. I can keep track of all this because I have a SATB 4-6 voice staff permanently built into my head. So, I see it like you would on Sibelius 6 or finale. Except, in my head, it's not a visual music staff; It's a kinesthetic one. It's kinda hard to describe. Again, it's a bit like watching the playback on sibelius 6 except I feel the lines and spaces of g clefs and bass f clef kinda like grooves or raises on a surface; And the movement of each note for every voice is like the feel you you drive a manual transmission cars (driving a stick). It's funny, I know, but it works well. And the neat thing is anyone can learn how to built one in there brain. If you want one, I can show you how to make it; I'm a certified Neuro Linguistic Programmer, in addition to a choral composer, so I've actually helped musicians install one inside their heads dozens of times. Anyways, that's kinda my own process. :) :) Quote
SSC Posted December 24, 2010 Posted December 24, 2010 I'm a certified Neuro Linguistic Programmer, in addition to a choral composer, so I've actually helped musicians install one inside their heads dozens of times. For anyone not sure what NLP is, here's some info: http://www.skepdic.com/neurolin.html Tee-hee. Quote
composerorganist Posted December 24, 2010 Posted December 24, 2010 Reminds me of Reiki Practioners. Quote
robinjessome Posted December 24, 2010 Author Posted December 24, 2010 I trust pencil & paper a lot more than any fallible human mind - programmed or otherwise. If it's not written down, it could disappear forever. Quote
jawoodruff Posted December 24, 2010 Posted December 24, 2010 For me it depends on what exactly I'm working on and what techniques I'm using. When I first started dabbling in serialism, I went from taking very little notes and making a few sketches to taking LOTS of notes and writing LOTS of sketches. Generally, I'll come up with a kernel or small motivic idea and then expand upon it in various ways in my head - sometimes writing them out. I'll determine how I want to set, develop, expand, and present the idea. Then I'll just write. Quote
neurotechnics27 Posted December 25, 2010 Posted December 25, 2010 For anyone not sure what NLP is, here's some info: http://www.skepdic.com/neurolin.html Tee-hee. :lol: Ok. So, wait a minute, let me see if I'm understanding this correct. You went to a website of people who, as can be seen from just the web address, natural disbelieve and are cynical about every topic that they post about, to get clear and unbiased information?!? lol. Ok, whatever floats your boat for you. But, that kinda seems like going to the NAZIs for information about the JEWS. Ah, well...... :lol: Quote
SSC Posted December 25, 2010 Posted December 25, 2010 :lol: Ok. So, wait a minute, let me see if I'm understanding this correct. You went to a website of people who, as can be seen from just the web address, natural disbelieve and are cynical about every topic that they post about, to get clear and unbiased information?!? lol. Ok, whatever floats your boat for you. But, that kinda seems like going to the NAZIs for information about the JEWS. Ah, well...... :lol: ... or going to a website that has a track record of being skeptical about pseudo-science, which this clearly is. Honestly, Nazis? GTFO. 1 Quote
jrcramer Posted December 28, 2010 Posted December 28, 2010 I made some pictures. I work rather not-structured. You can call it even messy. The most difficult is creating the transitional sections between the ideas/blocks/sections that are finished. Sketches, and a Matrix Drawing board, trying some rhythmical ideas My desk I My screen - Finale in Ubuntu 1 Quote
SYS65 Posted December 28, 2010 Posted December 28, 2010 Looks like this will be a different way to "show" my process, but I created a swf about it some years ago, I still have the flp, I couldn't find where to upload it so I exported it on photo. in the flash the details appear onmouseove, but here they are: Details 1: Music I hear in my mind or ideas I simply receive. Details 2: Analyzing what sounds good, what sounds bad, how other composers work, and reject the unneeded. Details 3: Filtering things that had been used many times, obvious ideas, and clean good material of very known similarities. Details 4: Pre-Built Material Factory: Building usable material doing combination of content, changing copied stuff :D finding content by pressing the piano keys randomly, playing improvisations, and discovering things accidentally. Details 5: Large Pre-built Material Library: Rhythms, Chords, sequences, tonality strategies, and different kind of materials including all have been used in previous works. Details 6: Start thinking about the character of the work, the possible length, movements yes or no, character of each movement, instrumentation. I created that flash about 5 years ago, so I've changed on my process a little, for instance I should now include the "posting in YC to see how could be improved" ... but more or less, that's my process. I only add that I write directly on Sibelius most of the times, I rarely use paper. Quote
composerorganist Posted December 30, 2010 Posted December 30, 2010 That diagram is a keeper. Non-musicians would love to see that and have a lecture on it. Quote
Ferkungamabooboo Posted December 31, 2010 Posted December 31, 2010 I'm not sure. Of course I'm not knocking anyone's precomposition style, but I don't think a flowchart is the best way to represent my process. I'm so capricious with what interests me and what is the main thrust of the piece that I'll skip, ignore, or double steps if it makes sense... Quote
pliorius Posted December 31, 2010 Posted December 31, 2010 i'm not a 'my' proccess guy. i take each and every woman as she presents itself to me. there can be no proccess for an amateur as a lover. there are only endless encounters, timings and spacings of this relationship. Quote
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