Jared Steven Destro Posted March 9, 2018 Posted March 9, 2018 Here I have a short piano piece that I have termed as a 'pastel,' a term I find to fit well (especially with the heavy sustain and blending used throughout). I have had a particularly difficult time composing solo piano music; and, for this project, I recorded myself improvising. I was happy with the end product, so I transcribed the piece from the audio. Before recording, I had a general idea that I wanted to depict a color, so, to begin, I merely envisioned the color blue, and I played. Like my recent projects, I found a painting by Georgia O'Keeffe -- "Blue, Black, and Grey" (included in the score) -- that I think matches the music well, and that I feel coincides well with my original thought process. Being improvised, it is very much reminiscent of "stream-of-consciousness;" though, while I played I attempted, at least, to follow different melodic, harmonic, and otherwise motivic fragments in mind. Nonetheless, I am interested to hear your thoughts on a relatively unformed area of my compositions. The audio I included is my improvised session, from where the audio was transcribed, and I wanted (as well as I could) to preserve the liberative quality by use of abundant time signature changes, which almost add a moment of pause for the performer (as though they were composing themselves). My ultimate goal is to complete a set of similar pieces, all on my perceptions of different colors. MP3 Play / pause JavaScript is required. 0:00 0:00 volume > next menu Pastel_in_B_minor,_for_piano_-_Blue_Portrait > next PDF Pastel in B minor, for piano - Blue Portrait Quote
Luis Hernández Posted March 9, 2018 Posted March 9, 2018 This is wonderful, I love it in every sense. Even the "dirty" real sounds. Congrats! Quote
Jared Steven Destro Posted March 10, 2018 Author Posted March 10, 2018 14 hours ago, Luis Hernández said: This is wonderful, I love it in every sense. Even the "dirty" real sounds. Congrats! Thanks, I appreciate it! It's far from a high-quality recording, but I didn't think at the time I would transcribe it note-for-note; turns out I did! Quote
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