Jump to content

Recommended Posts

Posted

So I've recently returned home for the summer from school and while I've had a house to myself I've decided to work on a song cycle for orchestra to paint a picture of the different places I've lived. It's generally surface level observation with the 4 places being 1. New York 2. North Dakota 3. Portland and 4. Emma who is the person who always makes me feel at home. New York is a jazzy movement in 12/8, North Dakota is a classic pentatonic melody, Portland is likely going to be more experimental and contemporary, and Emma is just supposed to make you realize how much I love her with each swell. 

 

With that I have started New York, finished North Dakota, and Emma, and am vastly afraid of Portland because it is likely the most complex movement. 

I started this as something to do while waiting for my summer job and now I will be very busy for the next few months so I'm not sure i'll get a chance to finish it soon, but am eager to share what I do have.

PDF
  • Like 1
Posted

Very cool! Is Aaron Copland an inspiration at all? I love the Dvorak New World and Copland Appalachia depictions of the U.S. I've never been to North Dakota, but I've been all over the midwest... I'm sure it's similar in a way 😛 The percussion colors really add a lot to the overall scheme. Cowbells, shakers, stuff that sounds like pans haha... I love it. 

I'm guessing each movement will be a certain "color" right? If I were to be critical of the ND piece, it's that it doesn't have any contrast. But I honestly don't think it needs it if I understand your intentions correctly. 

The Emma movement through me off haha. I expected romantic and love themes, maybe something akin to a Rach piano concerto. But instead, I heard sadness, longing, lost love, melancholy, hope, despair, and probably some other things lol. A very "mature" work in my eyes, focusing on emotional color and intent versus logic and completeness, yet it didn't suffer from either. This is a nice complementary movement that to me goes along with ND nicely. 

You do a great job mixing. Even when the music swells to maximum, I still hear clarity in your voicing instead of muddiness (something I struggle with in orchestra pieces). Whether it's your actual orchestration or mixing technique, I'm unsure which, your music blends well and I think it creates the effects you desire. 

This was great. I always hate to hear that what you posted is incomplete, as I can't fully gauge your music as a whole without the other movements, but from what I've heard this is stand-out-from-a-crowd stuff, and I'm excited to hear your finished product.

Well done, thanks for sharing!

  • Like 1

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Unfortunately, your content contains terms that we do not allow. Please edit your content to remove the highlighted words below.
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

×
×
  • Create New...