#81
Posted 05 March 2005 - 12:13 AM
#82
Posted 05 March 2005 - 12:30 AM
I like the calm stuff a lot (might be the hour, but I'm digging this anyway). The rest is pretty good too.
I'll come back to this thread tomorrow to listen to some more of the stuff others posted here that I haven't heard yet. I'm starting to really enjoy this thread.
- Marc, off to bed.
#83
Posted 05 March 2005 - 09:45 AM
I love the bond in action -- What sample set is that? It sounds amazing -- Very Hollywood
Thanks very much. I am using a combination of Garritan Orchestral strings and Vienna Symphonic library for brass & woodwind.
What Vienna Symphonic Library package are you using? Opus 1? Also, what sample engine do you use? Native Instruments Kontat, GigaStudio 3? Thanks
#84
Posted 05 March 2005 - 11:57 AM
Does Garritan Personal Orchestra work directly with Sibelius like Kontakt?
jep, it does work fine with Sibelius. But you should have a fast pc and at least 1 Gb Ram. I haven't worked with the EWQL libs. I use Opus 1 from VSL. In combi with some older samples I have (some of them have more expression in the woodwinds and strings then VSL) and the GPO...well, it works.
The whole sampling thing is a work of combination of different soundsets from diff. libs and then layering together.
"The romantic has no coordinates. In time he is yesterday or tomorrow, never today. In place he is there or thence, never here."
Einojuhani Rautavaara
------- COMPOSER -------
www.marcelschweder.com
#85
Posted 05 March 2005 - 12:00 PM
Maybe, you feed too much the reverb on input? I use automation to resolve this problem sometimes.
Thanks for the tip.
Thanks you Fiery Angel.
Forge do you read french?
My french is quite ropey I am afraid.
What Vienna Symphonic Library package are you using? Opus 1? Also, what sample engine do you use? Native Instruments Kontat, GigaStudio 3? Thanks
I am using the Brass & Woodwind Pro Edition. All my samples are played through Gigastudio 3 with instances of gigapulse to provide reverb.
Composer for hire: http://www.heskethmedia.co.uk
#86
Posted 07 March 2005 - 03:27 PM
The working link is:
Helmut and his Plant - Finale
Comments?
#87
Posted 07 March 2005 - 04:35 PM
I like the guitar bit.
#88
Posted 07 March 2005 - 04:43 PM
#89
Posted 07 March 2005 - 06:24 PM
I'm having lots of fun writing the Attack of the Clones Geonosis battle music for the 2005 JWFAN contest. So fun to use those themes.
#90
Posted 07 March 2005 - 10:29 PM
http://www.chrisafon..._finaldraft.mp3
Influences of Bartok and Williams... comments of course appreciated.
#91
Posted 08 March 2005 - 02:05 AM
Daniel Bouwmeester - Compositions
Give them a listen-
Greta
#92
Posted 08 March 2005 - 02:39 AM
#93
Posted 08 March 2005 - 11:56 AM
I just realized I posted a wrong link to one of my pieces (confused some folders).
The working link is:
Helmut and his Plant - Finale
Comments?
I like this piece of music, great lyrical feeling.
#94
Posted 08 March 2005 - 12:51 PM
F.Y.I. - "The Dour Bellringer" - a program
The theme/motive introduced in the piano introduction represents this extremely lonely, depressed and partially insane guy who lives in a belltower and has to ring the bell for a living. He desperately tries to forget about his horrid life by imagining and dreaming away his time, so his theme manifests itself along the way, acting both as a dour reminder of who he really is, and morphed to represent his creativity to pass the time, and whatever characters he might be imagining himself as. Essentially the line between imagination and reality is blurred. You decide whether a particular bar is desperation, or imagined swashbuckling drama. I can only describe the structure of this piece as deliberately plodding, uncertain in direction, occasionally surprising. But the ending is of course back to reality. The tugging of the bell ropes during the course of the six minutes is represented by the twin repeated chords in the left-hand of the piano intro, and wherever that sort of syncopated/off-beat two-note/chord accompaniment manifests itself along the way, as he becomes imaginative.
#95
Posted 08 March 2005 - 03:22 PM
Everything before the guitar rocks on in is SUBLIME, Chris!!! I wish the following snare/percussion part was more authentic lol. Doesn't do it justice. Please extend this baby!
Thanks
Yes, I know, the midi drums are crap. I'm trying to find some good samples for that, or maybe even record a real drumset. There's still much time before the film is finished, so I have enough time to work on the music
One more piece for this film: Music for a Quiet Scene
And this is the demo I made of the theme, so the director could OK it before I started on the complete finale sequence: Helmut Theme (Demo)
Somehow I'm more satiesfied with the "climax" in the middle of the theme here than in the "Finale" recording, I don't know why but there it sounds somewhat thin or something...
---------------------------------
"GLXBLT!" - Hortense McDuck
#96
Posted 08 March 2005 - 03:31 PM
Clint should have hired you. Pfft, self-indulgent old crank. The demo theme also has a beautiful, graceful Eiger Sanction/Missouri Breaks edge. Nice, solid craft you got.
#97
Posted 08 March 2005 - 03:51 PM
But thanks for the comments
I realized those pieces I posted thus far are all more on the intimate side
If anybody wants to listen to some sub-par midi rendition, here is a more full orchestra piece (one mvt. from a longer suite, but so far the only one finished... this project will take MUCH more time)
The Museum of Stolen Memories - The Secret Library
#98
Posted 09 March 2005 - 10:12 PM
Anyway, here's the music: MaxFighter - Title (rejected
#99
Posted 09 March 2005 - 10:40 PM
Marian - who will use the Blue Danube Waltz instead.
#100
Posted 09 March 2005 - 11:21 PM
- Marc, who agrees it might be a bit too depressing of an opening anyhow.
#101
Posted 10 March 2005 - 04:21 AM
#102
Posted 10 March 2005 - 03:12 PM
#103
Posted 10 March 2005 - 03:40 PM
How is "Minsh Cap"? I'm a big fan of the Zelda series, but have never played it (not that I even own a GBA....)
#104
Posted 10 March 2005 - 03:53 PM
If I had the time, I'd try sequencing some of your library music for GPO and EWGold. But I'm working on that Contest music these days. If you give me your file, I can do the beginning at least.
#105
Posted 10 March 2005 - 04:58 PM
(An eclectic sampler list: http://www.brainsand...bowie/bowie.htm
"The Dour Bellringer": http://www.chrisafon..._finaldraft.mp3)
#106
Posted 10 March 2005 - 06:54 PM
My "Over Land and Under Sea" for horn, euphoneum and piano was premiered at Bliss Hall, Youngstown last night. It went pretty well. The performers did a good job and it held together nicely, given that the piece is "quite a blow" for the brass players. One thing that was painfully obvious to me hearing the piece as an audience member for the first time was that the piece is too long! At present it runs at around 19 minutes. The quiet middle section is the prt I need to try and fix before it's next performance on April 1st (April Fool's day! How about that?
PS Greta, thanks for your kind PM, I will reply asap.
#107
Posted 10 March 2005 - 07:57 PM
#108
Posted 10 March 2005 - 11:52 PM
#109
Posted 11 March 2005 - 12:03 AM
Thanks Smile
How is "Minsh Cap"? I'm a big fan of the Zelda series, but have never played it (not that I even own a GBA....)
Minish Cap is typical Zelda. That's great, of course, but let me stress the typical. In other words, it's getting a little old. The music is part reused, part new...pretty cool stuff, though Koji Kondo didn't write it.
#110
Posted 11 March 2005 - 01:09 AM
#111
Posted 11 March 2005 - 02:07 AM
#112
Posted 11 March 2005 - 03:07 AM
Well the piece is mostly in dorian mode, and with the bassoon playing the melody at the start, one of my teachers said it was similar to Bartok, and he is quite an influential composer... but yeah it's mostly Williams, but didn't steal anything. Actually, I developed a melody based around the "B theme" of E.T. and Me (where the harp/strings do that up-tempo dance bit), and the 3:30 section onwards has roots in Adventure on Earth. The oompah section was meant to be a surprise, sort of evolving quickly out of what happened before, depicting the insane, depressed Bellringer, but I guess it still shouldn't be too jarring.Nice piece Bowie! Your harmonic language is convincing and the melodic material works well within your style. I couldn't hear any Bartok however (?). Definitely some film-score inspirations, which is no bad thing. Especially in the large piano bookends. Also some lovely transitions. My only criticism is that you might develop (or rethink) your ideas a little more, especially in the middle sections. It seems that no sooner have we entered a new section then we are moving on again. I'm not talking about the melody here (which is developed nicely), but rather the backing styles. The oompah section around 2.30-3.30 doesn't seem to go anywhre and seems a little out of place. Immediately after this however there is a lovely harmonic transition back to the reappearance of the piano! From here to the end is gorgeous. Keep writing for heaven's sake!!! You don't need criticism or praise from others to hear the merits in your own music. Be confident!!!
Thanks for taking the time to listen and grasp the piece... I know there are merits in my music, but I also know there are problems and it's hard to hear them if you don't know what you would hear as a pure listener. But I get disappointed when someone seems unsincerely all-praise (I know I've been uncruelly positive about someone else's mediocre or terrible work before, though noone in this thread, in fact, everyone else here has a shockingly better ability than me, especially in the more expressive, beautiful music), or of course when comments are brief and unhelpful.
#113
Posted 11 March 2005 - 03:10 AM
Lots of better game composers and NO I dont mean just Michael Giaccino.
Yasunori Mitsuda's music and Nobuo Uematsu's music for games is far better IMO.
#114
Posted 11 March 2005 - 03:37 AM
Thanks for taking the time to listen and grasp the piece... I know there are merits in my music, but I also know there are problems and it's hard to hear them if you don't know what you would hear as a pure listener. But I get disappointed when someone seems unsincerely all-praise (I know I've been uncruelly positive about someone else's mediocre or terrible work before, though noone in this thread, in fact, everyone else here has a shockingly better ability than me, especially in the more expressive, beautiful music), or of course when comments are brief and unhelpful.
What do you mean by "Everyone else here has a shockingly better ability than me"? Don't mistake having a nice set of playback sounds for ability! I've generally been impressed with all the music I've heard by composers at this site (especially Jeshop) and I find your own to be comparably impressive. Plus yours is a complete piece with a well-developed theme and a real sense of conclusion thanks to the well executed return of the opening material.
As for the Oompah section (! it now has an affectionate name!
#115
Posted 11 March 2005 - 05:06 AM
They have orchestras at their disposal, do they not? Zelda is yet to convert to acoustics, but when it does (and from what I've heard it will be quite soon) it'll blow everyone's socks off.Yasunori Mitsuda's music and Nobuo Uematsu's music for games is far better IMO.
#116
Posted 11 March 2005 - 01:09 PM
Oh my, we're getting off topic...
Bowie, listened to all your pieces, really nice stuff in there! I liked that RotS Finale you wrote, though I find it a bit unfocused inplaces... perhaps that's just from subconsciously comparing it to Williams, who would've (or has
#117
Posted 11 March 2005 - 02:43 PM
#118
Posted 11 March 2005 - 02:54 PM
Hehe, yeah I tried to achieve as many themes as I could in the one piece, including my own, which John would not do. Here's a rundown though of what goes on in the Revenge of the Sith piece:
0:00-0:29 = my own "Hopeless theme" for the unsettling quiet of the galaxy after all the murders etc, based on Darth Vader's theme (ie, three repeated notes, and the fragment at 0:21) as well as a hint of Yoda's Theme at 0:16;
0:29-0:54 = Han Solo and the Princess in the horns, over the top of a more fully harmonised progression of my Hopeless theme;
0:54-1:18 = piccolo mixes HS&P theme with Leia's original theme, ending with that Darth Vader fragment;
1:19-1:37 = quiet, again, as the desolate lower register of the flute plays the Hopeless theme, and it ends with a minor quote of Luke's theme in the violins;
1:37-1:52 = Duel of the Fates theme is built up to a march. I tried to aurally clarify the quasi-palindrome between Luke's and Duel's themes;
1:52-2:04 = The Rebel Fanfare (rhythm, contour) meets The Imperial March (modality, march, that three-note fragment at 1:55), resulting in a Luke's Theme fragment at 1:58, which is imitated by the strings and glock. Luke's Theme is built up to result in Across the Stars...
2:04-2:20 = Essentially the same section, with a more obvious Across the Stars addition, again resulting in Luke's Theme in minor;
2:20-2:28 = This is the C theme of Across the Stars (the one rehashed from A.I. and CMIYC), underneath woodwind quotes of the Duel theme fragment;
2:28-2:36 = The brass/horns emerge with the Across the Stars B theme (with the descending triplet added to the rhythm), canonically imitated by the strings with quotes of Luke's theme/Across the Stars, desperately reaching upwards. Note the introduction of the choir, and the Duel theme fragment takes over underneath on the woodblock;
2:36-2:50 = A transition section, with the trumpet further developing the Luke/AtS juxtaposition, against a rather lethargic, descending bass line. A mysterious quote of Darth Vader occurs in the island flutes. Mid-strings reprise the Rebel Fanfare/Imperial phrase from before;
2:50-3:03 = The Force theme is pronounced at a semitonal rise in key, and with developed rhythmic and melodic contour, essentially modifying the ends of phrases with the descending triplet motive of Luke/AtS/Duel themes (2:56-8). The second phrase (3:02) is accompanied by upper woodwinds contributing amalgamations of the Force theme, Duel and Luke's theme;
3:03-3:10 = The low/island flute from the beginning concludes the full Force theme statement in, again, a stripped down fashion depicting quiet and calm amid frenzy;
3:10-3:50 = It continues with the Force theme again, to which the horns/glock respond with three varied quotes and fragments of Luke's theme. The sentence ends with three Duel quotes, and two intertwined quotes of Across the Stars, and an accented descending triplet in the celli, depicting the succumbing to the dark side;
3:50-3:58 = The flute reminds us of the eery woodwind accompaniment to the Imperial March, dotted by a quote of the March in the bass. Similarities are drawn between this and the Hopeless theme to follow:
3:58-4:14 = The Hopeless theme has new string harmonisation.
4:14-4:30 = The above section is repeated, and Yoda's Theme - in the horn - fits snugly over the top, building to a crescendo, with two string tutti strokes of the major third Vader theme fragment.
4:30-4:47 = Yoda's Theme in the trumpet dances to the rhythm and contour of the Imperial March, which rumbles to a climax incorporating that Imperial March accompaniment figure.
4:48-5:06 = Solitude again, as the trumpet sort of wanders back into the shape of the Imperial March, no longer heroicly Yodaish. This is above a string rendition of Across the Stars. The Imperial March and Luke's Theme mingle with two soloists: flute and double bass.
5:06-end = The Emperor's Theme, slightly varied chord-progression-wise, and spotted with Imperial quotations. It ends with Yoda going into hybernation near the Magic Tree, so quotes represent this, solemnified by more Imperial quotes. A trumpet run leads into the End Credits themes... This, by the way, was written just before I learnt who actually is last seen walking off into the distance at the end of the film, ie, C3PO.
#119
Posted 11 March 2005 - 03:01 PM
#120
Posted 11 March 2005 - 03:15 PM
Whoa, yeah, great RotS finale! I guess I'm biased to anything with SW themes in it, but nice, very nice!
I'm glad you like the use of SW themes!
Hmm...nice use of themes...maybe overuse, though? I mean, that's pretty much themes nonstop with no space for nonthematic music; I think the symbolism and stuff is a little over-the-top.
I'm sorry you disliked the use of SW themes!
Bowie - who realises it was the same person
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