
Audio exported from MuseScore:
Audio mixed and exported from Dorico (29 Apr 2021):
Audio uploaded to YouTube with cover art and movement names (30 Apr 2021):
Some notes:
Continue reading Symphony No. 1, “The War”Audio exported from MuseScore:
Audio mixed and exported from Dorico (29 Apr 2021):
Audio uploaded to YouTube with cover art and movement names (30 Apr 2021):
Some notes:
Continue reading Symphony No. 1, “The War”I began the final section, the first movement, on 17 Dec 2020.
Continue reading Symphony No. 1 – The cautious walk to the endFinishing up the last movement in the next day or so and knowing that the first movement is the final music that will be written is… confusing. Songs for the rock operas were always dramatically out-of-order, and endings could come before beginnings, but having done it before doesn’t diminish the creative uncertainty. The order of music-to-paper dictates which themes will become themes and so the first melodies written will seed the subsequent sections. My compositions are always dramatically structured–and built off of a general blueprint of sonic techniques–but the musically thematic ground gets laid when the first notes get written.
And yet writing the first movement last means that I can hint at what I know is to come. It can’t be a camp, musical overture type of collage, rather a reverse echo of the future.
Continue reading Symphony No. 1 – From finish to startI’m worried I have strayed from the tonality of last year’s studies (which is what I’ve wanted to do) but have made it all process and not art (which is what I didn’t). The 2nd movement was very deep into process much like what I’d read of Ferneyhough’s technique in Lemma (or any serialists really) and I’ve continued a bit with that approach with the 4th. Is it too much? I am very happy with the mood so far though.