Well, I guess a great place to start,
(which is primarily for my non-classical music)
www.capeditiea.zenseiderz.org (http://www.capeditiea.zenseiderz.org)
*nods,
as time passes i shall post later works.
:3 i am currently working on String Quartet No. 3 in G Minor
Tell us more about your quartet-in-progress!
Quote from: k a rl h e nn i ng on September 02, 2018, 10:10:59 AM
Tell us more about your quartet-in-progress!
I: Larghissimo Accelerando Allegro ma con magico; is in sonata form
the theme is three notes. G-G#-Gb (among variations of similar stature.)
exposition is a strange one instead of a direct repeat the first three measures is to be played very slow the next four are to be played a bit faster any where from 1.5X-2X the starting tempo. then those measures are played again with some minor changes, a few notes augmented and played at about 1.25-1.5X from measures 4-7.
which then the development of the movement. (which is similar to an arguement between four people. i am basing this off my family life. almost the opposite of Strauss' Domestica Sinfonia is. (which i learned about this piece earlier this morning from a friend in another forum.) It is clearly the gnashing of teeth.
and then the recap with shifted dynamics.
i am still working on the development.
II: Scherzo: Allegro (this is technically the fastest movement.)
it will be in Bb Major. i have no idea what to do based the composition yet.
III: Lento
in G Minor
IV: Adagio
in D Minor
(as you can probably tell via the keys they are in, upon how it is gonna turn out.)
---edited due to a mistake theme. (it was originally stating G-A#-Gb...)
This composers work is amazing
:3 i was waiting for my first symphony to be published upon the site i use to publish music. :3
so here is the site for the scores. :3
https://capeditiea.musicaneo.com/ (https://capeditiea.musicaneo.com/)
*nods,
then this is a poor recording of me playing the piano, back in 2015... an improv.
https://soundcloud.com/moistica-capeditiea/piano-madness (https://soundcloud.com/moistica-capeditiea/piano-madness)
and finally the most strange composition any one will ever hear... hopefully. (all through Musescore.)
https://soundcloud.com/e-s-capeditiea/sets/the-capeditiean-epoch (https://soundcloud.com/e-s-capeditiea/sets/the-capeditiean-epoch)
:D i will start a new epoch. *nods,
Nice
Quote from: Capeditiea on September 04, 2018, 05:54:32 AM
and finally the most strange composition any one will ever hear... hopefully. (all through Musescore.)
Not strange at all! 8) Are you self-taught?
Quote from: Cato on September 06, 2018, 03:54:11 AM
Not strange at all! 8) Are you self-taught?
i am self taught. :D
i also enjoy getting pointers if i make mistakes from score writing. sometimes i see them... long after publishing the work. :O like typoes or something. or ending up using the incorrect key... out of a sudden change in key. i have to change one that i accidently put as the nineteenth movement when it was really the eighteen. which i found out recently. i will have to republish it. when i have the ambition to change it. which means i would go back and change any mistakes.
*nods, i am not sure if i should take the "not strange at all" as a compliment or a challenge to make something even more strange... are there any composers who use Harpsichord, Organ, Piano, Vibraphone, Violin, Viola, Cello and Doublebass? :O if there is an Octet based off of these instruments that would be fascinating. :D
Quote from: Capeditiea on September 06, 2018, 09:13:55 AM
... are there any composers who use Harpsichord, Organ, Piano, Vibraphone, Violin, Viola, Cello and Doublebass? :O
I like it. I'll write one 0:)
Quote from: k a rl h e nn i ng on September 06, 2018, 09:38:07 AM
I like it. I'll write one 0:)
:D so does this mean a new genre is born? :O
And what a bloom!
Quote from: Capeditiea on September 06, 2018, 09:13:55 AM
I am self taught. :D
*nods, i am not sure if i should take the "not strange at all" as a compliment or a challenge to make something even more strange... are there any composers who use Harpsichord, Organ, Piano, Vibraphone, Violin, Viola, Cello and Doublebass? :O if there is an Octet based off of these instruments that would be fascinating. :D
First, I will give you the advice that
Alexander Tcherepnin gave to me, viz. listen to and study as much music as possible, especially music which might not interest you very much at first.
Second, exactly how have you taught yourself? With e.g.
Joseph Fux's Gradus ad Parnassum,
Arnold Schoenberg's Harmonielehre,
Walter Piston's books,
Rimsky-Korsakov's book on orchestration, etc.?
More arcane or just rarer things include:
The NDM Principle of Relative Music by
Avenir de Monfred,
Modus Lascivus by
Tibor Serly,
Harry Partch's The Genesis of a Music, or
Busoni's Sketch of a New Aesthetic of Music.
Quote from: Capeditiea on September 06, 2018, 09:13:55 AM
*nods, i am not sure if i should take the "not strange at all" as a compliment or a challenge to make something even more strange...
:D The comment was simply that I did not find it strange at all!
Listen to these: 8) ???
https://www.youtube.com/v/5N8O-iJ0uTw
https://www.youtube.com/v/GhoNIVjt8H0
Quote from: Cato on September 06, 2018, 10:48:14 AM
First, I will give you the advice that Alexander Tcherepnin gave to me, viz. listen to and study as much music as possible, especially music which might not interest you very much at first.
Second, exactly how have you taught yourself? With e.g. Joseph Fux's Gradus ad Parnassum, Arnold Schoenberg's Harmonielehre, Walter Piston's books, Rimsky-Korsakov's book on orchestration, etc.?
More arcane or just rarer things include: The NDM Principle of Relative Music by Avenir de Monfred, Modus Lascivus by Tibor Serly, Harry Partch's The Genesis of a Music, or Busoni's Sketch of a New Aesthetic of Music.
:D The comment was simply that I did not find it strange at all!
Listen to these: 8) ???
https://www.youtube.com/v/5N8O-iJ0uTw
https://www.youtube.com/v/GhoNIVjt8H0
the links couldn't be found.
I listen to a lot of music of many genres. However, my personal preference is always changing, (i am currently on a Baroque Romantic binge.
(i have read a few things online, i tend to pick up more from experience than books, i want to obtain a few books. :D (i shall make a list upon books i shall obtain.) :3 i have been (slowly) reading a book about the Biography of Sorabji, along with (slowly) reading "Music and Performance in the Later Middle Ages." By Elizabeth Randell Upton. But this is as far as i have got, beyond various wikipedia things, and articles. (also a few other sites based solely for learning Music Theory.)
But most of my compositions are based primarily from over a thousand songs i have composed in almost 9 years. (although most have been lost or intentionally deleted but the bulk of them from 2012-2017.)
for a more condensed version,
i learn from listening to a lot of various music intently, practice of composing, and studying more from previous masters of music since many have shown me how much more i can do. :D
Quote from: Capeditiea on September 06, 2018, 11:12:53 AM
the links couldn't be found.
I listen to a lot of music of many genres. However, my personal preference is always changing, (i am currently on a Baroque Romantic binge.
(i have read a few things online, i tend to pick up more from experience than books, i want to obtain a few books. :D (i shall make a list upon books i shall obtain.) :3 i have been (slowly) reading a book about the Biography of Sorabji, along with (slowly) reading "Music and Performance in the Later Middle Ages." By Elizabeth Randell Upton. But this is as far as i have got, beyond various wikipedia things, and articles. (also a few other sites based solely for learning Music Theory.)
But most of my compositions are based primarily from over a thousand songs i have composed in almost 9 years. (although most have been lost or intentionally deleted but the bulk of them from 2012-2017.)
for a more condensed version,
i learn from listening to a lot of various music intently, practice of composing, and studying more from previous masters of music since many have shown me how much more i can do. :D
Odd: the links are still working, as I just clicked on them above. Perhaps your computer is blocking them? You can always look them up on YouTube directly:
Ivan Wyschnegradsky Cosmos, and
Mass for Pope John XXIII, the Kyrie, by
Julian Carrillo.Sorabji is one of the good ones! Have you followed e.g. the sonatas of
Beethoven, or
Scriabin? For songs study the
Lieder of
Schubert, especially
Die Winterreise, or the songs of of
Mahler or of
Zemlinsky. The arias from the great operas would be another source for study.
Quote from: Cato on September 06, 2018, 12:24:17 PM
Odd: the links are still working, as I just clicked on them above. Perhaps your computer is blocking them? You can always look them up on YouTube directly: Ivan Wyschnegradsky Cosmos, and Mass for Pope John XXIII, the Kyrie, by Julian Carrillo.
Sorabji is one of the good ones! Have you followed e.g. the sonatas of Beethoven, or Scriabin? For songs study the Lieder of Schubert, especially Die Winterreise, or the songs of of Mahler or of Zemlinsky. The arias from the great operas would be another source for study.
I have Wyschnegradsky's Cosmos and 2E2M collection. :3 (i will revisit them.)
I will have to fetch Carrillo. I am guess a Renaissance composer? Perhaps Medieval?
I only know Sonata No. 14 by Beethoven, i have been trying to find all his Sonatas. (i have his 16 Quartets, and Gross Fuge.)
Only stuff i have from Scriabin is his symphonies. (but i will fetch his Sonatas as well.
Schubert is one i am prone to have issues with wanting to listen to. (although i know he has composed some really good music. i end up with mental images of Sorbet while thinking of him...) but i will fetch them.
I have Mahler's Song of the Wayfinder along with his Symphonies. (i like his symphonic works but Songs of the Wayfinder was way do odd of a feeling from him.)
I have not heard of Zemlinsky until now. :O
I got a lot of inspiration from Carl Maria von Weber's Oberon.
*nods, i find that Sorabji has a lot of similarities to me. :D in both writing and in reclusiveness. (although my reasons are a bit different than his.)
it is strange though how the youtube thing doesn't work on GMG, however i do see other sites that post youtube videos to be working... :O
Here is a link to
Zemlinsky's 6 Orchesterlieder: listen especially to the first song! Masterpiece!
Scriabin is the ancestor musically for
Wyschnegradsky, so besides
Beethoven's 32 Piano Sonatas, you would do well to become acquainted with
Scriabin's 10 sonatas.
Quote I guess I am a Renaissance composer? Perhaps Medieval?
Those are questions you will need to answer for yourself! 8)
Quote from: Cato on September 06, 2018, 02:05:06 PM
Here is a link to Zemlinsky's 6 Orchesterlieder: listen especially to the first song! Masterpiece!
Scriabin is the ancestor musically for Wyschnegradsky, so besides Beethoven's 32 Piano Sonatas, you would do well to become acquainted with Scriabin's 10 sonatas.
Those are questions you will need to answer for yourself! 8)
:O i typoed. :O i meant
I am guessing *nods
i don't know how i neglected to type the "ing"...
i have found out that Carrillo is Modern/Contemporary. *nods
Quote from: Capeditiea on September 06, 2018, 02:20:26 PM
i have found out that Carrillo is Modern/Contemporary. *nods
Yes, he was very interested in new harmonies from microtonal scales. Listen to his
Christopher Columbus Prelude, and I think you will agree that
Carrillo shows the potential of a quarter-tone scale. The work is rather spare and mysterious, without a great number of xenharmonic chords, but those which do appear are exquisite.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lOihGnn6HoE (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lOihGnn6HoE)
Quote from: Cato on September 06, 2018, 02:30:28 PM
Yes, he was very interested in new harmonies from microtonal scales. Listen to his Christopher Columbus Prelude, and I think you will agree that Carrillo shows the potential of a quarter-tone scale. The work is rather spare and mysterious, without a great number of xenharmonic chords, but those which do appear are exquisite.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lOihGnn6HoE (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lOihGnn6HoE)
:O Corrillo is a gem. :D
---edited for mispelling Corrillo... :O
Nothing wrong with not being strange.
Nor, with being strange, per se. Each of us is a stranger to certain others.
:D so here's an Omni-Genre project i am working on... :3
https://soundcloud.com/e-s-capeditiea/anal-period-overture (https://soundcloud.com/e-s-capeditiea/anal-period-overture)