I listened by following the Youtube link, where I see that you were born in 1987. This makes you a 21st century composer I suppose; but what do you think is 21st century about this music?
My new piece - Symphonic Suite [WIP]
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Richard Barrett
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Hi Alex
Thanks for sharing your music .
Anybody prepared to pursue composition in an academic envirionment has my respect.
I enjoyed both of the movements.
I have to say that the second had , for me , a rather American feel or sound.I will not be pushed, filed, stamped, indexed, briefed, debriefed or numbered. My life is my own.
I am not a number, I am a free man.
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AlexMc
Originally posted by mercia View Posta 'catchphrase' of the late James Winston Savile, often accompanied by a strange yodelling sound. I won't post a link.
Originally posted by gradus View PostI enjoyed your work. I am afraid that my limited critical powers are not going to help you but I read your intentions as asking for a music lovers' reactions, so albeit briefly I'll try. I thought the first piece a little over-orchestrated with too much going on, although it held me to the end; the second sparer and the more appealing of the two. Like many other music lovers I can't avoid hearing influences whether intended or not but taken as a whole I thought your work didn't sound like anyone else. Recently I've become attached to the sound of the human voice in symphonic music eg VW3Nielsen 3 and I wondered if it might be something you'd considered?
Many thanks for the chance to hear your pieces and the best of luck with your career.
I haven't yet combined voice with symphonic writing but It's something I'd love to do (particularly after hearing Penderecki's 7th symphony) although I'd need a commission for that first most likely..!
Thanks!
Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostUnlike two other posters I don't hear any stylistic connections with Schoenberg or his school, finding no contradictions in the Adorno sense in this music - more a continuation of the English pastoral tradition as extended in his own music by Anthony Payne expecially.
FWIW I think Alex should make the second movement of his symphonic suite the third and compose a contrasting scherzo-type middle movement in the more rhythmically and harmonically challenging manner of the chamber pieces illustrated on the first of the two clips.
I'm working on a third movement which is much more rhythmically complicated (plenty of time-signature changes and the like). I might have to shift the order of the movements around a bit.
Thanks a lot for your input!
Originally posted by Padraig View PostThanks Alex.
I'm not qualified to 'mark' your test piece, but I found it full bodied, if you like, with textures I liked. For example,like BBM I heard those brass sounds which I enjoyed in some 2VS pieces. I was pleasantly surprised by the quality of the sound in light of the 'Noteperformer' you mention. Sorry to be so brief and inexpert. In short, I liked your piece.
PS What is 'wrong' with "guys and gals"?
I'm glad you liked the piece!
Originally posted by ahinton View PostI enjoyed this, too, the inevitable shortcomings of the software notwithstanding. Like S_A, I don't especially hear much 2VS influence here and his idea of a contrasting second movement interspersed between the two to which you've provided links here could indeed be a good one. I hope that you can get it played by a real orchestra once it's completed. How many movements do you envisage altogether?
Originally posted by teamsaint View PostHi Alex
Thanks for sharing your music .
Anybody prepared to pursue composition in an academic envirionment has my respect.
I enjoyed both of the movements.
I have to say that the second had , for me , a rather American feel or sound.
Originally posted by Beef Oven! View PostIt didn't do Rachmaninov much harm.
Anyway, I didn't want to start a discussion about the relevancy of particular styles of music, but just wanted to share something I'd written.
Thanks for your input though.
Oh and I forgot to thank BBM for your input. I wasn't really inspired by the 2nd viennese school, although I have recently been listening to music by a composer who was, and that's George Rochberg. If you get a chance to, listen to his 1st and 2nd symphonies.
Thanks for writing.
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Originally posted by AlexMc View PostIt certainly didn't. And Robert, [I assume you meant Richard? I don't see a Robert...] whether or not my music is truly 21st century or not is not particularly important to me at this stage in my life.
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Originally posted by kea View PostI'm afraid I don't quite understand this attitude—if your composing comes out of your everyday experience/inspiration as opposed to being an academic exercise or retreat into escapism, how can it avoid reflecting the 21st century?
It's not an attitude, it's a statement.
I think it was only a couple of weeks ago or so, that some knob-head was banging on about how welcoming and friendly this forum is!
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Originally posted by Beef Oven! View PostAlexMc said it's not particularly important to him whether or not his music is truly 21C. Surely that is easy to understand.
What do you take "truly 21C" to mean in that case?
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Originally posted by kea View PostBut... one can't write any other kind of music, if one's worldview has actually been formed during the 21st century... perhaps there are some older composers writing "20th century music", but I don't think it's possible to write music from any other time period unless one is a time traveler.
What do you take "truly 21C" to mean in that case?
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Richard Barrett
Originally posted by AlexMc View PostAnd Robert, whether or not my music is truly 21st century or not is not particularly important to me at this stage in my life.
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Originally posted by kea View PostBut... one can't write any other kind of music, if one's worldview has actually been formed during the 21st century... perhaps there are some older composers writing "20th century music", but I don't think it's possible to write music from any other time period unless one is a time traveler.
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Originally posted by kea View PostBut... one can't write any other kind of music, if one's worldview has actually been formed during the 21st century... perhaps there are some older composers writing "20th century music", but I don't think it's possible to write music from any other time period unless one is a time traveler.
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Richard Barrett
Originally posted by Flosshilde View PostA response to RB's question could be that it 'reflects the time' in which it was written because it was written in that time.
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostIt could be, but I would make a difference between something which "reflects" its time, as a symptom so to speak, and something which responds to its time, which takes the stylistic stance that it does through a positive decision rather than by default. This is what I mean by awareness.
Rachmaninov has been mentioned upthread; whilst Stravinsky and others were wont to pour scorn on him as a composer who, having relocated to America, had nothing new to say but continued nevertheless to say it (albeit only from time to time), I don't think that he stagnated during that time; it seems to me that he simply continued to develop in his own way, which might well not have been widely accepted as "of its time" (in either of the above senses) but still represented development for the composer himself (gone, for example, are the big tunes of the time of the second symphony). Just a thought or two...
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Originally posted by ahinton View PostRachmaninov has been mentioned upthread; whilst Stravinsky and others were wont to pour scorn on him as a composer who, having relocated to America, had nothing new to say but continued nevertheless to say it (albeit only from time to time), I don't think that he stagnated during that time; it seems to me that he simply continued to develop in his own way, which might well not have been widely accepted as "of its time" (in either of the above senses) but still represented development for the composer himself (gone, for example, are the big tunes of the time of the second symphony). Just a thought or two...
It is interesting that it is only now that there are composers who adopt the mannerisms of a previous century wholeheartedly and expect to be taken seriously. It is only in the world of Music that this happens - nobody paints in the style of Alma-Tadema, nobody writes plays a la Pinero or novels in the manner of Rudyard Kipling. Quite apart from any individual's work, this is a fascinating aspect of early Twenty-First Century Musical attitudes - perhaps on a different Thread. (But I think Alex might find it useful to consider such points.)[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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