Originally posted by Dave2002
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What Are You Practising / Composing Now?
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Originally posted by RichardB View PostYou seem very confused. There are electric guitars and there are acoustic guitars. Electric guitars have magnetic pickups, acoustic guitars don't. Acoustic guitars come in various varieties: baroque guitars, classical (or "Spanish") guitars, 10-string classical guitars, folk guitars, resonator guitars etc. etc. which differ in aspects like the material the strings are made of, the material and size of the body, and so on. People who play classical guitar music play it on classical guitars, I guess the clue is in the name.
So who plays an acoustic guitar which is not classical? Fok singers perhaps? Some pop musicians - though most probably play electric guitars?
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Originally posted by Dave2002 View PostTo me acoustic meant - "not electric"
Originally posted by Dave2002 View PostElectric means with some form of transducer, plus amplification.
Originally posted by Dave2002 View PostSo who plays an acoustic guitar which is not classical?
Of course you could have looked all this up on the so-called "internet" in a couple of minutes.
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Originally posted by Dave2002 View PostNo - not really confused - or I wasn't until I looked this up. To me acoustic meant - "not electric" - but I didn't realise that there are acoustic guitars which are not the same as classical/Spanish guitars. Electric means with some form of transducer, plus amplification.
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Just exploring Nestup, for generating rhythm patterns.
See https://nestup.cutelab.nyc/
Experiment, but do also look at the cheat sheet page at https://github.com/cutelabnyc/nested-tuplets
It'll only generate four tracks from the web page, but to get more simply run it several times and merge the resulting files.
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I've been working a bit "feverishly" for the last couple of days to get something finished - the electronic parts to a new work for solo performer (violin, voice, movement) whose score was finished a while ago and which is having its first performance in Paris early next month. I had two reasons for speeding up: firstly, the concert is coming up quite soon; secondly my OH tested positive yesterday and isn't feeling well so I thought I had better get this stuff finished before I almost inevitably get this virus too. Luckily I don't have too stressful a week coming up, nothing that can't be easily postponed.
Apart from being a new departure in terms of composing three seldom combined kinds of activity into the same piece, it's the seventh instalment to have been completed so far of a series of sixteen based on a cycle of poems written for me by our late friend Simon Howard. The sixteen are grouped into four "acts", in each of which four of them are interleaved in various ways. Act 3 is a 32-minute composition for an ensemble of sixteen instrumentalists (one of whom is also a vocalist) which was premiered by the Musikfabrik ensemble in Cologne in 2017; of the two completed components of act 4, only one (a duo for horn and percussion) has been performed so far; the other (a solo for basset horn) was written last year. Act 2 is in progress for the French ensemble soundinitiative, whose violinist Winnie Huang will be playing the new solo; act 1 is in progress for the Chicago-based Fonema Consort. With luck it might all be finished late next year by which time it will have been ten years since Simon departed this world.
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Originally posted by RichardB View PostI've been working a bit "feverishly" for the last couple of days to get something finished - the electronic parts to a new work for solo performer (violin, voice, movement) whose score was finished a while ago and which is having its first performance in Paris early next month. I had two reasons for speeding up: firstly, the concert is coming up quite soon; secondly my OH tested positive yesterday and isn't feeling well so I thought I had better get this stuff finished before I almost inevitably get this virus too. Luckily I don't have too stressful a week coming up, nothing that can't be easily postponed.
Apart from being a new departure in terms of composing three seldom combined kinds of activity into the same piece, it's the seventh instalment to have been completed so far of a series of sixteen based on a cycle of poems written for me by our late friend Simon Howard. The sixteen are grouped into four "acts", in each of which four of them are interleaved in various ways. Act 3 is a 32-minute composition for an ensemble of sixteen instrumentalists (one of whom is also a vocalist) which was premiered by the Musikfabrik ensemble in Cologne in 2017; of the two completed components of act 4, only one (a duo for horn and percussion) has been performed so far; the other (a solo for basset horn) was written last year. Act 2 is in progress for the French ensemble soundinitiative, whose violinist Winnie Huang will be playing the new solo; act 1 is in progress for the Chicago-based Fonema Consort. With luck it might all be finished late next year by which time it will have been ten years since Simon departed this world.
And your Howard cycle sounds very interesting. Here's hoping it's released on CD one day...
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Originally posted by RichardB View PostI've been working a bit "feverishly" for the last couple of days to get something finished - the electronic parts to a new work for solo performer (violin, voice, movement) whose score was finished a while ago and which is having its first performance in Paris early next month. I had two reasons for speeding up: firstly, the concert is coming up quite soon; secondly my OH tested positive yesterday and isn't feeling well so I thought I had better get this stuff finished before I almost inevitably get this virus too. Luckily I don't have too stressful a week coming up, nothing that can't be easily postponed.
Apart from being a new departure in terms of composing three seldom combined kinds of activity into the same piece, it's the seventh instalment to have been completed so far of a series of sixteen based on a cycle of poems written for me by our late friend Simon Howard. The sixteen are grouped into four "acts", in each of which four of them are interleaved in various ways. Act 3 is a 32-minute composition for an ensemble of sixteen instrumentalists (one of whom is also a vocalist) which was premiered by the Musikfabrik ensemble in Cologne in 2017; of the two completed components of act 4, only one (a duo for horn and percussion) has been performed so far; the other (a solo for basset horn) was written last year. Act 2 is in progress for the French ensemble soundinitiative, whose violinist Winnie Huang will be playing the new solo; act 1 is in progress for the Chicago-based Fonema Consort. With luck it might all be finished late next year by which time it will have been ten years since Simon departed this world.
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostI must look up Simon Howard. Hope this comes off after all the work you've put in, Richard.
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