26 July 2011

Well this is really sad. It’s been over a month since I've made a blog entry here. I'm going all my writing on Facebook, Twitter and Google+. (Yes, Im at Google+ already, but I don't mean to brag.)

Meanwhile, I have done some uploading to SoundCloud. Some of the tracks are re-recorded since I found some mistakes. I’m OCD like that.

24 June 2011

Happy 110th, Harry!

A 1968 documentary about American composer and instrument inventor Harry Partch from KPBS-TV, San Diego, CA.


Don’t forget part 2, part 3 and part 4.

23 June 2011

Comparative religion for geeks

I have to start writing more in this thing.
  • Taoism: May the Force be with you.
  • Confucianism: Confucius said, “May the Force be with you.”
  • Zen Buddhism: What is the sound of the Force happening?
  • Islam: There is no Force but the one true Force. Allahu Ackbar.
  • Catholicism: May the Force be with you. R/: And also with you.
  • Mormonism: May the Force win the GOP primaries in 2012.
  • Atheism: Good luck.
  • Nietzscheanism: The Force is dead. You killed it in Episode III, remember?
  • Scientology: May the Force be with you. That will be $20,000.

05 June 2011

A better place to upload music

I’m in the process of uploading my tracks to Soundcloud now. Check back over the next few days.

26 May 2011

Gonna fly now.


Still need to get caught up on the blog.

First off, I bought and downloaded the new Lady Gaga album on Monday since it was 99¢ at Amazon.com (and yes, I had to wait a day to get it like everyone else). Pop, especially today’s generation, is not at all my thing, but The Artist Formerly Known as Stefani Germanotta has impressed me, especially when she does the piano-and-voice Sir Elton thing. She’s a lot like me in a lot of ways: she was a child prodigy who was picked on a lot in youth for looking and acting weird, started playing piano at four, wrote songs as a preteen, majored in music in college only to drop out to pursue a different calling. Only she’s the new Madonna and Michael Jackson, and I’m still waiting to be the new Frank Zappa, the new Charles Ives, the new Harry Partch, the new Danny Elfman, etc.

Anyway, being one of those postmodernists (I guess) who mines ideas from anywhere, including pop/dance, I can get a lot from some of the tracks. Catchy tunes anyway.

I’ve also resolved to get into shape. I’ve been suffering from a chronic neurological illness that has made me tired and miserable, and the medications I’ve had to take have made things worse in some ways (mostly weight gain). Physical fitness is indeed inseparably tied to mental fitness. I’m trying a mixture of weightlifting and yoga right now, since I can’t do much running, just walking. The breathing exercises of yoga have not only helped me relax, but they’ve helped me not get cramps after a workout, which I’ve always had trouble with since I also has asthma and allergies that have made it hard to breathe.

Incidentally, one of the first film scores I heard as a kid was Bill Conti’s for Rocky. That’s some good workout music there. Also, you don’t hear enough fugues in movies.

I’m still fighting writer’s block. If inspiration doesn’t come, I can’t force it. I still need to re-record some music using the better SoundFont file and FluidSynth.

02 May 2011

The “Symphony apocalyptique” story

My “never-ending symphony” project began in the early 1980s with music I had written in my head. It was originally going to be a four-movement piano sonata in the key of F# minor, but by the end of the decade, it had become a five-movement symphony in C minor. And yet it was still written in my head.

I finally got around to starting to actual writing the thing in 2006 (with one movement adapted from a piano tune I wrote in 1996), and now it has over twenty “movements”, so it's much more a symphonic suite than a symphony, and not exactly centered around the key of C minor, especially the atonal and polytonal parts. But there are a number of leitmotifs for different characters and situations.

The official name of the work is, facetiously, Symphony No. 1 in C Minor, aka Symphony apocalyptique, the soundtrack for an imaginary movie and/or video game called DIES IRÆ, styled in all capital letters with the æ ligature. I am working on the ideas for a sci-fi/horror role-playing game.

The choice to give French titles to many of the pieces is a nod to Berlioz’ Symphonie fantastique. One of the leitmotifs (or as Berlioz would’ve called them, idées fixes) is the medieval funeral chant Dies irae, which can be heard in the final “Witches’ Sabbath” movement. Other old themes, obviously in the public domain, are quoted. In “An American in İstanbul”, one can hear a snippet of Mozart’s Rondo alla turca and a very old song of the Levant titled “Ya ein mulayyatein” in Arabic and “Şaşkın” in Turkish. In “Une russe à Nouvelle-Orléans”, “Song of the Volga Boatmen” is used.

Besides “Fantastique”, other major influences include the symphonies of Beethoven, Tchaikovsky and Shostakovich’s symphonies, Stravinsky’s Le sacre du printemps, the epic film scores of John Williams, Hans Zimmer, Danny Elfman and the like, and Nobuo Uematsu, composer to most of the Final Fantasy series of games. Also, in many of the pieces, microtonal notes can be found within a 72 equal temperament tuning, both expressing Pendereckian atonality and exotic tonality as an approximation of just intonation (listen to some Harry Partch to get an idea of what I’m talking about).

01 May 2011

Finally...

I haven’t intended to write much here on politics, as this is primarly a musical blog, after all--but a major victory has been won. The world’s most wanted terrorist, responsible for the murder of thousands, has been taken out. Almost a decade after the attacks of September 11, 2001, Osama bin Laden is dead. President Obama just made the official announcement.

Bin Laden was the spiritual leader of a most extreme expression of a sect (or rather, cult) that interprets Islamic teachings in an ultra-authoritarian, tyrannical manner. Among other, far worse things, they oppose playing, singing and listening and dancing to music, especially by women. They also brutally oppose Sufis, Shi’as, more liberal Sunnis and the many others they consider heretics, apostates and infidels because their beliefs aren’t like theirs.

Of course, al-Qaeda is still around, the new top man in the organization, Ayman al-Zawahiri, is still on the lam, and there will always be terrorism. But a victory is a victory. Let’s not celebrate that a man has been killed (though one who definitely had it coming), but that justice has been done, and the world is a little bit safer now.

And let’s never forget the victims of all the attacks, and never forget to thank the troops for a job well done. The credit is theirs. Hopefully we can bring them all home sooner.

29 April 2011

slacker.

I know, I haven’t written anything in my new blog yet (except for that introduction). Truth is that I’ve been busy. I'm almost finished with the score I've been working on for an indie film that was shot in my East Texas hometown. It’s turned out to be a mix of dark minimalism, microtonal serialism and Stravinskian horror. (I have a 17-tone-per-octave tone row as one of the leitmotifs; it’s just the 12-tone chromatic scale plus five quarter tones.)

Once I get this finished, I can work on my other music, including a fugue for wind quintet I may or may not finish, since I do want to write that novel I’ve been claiming to be writing for years.


I’ve become a big fan of Paul Hindemith, who specialized in chamber pieces and modernist fugues, though I still prefer full orchestras. I’m actually writing for a half-size “budget” orchestra though, i.e. just one each flute, oboe, clarinet, bassoon, horn, tuba doubling on second horn, trumpet, trombone, timpanist, other percussion (or piano, which I consider a percussion instrument; blame Varèse for that idea) and harp, plus twenty-odd strings.

24 April 2011

My new home

My writings, and links to my music and other files, will be here from now on. I was blogging at LiveJournal and other places, but decided I needed a new scene.

Most of what you’ll see here will be related to music and music theory, but I do have other interests: news, politics, philosophy, mental health, sports, whatever I’m interested in at the time.

You can also find me on Facebook (that’s where my music is) and Twitter. Stay tuned.

~D.