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September 30th, 2005

Bruckner’s Ultraman Symphony

My friend Will Laughlin, in his brand new blog, surveys the unexpected and occasionally inappropriate use of Bruckner’s music in movies.

No sooner had I said to myself, “You know? This sure does sound a heck of a lot like the first movement of the Bruckner Eighth,” than it became the Bruckner Eighth. Yes — a Japanese rubber-suit monster movie is quoting Bruckner.

Read the rest…

It looks like Will’s blog will be a mix of music-related items (he’s a composer and writer) with his own poetry, and, no doubt, tons of monster movie stuff. See also my earlier post about some of his poetry.

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September 28th, 2005

Muss Es Sein?

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Es muss sein!  Es muss sein!

Es muss sein! Es muss sein!

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September 28th, 2005

Good News and Bad News Redux

Just a quick followup to the last post. In today’s New York Times, Allan Kozinn reviews the Sony Classical recording of the opera Ça Ira, by Pink Floyd’s Roger Waters. Reference is also made to “crossover” projects by Elvis Costello, Paul McCartney and others.

It sounds like Mr. Waters’ piece would sit better with us longhairs if it were referred to as a “musical” instead of an “opera”. But, that’s a whole other debate, isn’t it.

When Rockers Show Classical Chops - New York Times
(I’m not sure whether you have to log in to read this. I promise, it’s painless.)

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September 28th, 2005

Good News and Bad News

Two news items found on Andante.com seem to cancel each other out.

Apperently, Billy Joel has been sprinkling cash among music schools on the East Coast. He’s giving Syracuse University $320,000 to fund four “Billy Joel Scholarships” for composition students. Thanks, Billy! I always thought you were a mensch.

But then we have this UPI-generated headline: Sony BMG to ‘Manufacture’ a ‘Classical Crossover Band’. Really, now. Must we? This article doesn’t say much about what a “Classical Crossover Band” would do, but it would consist of 10-14-year-olds. I don’t get it. It strikes me there are plenty of 10-14-year-old classical non-crossover musicians that could be recruited. Putting aside my objections to “crossover” for the moment, I would like to remind Sony BMG that manufactured bands in the pop world are awful, and this too will be awful.

I would like to see more of the Billy Joel type of crossover activity, and less of the artificial nonsense I can only assume is in store for us now from Sony BMG.

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September 27th, 2005

Blogroll Highlights

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This blog was started about a month ago, and I’ve been gradually adding links to my blogroll (see left-side column). Here are a few highlights. (more…)

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September 23rd, 2005

From the Philo Sessions

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The Artist

It was another smoke-filled all-nighter down at the studio. The artist was all hopped up on cookies, and it was hard to get him to focus.

Still, we did manage to get this fairly decent take of the new song “Ugly”, which we know will be a hit.

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September 21st, 2005

Perfecto!

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I don’t care what anybody says. Oobi is the best thing on television.

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September 20th, 2005

Sacrifice

Sometimes it is necessary to discard perfectly good material. The piece grows, the goalpost moves around, and not every good idea survives. This is something I learned gradually, even after I was a student. Sometimes it’s just a held bass note that makes sense in a piano sketch, but turns out to just be mud when you orchestrate it. Sometimes it’s the original idea that an entire piece was supposed to be based on.

I’ve had to do this frequently in the past, and the piece has always come out better for it. It’s particularly common in musical theater, and I’ve often had to fight over this with collaborators who find it hard to let go.

In my earlier description of Letter To Hungary, I described it as a four-movement piece, but since then I’ve been working toward building one large movement. One reason for thinking of discrete movements was my concern that my material was not well enough unified to hold together as one movement. Meanwhile, most of my material is now fleshed out enough that I can see it as one movement, but there will have to be a sacrifice.

The second movement referred to in that earlier post, the one described as “playful and macabre” and reminding me of Bernard Herrmann, needs to be taken out of the game, unfortunately. It just doesn’t fit into the emotional narrative that has evolved. I do like it, though, so I’ll probably hang on to it, and perhaps rework it for the violin sonata that I put aside for this project. I’m still not ruling out dividing the piece into movements, but I’ll still be leaving this material out of the piece.

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September 17th, 2005

Sketching and Sibelius

Recent improvements in notation software have brought about some interesting phenomena. There was a brief item on Steve Hicken’s site Listen, where he mentioned that in the course of revising a piece, he found himself composing right in Finale, as opposed to sketching on paper. This is something I’ve been doing for a few years, although in my case using Sibelius, and I thought the process might be interesting to some readers.

Sketching without paper certainly takes some getting used to, but it’s worth it, given the amount of time saved. In Sibelius, I typically start with just a few staves and just sketch away. One nice thing is that you can decide what certain milestones in the piece will be, and put them in all at once, knowing that you can always insert as many bars as needed in between them. It helps the process knowing that here’s x material, and here’s y material, and I can just add measures as needed to make a transition.

If you’re writing for a film, or you’re concerned with timing for other reasons, it’s also handy to show the time code in your sketch, putting in empty measures between sections that are finished to make sure the timing is right.

When it’s time to flesh it out, I may just start adding instruments, and copying material from the sketch staves into their appropriate instrumental lines, or if it’s a larger ensemble, I may copy from the sketch into the real score in a different document. Sibelius makes copying and pasting very easy with its filters feature. For example, if you want to only copy the bottom note from a line consisting of block chords, you can do that.

In the former scenario, where you just build the sketch into the final work, the sad side effect is that there is no history of the creation of the piece unless you’re very disciplined about saving backups at various stages. I’m not very disciplined. I would like to see a future version of Sibelius incorporate some kind of version control system that stores the whole history of a file, and even lets you roll back to an earlier version if desired.

I’m glad I’m just old enough to have been trained in a world where handwriting on paper was the only option. I hope younger composers will continue to receive that training. But, not having to deal with paper makes composing much easier and more fun. I dare say that I would not have been able to accept my current project — 3 months to do a 15-minute piece — if it weren’t for Sibelius.

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September 14th, 2005

Folk elements in Letter to Hungary

Letter to Hungary draws inspiration from Hungarian folk music, which I’ve studied and loved this music since my time living in Budapest in the early 1990’s.

Using a folksong anthology that I’ve had since those days, I found a song that’s appropriate, both in what the text conveys and in that it bears some of the lovely intervals and modal shifts typically found in these folksongs. (more…)

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