Sounds great! And yes, it makes perfect sense. I like the idea of singing/"utter"-ing ideas as the film rolls. In fact, I could really see that helping me formally, as it would prevent me from abondoning an idea too quickly - particularly one with an odd/angular, semi-random rhythmic development (which I like, BTW). Being originally trained as a drummer, these sorts of things can just fall off my tongue, but it's painfully slow scoring them out.
A while ago I was actually working on a compositional tool in Max/MSP that would follow certain types of gestures, and give a kind of rough playback of an idea. The problem, for me, was that my language is so closely linked to the way I "see" music -- on paper -- that it's hard to find a way of capturing that part of it in a meaningful way. My musical imagination seems to be provoked by seeing the phrase written out, in full. I once tried to do something like what you're describing with the gestural score, but I lost my nerve and started writing it out full -- like I was 'testing' it, or something -- thus losing any advantage the gestural score might have given me!
Maybe I should try it again sometime!
J.
A while ago I was actually working on a compositional tool in Max/MSP that would follow certain types of gestures, and give a kind of rough playback of an idea. The problem, for me, was that my language is so closely linked to the way I "see" music -- on paper -- that it's hard to find a way of capturing that part of it in a meaningful way. My musical imagination seems to be provoked by seeing the phrase written out, in full. I once tried to do something like what you're describing with the gestural score, but I lost my nerve and started writing it out full -- like I was 'testing' it, or something -- thus losing any advantage the gestural score might have given me!
Maybe I should try it again sometime!
J.