Otherwise, great works folks!
Regards - Colin
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@musos said:
I'd love to hear a second version of the Albinoni at a slightly slower tempo. I have often felt that this beautiful composition is played too fast - this was confirmed when I finally heard a recording at a real mournful adagio - maybe William would consider simply adjusting his tempo map?
Otherwise, great works folks!
Regards - Colin
@DG said:
Does anyone actually remember who wrote "Albinoni's Adagio"? I've forgotten. [:O]ops:
DG
@DG said:
Does anyone actually remember who wrote "Albinoni's Adagio"? I've forgotten. [:O]ops:
DG
@hermitage59 said:
[...] Really great sound. I'm still experimenting with your 'Three Verbs' approach and finding out lots of useful stuff along the way that has improved my own output. [...]
@hermitage59 said:
[...]
Puccini, Michi, erm... Dietzy(?), and Ferdinand.
[...]
[[:D]]
@hermitage59 said:
[...]
Puccini, Michi, erm... Dietzy(?), and Ferdinand.
[...]
[[:D]]
@hermitage59 said:
[...] Really great sound. I'm still experimenting with your 'Three Verbs' approach and finding out lots of useful stuff along the way that has improved my own output. [...]
@Dietz said:
.....discrete multi-positional Impulse Responses.....
I got this piece done on a single DAW PC, with 4 gigs of RAM ("3 Giga switch" option enabled); none of the tracks were bounced into audio, and it was all sequenced in real-time.
Does anyone actually remember who wrote "Albinoni's Adagio"? I've forgotten.:
DG
Remo Giazotto composed Albinoni's adagio in sol minore, in 1958 I think
No, the famous Albinoni Adagio was actually composed in fragments by Albinoni, and then expanded into an entire piece by Giazotto in the 1940s. There were melodic sections and a figured bass, which Giazotto expanded into a complete Adagio in the style typical of Albinoni's Concerto/Sonata adagio movements. It is extremely well-written for strings by Giazotto, who also added the organ because it seemed approriate for the melancholy mood of the music..
I know Amit as customer of my IR libs - so after listening to his great piece I hoped he would help me to prove that you do not need "acoustical" IRs per se. But alas :P he used Audioease IRs for this piece, hehe ;-)
Peter, stubborn as always ;-)
PS: tomorrow I will receive my Appasionata strings! I can't wait!