This became incredibly hard to listen to almost right away. It is way too mathematically perfect. There is no relishing of notes.
I think people who sequence orchestral music really need to know what it's like to "perform" music.
I say, get up in front of 100 people and try singing/humming/whistling the melody of what you just sequenced, and you'll learn soon enough, that you need to shape these lines to keep people's interest.
This sequence was excruciatingly difficult to listen to. It makes you tense, because it doesn't ever relish any of the beauty of the lines.
Instead, try adding spaces, pauses, and such for dramatic effect. Make it sound conducted. Plus, in my opinion, Copland intended for this piece to be about 15% slower than this. Get into the "space". Feel the reverb. Slap that trumpet up on your keyboard and instead of listening to the notes, listen to the reverb. Every hall has it's own performance characteristics. Players drag notes, conductors sharpen phrases, so that it resonates best with the hall.
This is too much "sequence and music" and not enough "sound and compassion". Music is love and sharing. Forget the notes. Feel the spirit, don't hear the music.
If you want, you can email me, and I'll hum to you what a great performance sounds like. I used to play this work while I was 1st chair in the orchestra, and I have many recordings of the work.
I'd love to hear your next revision!
Sorry to be sharp ... I intend to work with you more on the next revision when you post it. I know you can do it!
Evan Evans
I think people who sequence orchestral music really need to know what it's like to "perform" music.
I say, get up in front of 100 people and try singing/humming/whistling the melody of what you just sequenced, and you'll learn soon enough, that you need to shape these lines to keep people's interest.
This sequence was excruciatingly difficult to listen to. It makes you tense, because it doesn't ever relish any of the beauty of the lines.
Instead, try adding spaces, pauses, and such for dramatic effect. Make it sound conducted. Plus, in my opinion, Copland intended for this piece to be about 15% slower than this. Get into the "space". Feel the reverb. Slap that trumpet up on your keyboard and instead of listening to the notes, listen to the reverb. Every hall has it's own performance characteristics. Players drag notes, conductors sharpen phrases, so that it resonates best with the hall.
This is too much "sequence and music" and not enough "sound and compassion". Music is love and sharing. Forget the notes. Feel the spirit, don't hear the music.
If you want, you can email me, and I'll hum to you what a great performance sounds like. I used to play this work while I was 1st chair in the orchestra, and I have many recordings of the work.
I'd love to hear your next revision!
Sorry to be sharp ... I intend to work with you more on the next revision when you post it. I know you can do it!
Evan Evans