Monday, May 28, 2007

Quiz


According to this I'm 85% Bach. I think that number is inflated, but I'd be happy just to have 1% Bach.






You scored as J.S. Bach.

J.S. Bach 85%
Haydn 65%
Tchaikovsky 65%
Beethoven 60%
Handel 60%
Schubert 60%
Hector Berlioz 55%
Chopin 45%
Wagner 45%
Schumann 45%
Brahms 45%
Mozart 40%
Liszt 30%


Take the quiz yourself.

Words of wisdom

I think the following can be applied to music as well as literature:


“If you only read the great writers, you’ll be in trouble,” [Albee] said. “Read junk. It’s enormously encouraging to tell yourself, ‘I can do better than that.’ ”

--Edward Albee

from 'Virtue Is Not Its Own Reward' and Other Lessons for a Life in Art
By KATHRYN SHATTUCK
The New York Times
Published: April 24, 2007


Tuesday, April 17, 2007

Theme for Marcus

And now for something completely different. (I do write music for outside the church too--really!)

Back in 2000 (I think--the brain cells are starting to go dim here) I had the pleasure of providing the incidental music for Listen!, a play by Leah Cooper. It was performed in the Minnesota Fringe festival that year. The play is a "battle for the soul" of Joe between his Eco-friendly girlfriend (Katie) and his corporate boss (Marcus). The follow is a line of Marcus's that I used as the jumping off place for this composition, A Theme for Marcus.

MARKUS: ...Dose up on the gingko biloba and bring your brain. Ten minds, ten mouths, one note-taker, locked in a room together. Stream of consciousness stuff. This is where the product image gets conceived. Identify the essence of the allure, get in touch with the product's sexy side. Spin that into a lifestyle image. Invent a look, jingle out a voice, manufacture some soul, and bring your brand name to life!

(quoted with permission of the author)

Give a listen (no pun intended) to it.

New web hosting service

Well, I upgraded the website last night, so now I have plenty of room for mp3 files. Slowly but surely things come into place.

Sunday, April 15, 2007

It's been a while

I realized I haven't written an entry on this blog for a while. Lots of things have been happening "behind the scenes", but haven't really had a chance to put things out. I need to upgrade my web hosting service for gennaula.com (where I put all my mp3 files) and so that has been somewhat of a blocker since I don't want to put too much more stuff out to my current website that I'll just have to move.

I was realizing that all of the pieces I've put out so far as been from my "sacred catalog." I need to get a bit more of my theater pieces out.

Now that I'm "40 something" I'm definitely having those times where I think "wouldn't it be great to be back in college when I could just play around at a piano or computer for hours"? That gets a bit more difficult when you mix in family, house, and job.

Saturday, February 17, 2007

Looking for soundfonts

Right now I'm in the search for new soundfonts. I've orchestrated Blessed are the merciful and have decided that a listener would have to extra extra extra merciful in listening to what my midi to mp3 convert is giving out. The converter uses .sf2 files for the conversion, so I'm looking for a better set of files.

Sunday, February 11, 2007

Meditation No. 1: Mercy

Listening to the "Blessed are the merciful" composition, I started to experiment with it: slowing it down and then lowering it in the the bottom most octaves.

A few years back I read the The Cloister Walk by Kathleen Norris. This eventually lead me to exploring the practice of Centering Prayer. I worked for a while in downtown St. Paul, MN and close by was a place called the Benedictine Center where there was a lunch meditation service. Unfortunately that downtown outreach program was shut down and I have since moved to a different location for work.

Listening to this experiment I thought this would be perfect music to listen to while combining it with the Centering Prayer. This goes somewhat against the basic tenet of the prayer since its goal is "interior quiet". But I find personally that the right music can help me obtain that prayerful state.

Click here to listen.