Year: 2009
Album:
serenity
Artist's description:
A tune put together by us for you
bass, rhodes, organ pad, drums, guitar, glockenspiel, bata, quintos, shaker, effects.
The piece is polyrhythmic and polytonal. we suggest you give it a couple…
A stretched version of my final music theory presentation "A Song for the Twilight". The actual version will surface once I deal with some technical issues.
The show here is the video below. The mp3 is just a stub to allow me to post this to AT though I'd appreciate you clicking it.
On June 26th Kenji Haba performed 15 one minute classical guitar pieces as part of the Vox Novus Composer’s Voice…
The show here is the video below. The mp3 is just a stub to allow me to post this to AT though I'd appreciate you clicking it.
On June 26th Kenji Haba performed 15 one minute classical guitar pieces as part of the Vox Novus Composer’s Voice…
The show here is the video below. The mp3 is just a stub to allow me to post this to AT though I'd appreciate you clicking it.
On June 26th Kenji Haba performed 15 one minute classical guitar pieces as part of the Vox Novus Composer’s Voice…
The show here is the video below. The mp3 is just a stub to allow me to post this to AT though I'd appreciate you clicking it.
On June 26th Kenji Haba performed 15 one minute classical guitar pieces as part of the Vox Novus Composer’s Voice…
The show here is the video below. The mp3 is just a stub to allow me to post this to AT though I'd appreciate you clicking it.
On June 26th Kenji Haba performed 15 one minute classical guitar pieces as part of the Vox Novus Composer’s Voice…
I have issues at my house, sometimes they manifest themselves in my tracks. In this case, the bassoon and oboe represent the mouse. The guitar is the peanut-butter.
this is one inventive piece! what a mix - are you sure you didn't grow up south of I-10 in Louisiana? You have that Cajun blues thing down and who'd expect you could get oboe and bassoon to work so well with it! wow.
Hi - thought I'd throw up an older piece today while I have time (doing work at the new house later). This is an improvisation with my Fender Mustang / Roland GR-20 combination retuned on the fly to 9 notes per octave "Sorog" tuning. I think…
Yes, as a matter of practicality one performs with volume greater than the actual Fender (headphones to the GR-20, amplification of the Roland GR-20 ) - although I have mixed the "normal" and "new" tunings together and in some cases that sounds nice and fairly unique.
Really nothing more than some voice leading practice. Unfortunately, I had no keyboard or orchestral samples when I did this, so I used Lilypond and TiMidity++ and step programmed it in a text editor. I've since bought Cubase and EastWest/QuantumLeap…
As chance had it, I found myself in an acoustically great room, full of cajons! Well, they were unfinished cabinets actually, but they had lovely tones. Since this is the stuff dreams are made of, I had no choice but to seize the opportunity and…
well.... tell your wife you'll build her a new addition if she lets you keep this room as is :-)
nice - the sound is so surprisingly robust and resonate in tone.
Caveat emptor: I did absolutely none of the drumming in this piece.
WORLD PREMIER! FIRST RECORDING OF THIS PATTERN - EVER!
My friend Kokou "Alex" Yemey called me a few days ago with some urgency in his voice: "I must record this before…
It seems a lot of you record with open mics and can relate. I record 1 track at a time with usually 4 or 5 tracks. So, Im only asking for about 15 minutes of Silence...IS THIS TOO MUCH TO ASK??? Anyway, my house is so loud, I get a lot of bloopers…
Hi, The Suicide is programmed actually and uses Kontakt sounds. I have a large number of manuscripts which I created in college and shortly after (before 90's no computer program I had could let me score reasonably). In this case, The Suicide, was scored at an upright piano and I could play it at the time. Its really easy to play.
The last track that I'm going to upload for a while. I will be re-recording a few songs to release a LP under my own name. Hopefully it'll be good :)
This one is another exploration using loops and delays. I hope you like it!
A second version with the initial lead guitar standing alone...a little cluttered after a few listens and some constructive feedback!
Norm's Groove for St Monica inspired this one. Thanks Norm!
Lead Guitar, bass guitar and acoustic guitar…
still one of my personal faves. - although i'd wish to redo some parts, i'm stuck with this version, since i don't own one of the synths used there anymore..
(original photo)
If you have the fever and the only cure is more tambourine, here it is.
MORE TAMBOURINE SOLOS!! (But you should probably wait until you have the house to yourself...)
last eve there was a beautiful moon
dancing in a blue black sky
outside my piano room, it called to me
this tune is a one take playful moment, loosely based on the main theme from the 2nd mov of my piano sonata,,, i only toned down about…
Hey Richard - for Rumba - the guitar tunings are standard so if you want to play along on your piano it should work. If I remember correctly Brian laid down a basic I-IV-V in D major. I put 7th chords on top of that.
Comments on vaisvil's stuff
My word, that has Indian flavours and a tad bizarre!
Ha, as soon as I saw it, I knew that photo!
Yes, that is a lovely picture... great light.
What's that then? Ethyl Chloride? Guitar sounds good, tad loud though, I have my volume on 40% The icy tinkling's nice!
It's very dramatic Chris! I couldn't get the "More" to come up but the photo is lovely, gentle, quiet, floaty ....
The build is excellent..... layers..... forming... frozen.....excellent
Wow, as big and bold as the night sky..! Stunning feelings here.
Extraordinary trippage!! Tess S
Nice! Digging this guitar solo!
Yes, Heavenly! This is wonderful. Such atmosphere! WoW!
I like the Roman Legions advancing bit. Brushes hair back, yeah, stirring! Nice isn't fair, it's super.
Golly, I bet they enjoyed that! Oh, thought you were going to burst into, "Somewhere Over the Rainbow" then.
That was really interesting! It hit home! Zonk!
Good title. Eerie with mist and no shadows, not quite be able to see through.
Very nice Chris. Great piece, and having a great guitarist preform it is really killer. Bad ass man, bad ass.
Congrats Chris! It is very gratifying to have such a talented guitarist select your composition for his performance!
Very nice composition.
I think the residents should be delighted with your visits. I like the way it picks up at around 2.40.
checked out earlier great bit of work Chris ....he can certainly pla that guitar
Lovely composition Chris.
Comments made by vaisvil
this is one inventive piece! what a mix - are you sure you didn't grow up south of I-10 in Louisiana? You have that Cajun blues thing down and who'd expect you could get oboe and bassoon to work so well with it! wow.
This is a great tune - I love the percussion and the deep deep sounds.
Yes, as a matter of practicality one performs with volume greater than the actual Fender (headphones to the GR-20, amplification of the Roland GR-20 ) - although I have mixed the "normal" and "new" tunings together and in some cases that sounds nice and fairly unique.
nicely done - sounds a bit floydish. Introspective Roger Waters.
all of the compositions are wonderful - I feel emotion from your work.
this is a very nice progression against a pedal point and exposition. I agree the room acoustics are really great - it sounds great!!
very classical period sounding.
well.... tell your wife you'll build her a new addition if she lets you keep this room as is :-) nice - the sound is so surprisingly robust and resonate in tone.
wow - this is complicated!! and cool!
Hi, The Suicide is programmed actually and uses Kontakt sounds. I have a large number of manuscripts which I created in college and shortly after (before 90's no computer program I had could let me score reasonably). In this case, The Suicide, was scored at an upright piano and I could play it at the time. Its really easy to play.
wonderful!! So this is in part classical guitar? If so great tone!
bizarrely the opening bass riff sounds like the theme to green acres - a usa 60's sitcom.
sounds like my ferrets playing!
excellent!
yes! love the sounds here
this is nice indeed!!
one of my personal favorites too :-)
Dude! You own this place!!
Hey Richard - for Rumba - the guitar tunings are standard so if you want to play along on your piano it should work. If I remember correctly Brian laid down a basic I-IV-V in D major. I put 7th chords on top of that.
I'll see what I can up with.