Yesterday was a misfire because I had the drums misaligned - but Fabrizio came to the rescue and mixed this properly! We hope you enjoy our collaboration!
Earth, Can You Hear me Now? is a rock composition in 17 notes per octave (17 edo, 17…
Reminds me of the last movement of Conic Sections "King Pimento", which pissed off two thirds of Liberian nationals when first performed. Keep Stompin' til the Music Stops!
so did you know when I googled that statement in the comment I got a book... all that we hold dear.. I am sure you knew that.. . such pleasantry here in these sounds and music as this song is.
This is an extremely interesting piece, since microtonal music is still a bit of a mystery to me, though i play some turkish and persian pieces. Well-played too!
Billy wanted a project for the 2023 Christmas holidays and asked some of his extremely talented musician friends to play on this track.
Matt Smith: Guitars & backing vocals
Paul Matthews: Pianos & organ
Naomi Daulby: Lead & backing…
Punny title to hint at the sound origin; the sounds left on a reel of tape (or in this case, two different ones) after it has undergone a bulk-erase procedure - placing it on a device that creates a strong electromagnetic field that scrambles…
Four different tracks of Roland SE-02 controlled via MIDI by a Casio DH-100. Choosing different voices on the Casio causes settings to change on the Roland, which were then tweaked a little. Submitted to Sound-In "Roleplay Improv" for 1-8/2/2024.
Three different versions of a similar line created using the onboard sequencer on a Roland SE-02. the different voices were created by changing settings on a Casio DH-100 digital horn attached via MIDI, and playing the horn. Submitted to Sound…
I'm working on a series of new pieces for an electro-acoustic album. As this one is most are done using Pure Data as a somewhat compositional playing in the process. I'm capturing real time playing to loop tables and then laying them into an…
Comments on vaisvil's stuff
Tony Iommi jamming? Very dark
Reminds me of the last movement of Conic Sections "King Pimento", which pissed off two thirds of Liberian nationals when first performed. Keep Stompin' til the Music Stops!
Excellent...
interesting,,and nice
indeed quite intense... very rich in sound and texture.....lots of emotional space here,, very well done indeed!
Great full sound
Cool.... Sneaky little Grinch
Nice and bright sound, great echo.
Nice version. Simple and pure
very good... the repeating beat works well. never heard you do something like this.
Has an almost Sitar like quality....very unique sound.
Very cool.
I love how this one turns and twists... tells a wonderful story without needing words.
Wow! This is epic! Very cool!!!!
nice. very Popol Vuh! -Kavin.
loving it Chris
so did you know when I googled that statement in the comment I got a book... all that we hold dear.. I am sure you knew that.. . such pleasantry here in these sounds and music as this song is.
This hits the spot! Well done!
Mellow good stuff. Mesmerizing!
This is an extremely interesting piece, since microtonal music is still a bit of a mystery to me, though i play some turkish and persian pieces. Well-played too!
Comments made by vaisvil
Definitely true to the original - very excellent work!
You always come up with inventive ways to generate sound and I admire that - this is quite cool as it sounds underwater to me.
another brilliant DH-100 application!
such a foreboding piece - were you thinking about it being an election year here in the states?
Nice pocket between ambient, EDM and experimental electronic!
I enjoyed your performance very much!
This is the most unique use of a DH-100 that I know of!
nice work!
Brilliant!
This blew me away - so powerful!
This has such a nice ambience to it. Nice pickin' my friend!
Man you man that dobro sing!
Man you nailed it - your vocals are especially powerful at the end.
Man this is great to happen upon again!
This is a sweet piece!
beautiful!
Excellent!
Alberta too? I thought Canadians were sane.
Excellent work!
Loving it!