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| The Classical Music Sound Hole Classical music discussion on any subject which falls outside the categories below |
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#1
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I've submitted it to some orchestras but they have told me that, while they like it personally, they cannot program it. Why is this, do you think? Is it not good?
For easy navigation of the concerto movements: Exposition: Main Theme :01-2:00 Transition 2:07-2:28 Subordinate Theme(a) 2:29-3:55 Subordinate Theme(b) 3:56-6:16 Development section is the most dramatic section 6:17-8:42 Recapitulation 8:43-10:14 Subordinate Theme(a) 10:15-11:34 Coda 11:35-12:47 SECOND MOVEMENT A-B-A A 12:53-15:31 B 15:32-18:49 (Ghostly Waltz) A 18:50-20:52 THIRD MOVEMENT Intro 20:53-21:29 Main Theme 21:30-22:29 Transition 22:30-22:58 Section B 22:59-23:57 Recap Main Theme & Transition 23:58-25:47 Coda 25:48-end http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GanFv...feature=relmfu Any suggestions/input is greatly appreciated.
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#2
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it was good, but there maybe was some kind of 'wow factor' that was not present. The piano part did not have as much of a solo part , to display the pianist's virtuosity. It was more like part of the orchestra. I am not an expert critic, and you can take my thoughts as only one person's reaction to the piece. There are so many piano concertos out there that this may be a reason that some orchestras may not program it. Some B.C. members may have a favorite piano concerto, by Prokofiev, for instance, that they may want to compare your work to. one piano concerto that i always enjoy is Darius Milhaud's Piano Concerto No. 4 and i play it quite often. Wish i could have found it on youtube to compare to yours, but here is Milhaud's Piano Concerto No. 5, as something to contrast it to: |
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#3
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The 2-piano score for 1st and 3rd movements are available to peruse here: http://www.scribd.com/_Joe_Townley Quote:
Interesting that I offered up to ten thousand to a pianist, depending on their name and qualifications, to learn and perform it, but nobody took me up, even for that kind of money. One pro, Thomas Pandolfi, did express an interest in doing it (the conversation was with his agent) but she said he wanted to premiere it in Eastern Europe, which I could not fly to. So that was that. Quote:
http://www.ashleywang.com/resources/Fissured+Words.mp3 but I felt everything being written today already sounds like this, not to mention my observance has been that this kind of music gets one performance and then is forgotten. The Milhaud Concerto is, of course, a masterpiece written by a genius composer and I have no hope of ever getting near something like that. I was blown away by the Opus (365 or thereabouts) Mine is only the second thing I've ever written so I'm a newbie of the first ranks.
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#4
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i guess the first thing that struck me was how it sounded so much like a Romantic period piece, and as you said, derivative. All composers are derivative, so it is not a bad thing. i'll listen tomorrow to the Ashley Wang piece. I think most composers write things that they would like to listen to themselves, but not always is the case when finances come into the picture, so they need to cater more to tastes other than their own. How a composer's style develops would be an interesting thread. I have certain composers that i listen to more than others, but my composing style (of what limited pieces i have written or improvised) does not sound like any one of them in particular. Original themes and 'raw talent' separate composers' qualities, i feel, and you never know when you will hit upon that combination that is IT. good luck, Mambo |
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#5
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You should put up some of your work, mambo. At any rate, thanks much and good luck to you too.
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#6
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I listened to the Ashley Wang piece and i liked it well enough that i would give it more hearings. Its quality is hard to determine; maybe time will tell. At least it used all conventional instruments from what i heard. I found this piano piece by Ashley Wang which i enjoyed - the melodic parts sound very much like something i would write, to give you an idea; but i usually add more harmonic texture, and prefer to use secondary (or more) melodies in contrapuntal fashion, rather than simple chord progressions. |
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#7
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I've listened to your piano concerto, too, and I think you are kidding yourself if you think you could do something like the Wang. |
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#8
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I'd like your stuff better if it sounded more like Ashley Wang.
Just sayin'.
__________________
"I personally never liked all that new music made by them latte-sipping, lima bean-munching, intellecto-beatnik snobs." - A. Daniels |
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