Music: Things Are Gonna Get Better

Download:
Things Are Gonna Get Better – 192kbps OGG Vorbis
Things Are Gonna Get Better – 160kbps MP3 VBR
… or where you go when you know. 
About: I am a digital artist and computer geek with interests in Linux, open source design programs, and saving the world. You will find me blogging here about art, life, technology, and other mildly amusing things. More »

Things Are Gonna Get Better – 192kbps OGG Vorbis
Things Are Gonna Get Better – 160kbps MP3 VBR
… or where you go when you know. 
Copernicus, Copernicus!
Let’s all look at Copernicus!
He’s watching us, observing us,
My friend, where are you now?
In 1491 there lived
a boy, his name Copernicus.
He changed his mind for all of us
My god, where are you now?
By thinking he moved all of us,
The moon, the sun, Copernicus
The church, the gods, Copernicus!
The days the earth stood still.
For is it that the
Sun lies not above us
but below us, dear Copernicus…?
And would you claim the Earth is
not the center of the universe?
[...]
Copernicus, Copernicus!
Can you not feel him, watching us?
Beseeching us, imploring us:
My god, where are you now?

Here’s a long overdue something, a tribute to a silly yet truly awesome musical instrument. My first instrument ever was a funky 128-voice Casio, my fifth birthday present. The keyboard was the last of its kind in the store, the display version — so there was no manual or box for me to learn from. 
At my art camp job, there are some sweet aged Casio keyboards for people to play. They are even older than mine: the type with only 16 real voices and the option to play two voices in unison. This is an expanded version of a very random jam on Wednesday.
Sequenced using Rosegarden4 with fluidsynth and Xsynth as DSSI plugins. All soundfonts used are free. Enjoy!

Close Your Eyes – 192kbps OGG Vorbis
Close Your Eyes – 128kbps MP3 VBR
Well, another school term has passed and yet another whirlwind of homework and activity has come and gone. Shifting gears was totally weird. I guess I fell into a mode where there was always another assignment around the corner that had to be worked on… the shadow of procrastination and doom lurking over my head. When there wasn’t, there wasn’t this startling realization or a lifting sense of freedom… just the realization that I didn’t have to go home and get studying any more. The day after finals were over, sleep deprived and braindead, I recorded this song.
This piece is about a month and a half old. While I wrote it, I imagined it as an experiment in multitracked pianos. Most of the primary melody however was improvised as I added layers on Friday. Everything, except from various percussion, is piano. The cymbal crash is a mixture of two samples courtesy of the freesound project. There’s some great stuff over there.. I wish I’d learned to use the site sooner!

I know I haven’t posted much, let alone music, in quite a while — though that does not mean I haven’t been working persistently on both. I am very excited to finally share a new musical composition. I woke up this morning with the intention to create music, and work this tune that had developed by accident in the last few days. Originally, I had intended to put up an entirely different piece. However, this one stuck in my head constantly and just would not leave until I had completed it.
This is the first time I have done multi-track recording in a very long time (I believe on the last, I was about 9 years old). With cornelius’s suggestion to try multiple instruments in my mind, I tried adding a flute to the mix. Another instrument was added, and soon another. Keeping in mind that I never claimed that I could play flute, I will simply sing the praises of digital pitch correction. Hopefully this is what you had in mind, cornelius. 

Way back when in April, I wrote about a little song I composed and recorded on my laptop and an iffy vocal mic. It was a frenzied effort at making it work after an hour of mixed success. There were obvious technical flaws in my recording: the micing was mono and sounded terrible, there’s was buzz throughout the piece, and I played it like a new and unfamiliar piece.
Recently, my father acquired some really cool home recording equipment. This meant a chance to try things again and get it right technically; also a chance to test out the new stuff with a song I’d had months to play and practice.
This afternoon we sat down and tried things out. Micing up the piano was very exciting, as we finally had two mics and so were able to do it in stereo. Sitting down and playing was a bit stressful, though this time I was much more used to playing with the mics running. The version I settled upon was the 3rd or 4th rendition — many others were stumble-filled as I was often jarringly aware of being recorded.
I logged into Last.fm today, spotting a new message notification waiting for me in the top right corner. Only, something looked different in my status box today. My user icon was a different color – a subscribed color…
As you might have noticed, one of our profile servers (which your account is on) has been rather slow recently. Affected users are noticing that their charts are taking ages to update, and neighbours are not calculated fast enough. This is due to the changes we’re making in the way profile data is stored and searched. [...]
To sweeten the deal we’re upgrading your account with a free 1 month subscription. (or extending it if you already subscribe). Along with the usual subscriber perks, you’ll have access to the beta test of the new site update (in early June). This will give you a chance to try out the new charts system before everyone else, and tell us what you think before it’s launched.
Zzzzmm… very good concert. Sigur Rós were wonderful, Amina were excellent, and there were some really neat tracks in the setlist that I hadn’t heard for a long time. There were also some fun mixups and surprises that made the night special. I got to talk to the lights guy and meet the sound people before the show, which was really nice. 
It seemed that Sigur brought back a few of their more gloomy, melancholic songs instead of the extreme happiness in the last concert – though they played those songs with an energy I hadn’t heard before. It was especially funny to hear the first encore, “Dauðalagið,” just after this morning reading john of management’s tour diary:
“when the band played daudalagid at a soundcheck in tokyo they gave up before the end, pondering later why their songs were so bloody long… go figure.”
… the studio version of that track is 13 minutes long. But hey, they made it through it tonight! And it was spectacular.
Tomorrow, to my great anticipation, I will get to see my all-time favorite band live in concert. Ever since listening to some of their music on their website, I’ve been a huge fan of Sigur Rós’s music.
Sigur Rós is (are) an Icelandic band who play original, long, simple and yet very sonically “full” music. They play a mixture of rock instruments, strings, used in a genre that’s pretty much all their own. There are no (to my ear) understandable lyrics, though singer Jonsi’s often high-pitched vocals in Icelandic and “Hopelandic” (a kind of phonetic scat singing unique to the band) have a very meaningful quality, even without the words. Jonsi also often plays his guitar with a bow, adding to the uniqueness of their sound. 

And now for something completely different… free music! 
Over the past week I’ve been working on a four minute piano piece. It’s part of continuning composition projects working with my piano teacher. This week, I finally got my act together and wrote something I feel is whole, and recorded it well enough that I’ll let myself get away with it. 
In my opinion the song is about that experience when the weather can’t decide whether or not to be sunny. This is the first jazzy piece that I feel this satisfied with… so it’s a bit of a happy thing to get it out there. Oh, and everything was recorded and edited using Open Source software.
If you’d like to check out this piece of music, it is available for streaming and download on the Internet Archive.
Yeah, it drags in some places and occasionally I hit extra notes, but hey – it was a joy to create. Isn’t that what counts?

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