Last Friday, 1 March 2024, I released Epistemology, my latest collection of original compositions. I personally think it’s some of the best of my newer works.
You can listen to and/or purchase Epistemology through the following services (and more!):
Last Sunday I was exceptionally busy and had to phone in my already-phoned in Lazy Sunday post. Today I’m doing the ultimate phoning in and taking yet another day away from the blog (as it were—gotsta keep that daily post counter mollified). I’ll actually be doing a significant amount of writing this afternoon, so have no fear—we’ll back to the more-or-less regular schedule tomorrow.
I wasn’t completely useless. I finished composing for my next major release, Four Mages. It’s a collection of fantasy-inspired instrumental music, with nine of its ten tracks corresponding to different fantasy archetypes (each with their own color). The titular mages are “Red Mage,” “Blue Mage,” “Black Mage,” and “White Mage.” The other tracks (in no particular order) are as follows:
“Pink Princess”
“Purple Prince”
“Green Knight”
“Yellow Knight”
“Brown Friar”
“The Blind Prophet”
That album will hit Bandcamp and all streaming services (sans Spotify) on Thursday, 2 May 2024—exactly halfway to Halloween! It seemed an appropriate time to release a fantasy album.
Even better: I have a new album out today! You can pick up Epistemology for $5. It’s ten tracks of original instrumental music. Your digital purchase includes not just the music, but also full scores for every song; music videos for each piece; handwritten manuscripts for most of the pieces; and exclusive artwork (including artwork to accompany every piece on the album).
There’s a lot to dig into in this release. The title track, “Epistemology,” is a multipart suite for clarinet, bass clarinet, and piano exploring various philosophical theories about how we know what we know.
If you’re feeling generous and want my entire catalog of fourteen releases, my entire discography is half-off. That’s fifteen releases for $28.39, or $1.89 per release.
Tight on cash? No worries—you can listen to Epistemology on any streaming platform (except for Spotify), and all the tracks are on my YouTube page (you should subscribe to that, by the way—it’s free!).
I’m excited about this release, and I appreciate your support.
I’ve been writing a lot about my composing lately, which might be wearing down my readers. However, I have two updates on that front to sweeten the pot:
My latest release, Epistemology, hits streaming platforms and Bandcamp tomorrow, Friday, 1 March 2024
I have some tentative inquiries from at least two parties interested in commissioning original works from yours portly
I don’t have much more on #2 at the moment, but one of those commission will be paid, and involves composing for various flutes. The other commission will be for an online friend of mine.
As for #1, I’m quite excited for this release. It features some bold tracks, particularly the lengthy title track, “Epistemology.”
My latest bout of composing started last August (2023), but it was predated by a round of piano compositions dating back to February 2022. That resulted in Péchés d’âge moyen. I’m still planning to put together Red Tardy Slip Compositions, but I’ve tabled it for the time being to focus on more electronic works.
A couple of weeks ago I purchased a Slade saxophone from Amazon. Amazon is notorious for selling tons of junky Chinese saxophones in garish colors for low prices. These horns are often barely worth the brass and cork they’re made from, but parents looking for affordable horns for their kids buy them without knowing any better. The result is typically frustration with the instrument.
Yours portly desperately needed a reliable saxophone for some upcoming gigs, and repairs to my existing saxes (one alto and two tenors) are prohibitively expensive at the moment. Also, my repair guy is a cantankerous old Northern guy who lives way far out, and the combination of expense, inconvenience, and a Yankee tongue-lashing for not maintaining my horns adequately had yours portly running to the arms of our Chinese overlords.
Well, Slade makes a surprisingly good sax for $230. Typically these Chinese horns have all sorts of problems: leaky keys, pads that don’t seal properly, etc. Horror stories abound of purchases paying the equivalent of the horn’s price (or more!) to get it setup properly.
I decided to bite the bullet and try it after watching a video from Better Sax on YouTube, in which he compared one of the saxes to to his gorgeous (and $4000) Yanagisawa alto:
I ordered the cheapest possible sax, even though I could have spent another $40 or $50 for some cool colors. When the sax arrive last Tuesday night, I was pleasantly surprised to see they’d sent me the wrong sax—their blue model! It is an absolutely gorgeous instrument.
Check out that beauty! Such a beautiful instrument, of course, demands to be played, so I did just that.
On Friday, 2 February 2024 I released Firefly Dance, my latest collection of original digital compositions. It’s a fun album, and I’m pleased with how it came out in the end.
You can purchase and/or stream Firefly Dance through the following services:
Amazon: https://amzn.to/3SyTMHJ (Amazon Affiliate link; I get a small portion of any purchase made from clicking this link, at no additional cost to you)
This week I’m featuring “Triumphant Processional“—a composition that I found buried in one of my music journals, and which turned out to be a quite fun tune.
On Friday, 2 February 2024 I released Firefly Dance, my latest collection of original digital compositions. It’s a fun album, and I’m pleased with how it came out in the end.
You can purchase and/or stream Firefly Dance through the following services:
Amazon: https://amzn.to/3UxmwDp <—That’s an Amazon Affiliate link; I get money if you get buy something through that link, at no cost to you, etc., etc.
Of course, if you’ve been reading the blog regularly, I’ve been posting sneak peeks of the album since late November. So for the next few Sundays, I’ll be featuring past installments of Open Mic Adventures that highlight the tracks:
“Open Mic Adventures LXVII: ‘Ode Napoléon’” – “Ode Napoléon“ opens Firefly Dance. It’s a tone poem depicting the rise and fall Napoleon Bonaparte, Emperor of France. It’s composed for piano, right-hand organ, small choir, and drums, but works well as an electronic instrumental composition.
On Friday, 2 February 2024 I released Firefly Dance, my latest collection of original digital compositions. It’s a fun album, and I’m pleased with how it came out in the end.
You can purchase and/or stream Firefly Dance through the following services:
Amazon: https://amzn.to/3SyTMHJ (Amazon Affiliate link; I get a small portion of any purchase made from clicking this link, at no additional cost to you)
Most of the tracks are fairly short, and several of them started life as small sightreading exercises for my various music students. Such is the case with “Cook’s Brief Bourrée in E minor”—an exercise for bass players to learn the bass clef, and for pianists to sharpen their left-hand playing.
On Friday, 2 February 2024 I released Firefly Dance, my latest collection of original digital compositions. It’s a fun album, and I’m pleased with how it came out in the end.
You can purchase and/or stream Firefly Dance through the following services:
Of course, if you’ve been reading the blog regularly, I’ve been posting sneak peeks of the album since late November. So for the next few Sundays, I’ll be featuring past installments of Open Mic Adventures that highlight the tracks:
“Open Mic Adventures LIX: ‘Listless Chorale’“ – At the time of writing, this track has 366 views on YouTube, which is kind of ridiculous (but I’m not complaining). An attempt at a chorale, which I called “listless” because it doesn’t seem to go anywhere (except back to the tonic, eventually).
“Open Mic Adventures LXIII: ‘FRANTIC!!’“ – And “FRANTIC!!” has 316 views, which is even more ridiculous. Again, I’m not complaining. In fact, I kind of want this track to reach an absurd degree virality—perhaps to become an instrumental “Rick Roll” for nerds. The piece is written to be intentionally annoying and anxiety-inducing for both the listener and the musician. I think I succeeded.
I’ve been composing like a madman lately, so much so that my brother is calling me the “Stephen King of Composing,” not because my pieces are particularly horrifying, but because I am slamming them out with the speed and consistency of the great horror writer.
I thought I’d take a short break from composing, but within a couple of days I was back in my music journal and Noteflight, composing new works. In the process, I’ve stumbled upon my next project: Four Mages.
I started with composing two pieces in my music journal, “Blue Mage” and “Red Mage,” which I then polished and altered in Noteflight. That start got me the idea that I needed a “White Mage” and a “Black Mage” to accompany those pieces.
Here’s a video version of “White Mage,” which I think is my favorite so far: