This week I’m digging up an older piece that invokes (in my mind) the ancient traditions of medieval Europe.
This week I’m digging up an older piece that invokes (in my mind) the ancient traditions of medieval Europe.
Yours portly is hard at work on Spooky Season IV and it’s nearly done. I don’t have an official release date yet, but I hope to have it out by Halloween (preferably about a week before).
That said, here’s one of the pieces from the release, which features a number of colorful ghosts.
Yours portly has three separate releases that I plan to now release in early September, as my distributor, CD Baby, usually takes about three weeks to approve releases for distribution. Two of the releases feature older works, but one will feature tons of new pieces.
This week, I’m featuring one of those new pieces, “Triple Deluxe”:
It was a more musical week than usual here at The Portly Politico, so I thought I’d take today’s installment of Lazy Sunday to feature recent music-related pieces:
Enjoy this brief trip into the very recent past—and enjoy listening!
Happy Sunday!
—TPP
Other Lazy Sunday Installments:
In case you missed it, yours portly is getting married. Yesterday, I decided to sit down and figure out music for the ceremony (pending Dr. Fiancée’s approval, of course) so that our pianist—the incomparable Robert Mason Sandifer—can get to practicing.
I’m not selecting anything controversial or daring for the processional or recessional. I’ve asked Mason to have fun with the prelude music and to play some of his original compositions, but for the ceremony itself, it’s straight-up Baroque classics.
Back in April I heard and/or read the word “xeriscaping” and found the concept and the word fascinating. Xeriscaping is gardening that does not require irrigation, so it consists of plants like cacti and succulents, as well as lots of rocks and gravel.
Also, it just sounds cool. Sometimes, that’s enough, and yours portly wrote an odd piece inspired by the concept.