Share Your Music

I’m sorry for your loss Ali and echoing everyone’s sentiments that was a very lovely moving piece and I felt the emotion coming from it. A very beautiful yet melancholic tribute to her.

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I’m sorry for your loss. :folded_hands: This is a lovely and touching composition. You can really hear meaning in the song and perhaps get some sense of beauty the they brought to those around them. You must have spent a long time making this tribute, there’s a lot to it and flows very naturally. I would also echo what everyone else has said.

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Thank you for your kind words Vishen. I’m pleased you enjoyed the music. :+1:

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Hi Cats,
Your kind words are much appreciated. I’m glad the music moved you. Timewise (according to the project clock on my DAW) it took just under 13hrs to create the track. It was done in fits and starts, with numerous revisions etc, so not all in one go. Thanks for taking time to comment! :slightly_smiling_face:

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Hi everybody!

The first single from my album is out now, available on most platforms! This community is the best!

Much love,

-Noah Stockton

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Brilliant Noah, Well done ! Love the bass :grinning_face:

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Still getting me ‘chair dancing’, mate! Wonderful. Good luck with this release. :smiley:

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Congrats, Noah! It’s a great sound with all of the good vibes!

A little bit of battle music using Cello Motors, Guitar Hive and Marshal Brass

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Love this, has a strong Tycho feel to it

Those drums are great!

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A lovely de-stress! Thank you!

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I’ve just come to this a bit late and… Wow! That’s ridiculously beautiful. The oneness of the spirit of life on earth, linked together via DNA…. and music! Thanks for sharing, Greg.

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Have created a new track - slightly different to previous postings here. It uses Crow Hill instruments and effects, but also other tools in my collection. Comments in the YT explain the inspiration behind it.

:slight_smile:

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Thought I’d share the most recent piece I actually managed to finish :sweat_smile: it was my entry for the brave scoring competition from Patrick Doyle.

Constructive feedback always welcomed!

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Hello all, long time no see (again), been incredibly busy so I have not had the time to actually join google meets for the podcast etc. The life of somebody who wears a lot of hats at once… One of the things I’ve done is revise an old(ish) piece i made called “Waltz of the Drunken”. I’d love it if you could check it out!

https://youtu.be/_WC1ecybdYQ?si=J-9F1aVFExw5X4mB

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This actually gives me Patrick Doyle vibes with a tinge of Danny Elfman. Love the quirkiness at 1:30 before going dark, that muted brass is so crispy. Good job

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That’s a powerful piece, Ali. To me it’s full of forward momentum, urgency and threat, completely in keeping with the subject matter you alluded to in your YT comments. Very nicely done. Far more Brad Fiedel’s ‘The Terminator’ (a modern golem) than Richard Teitelbaum’s epic ‘interactive opera’. In Jewish folklore the roles and fate of the g’lamim (plural of golem) are complex. They protected the Jewish community from the constant racism that they experienced in Europe. However, humans are not supposed to create and control other beings in that way and such attempts were often disastrous. Maybe one day we’ll learn that lesson that the g’lamim were sent to teach us. Maybe….

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Thank you so much for listening Stephen and for taking time to comment. The concept of creating men or monsters from clay/mud is found in the folklore of many peoples around the world. It is mostly seen as the preserve of gods to do this and there is a strong inference that men who do this are acting above their pay-grades, so-to-speak, and as a result will bring misfortune on themselves and others for such transgressions. They are old stories, but still relevant today. :slight_smile:

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