Very, very, VERY well done! This is more regular, stable and flows correctly! Now we can step even further: I see your compositions last, on average, 5 minutes; in order to make them more interesting, you can do two things: either make the piece shorter, focusing on the theme you chose, or use two of what I like to call the “composer’s tools”: modulations, change in the tempo, or even both! They’re two of the hardest things to pull correctly, but when done right, they give a piece of music a true identity! They’re hard to learn and master because they obnoxiously strictly rely on music theory… for that reason it’s difficult to make a good tempo change and/or modulation without studying a bit, but it’s worth the while. At the moment I can’t get in my mind a good example of tempo change, but I have a nice piece which features a great example of modulation, that is Chopin’s Waltz in C sharp minor op.64 no.2
Thanks for the advice! I've attempted tempo and key changes before, and most of the time the key changes just sound a bit basic or uninspired- they work a little, they bring up the energy, but ultimately the transition just ends up sounding very robotic and even a little unfitting at times. I've used tempo and even meter changes a few times before, but mostly just to bring more intensity to finale sections by upping the tempo. I think next time I'll try a key change too for the final section instead of just increasing the tempo. There are a few old pieces I made that used or maybe even overused key changes at times, but I'm not sure how I'd upload these as they use far more instruments than just piano, and the only sound SeeMusic seems to support is piano. If I can find a way to upload those I probably will, but for now they remain unpublished.
Amazing!!!
your videos are getting better and better, you can see a great evolution
Thanks!
Very, very, VERY well done! This is more regular, stable and flows correctly!
Now we can step even further: I see your compositions last, on average, 5 minutes; in order to make them more interesting, you can do two things: either make the piece shorter, focusing on the theme you chose, or use two of what I like to call the “composer’s tools”: modulations, change in the tempo, or even both! They’re two of the hardest things to pull correctly, but when done right, they give a piece of music a true identity! They’re hard to learn and master because they obnoxiously strictly rely on music theory… for that reason it’s difficult to make a good tempo change and/or modulation without studying a bit, but it’s worth the while.
At the moment I can’t get in my mind a good example of tempo change, but I have a nice piece which features a great example of modulation, that is Chopin’s Waltz in C sharp minor op.64 no.2
Thanks for the advice! I've attempted tempo and key changes before, and most of the time the key changes just sound a bit basic or uninspired- they work a little, they bring up the energy, but ultimately the transition just ends up sounding very robotic and even a little unfitting at times. I've used tempo and even meter changes a few times before, but mostly just to bring more intensity to finale sections by upping the tempo. I think next time I'll try a key change too for the final section instead of just increasing the tempo.
There are a few old pieces I made that used or maybe even overused key changes at times, but I'm not sure how I'd upload these as they use far more instruments than just piano, and the only sound SeeMusic seems to support is piano. If I can find a way to upload those I probably will, but for now they remain unpublished.
Nice
i feel this could use a humans playing instead of a program cuz the chords sound too violent in my opinon but still a nice piece
This doesnt fucking suck