Monday, 11 March 2013

Promise kept! "2:32" released

The album that I said would be coming out this month is out! And, happily enough, in the exact date that I wished. You can download it from my website, which, by the way, has a new address: http://www.ferniecanto.com.br/. The album, titled 2:32, is available here: http://www.ferniecanto.com.br/2-32, and you can download it in both MP3 and FLAC formats (as well as all my previous albums). You can also listen to the whole thing on SoundCloud: https://soundcloud.com/fernie-canto/sets/2-32-full-album.

As the title suggests, every track in that album has the length of 2 minutes and 32 seconds exactly. Why? Mostly to see what kind of stuff would come out. The album was a good exercise to put some random ideas that were bubbling in my head, and also to exercise a more purely electronic and abstract sound. There are plenty of weird textures and rhythms going on, but also some neat fragments of melody -- and Bach pieces as well. Check it out, it's nifty.

Friday, 14 December 2012

This long delay

So it happened that the whole year of 2012 has went by without a single new composition by me, and the last post in this blog was made 16 months ago. But that doesn't mean that stuff hasn't happened. Stuff did happen, it always does. As for musical stuff, if things run smoothly and nice, 2013 shall be a quite productive year.

For one, there'll be a new album coming out in March. This date is definitive, because the album is already done, and it only hasn't been put out yet for reasons that shall be disclosed when the time is right. And I've also got a fairly big project under production; for now it's entitled Don't Stay in the City, and its current shape is an "album in two parts", with seven tracks in total, and a combined length of about 70 minutes. That one is still a work in progress, and there are no predictions of release dates and so on, but it's gonna be a pretty nice record. I'll probably publish part one as soon as its done, and then move on to finish part two.

Thursday, 25 August 2011

New album published: 3 7 4 11 2 5

My newest album is already available for free listening and download on Jamendo: 3 7 4 11 2 5 features six tracks, all entirely instrumental, with a radically more electronic and abstract sound than my previous releases. The title of the album is a numeric pattern used to determine most -- but not all! -- of the rhythmic aspects of the music in different scales, from within each individual measure, to the album as a whole. All of the melodies, harmonies, instrument choices and everything else were NOT generated algorithmically, however.

Sunday, 14 August 2011

Eleven Gifts in depth, part 11: v

This was one of the easiest songs to conceive -- and I mean easy in a good, self-assuring way, not in a dismissive way, if you know what I mean. Basically, this song was begging to be written; firstly because, since it would be the closer of the suite, I wanted it to be VERY different, upbeat and sparkling; and secondly because it matched exactly the mood I wanted for it. It was a win-win situation, and I can't think of any better piece to fit in here.

Yet, it's the simplest song in the set - a boogie-woogie, nothing more, nothing less. Of course, me being me, I just have to twist it somehow; and the best way to do that was to use unexpected chords -- in this case, modulating from C major to C-sharp major, and so on and on, culminating in a crescendo over a diminished chord, and back to the main key. It didn't need to be anything else. It's one of my favourite tunes in here, for being so effective.

Eleven Gifts in depth, part 10: t

This short piece came to my head in one lucky, inspired moment. I don't know exactly what prompted me, but I was seeking for a slow, solemn theme that transmitted a stately, not exactly sad, but poignant feel. Not that there's any special significance to this track, but I wanted it to have a different feel from the others. I guess I was thinking of using the sustain pedal for an enhanced effect, and when this sequence of notes hit my head, I scribbled them down on a notebook, with the working title of "Pedal".

Writing it was very easy a fast -- the song pretty much wrote itself from start to end. It uses a pretty predictable trick halfway through, which is to switch to what would be the relative major key, but in the minor key. In practical terms, the song starts in G minor, which has B-flat as its relative major key, but the song switches to B-flat minor instead. Yet, the tail end suggests a major key, and I like the effect of the trailing notes, which creates a hazy, ambiguous tonality.

Just not I realised that G minor and B-flat minor are exactly the two keys used in the song The Wedding, by the Legendary Pink Dots, which is also a piano led track which I truly, really love -- but I don't think I knew that particular song back then! A minor coincidence, I believe...

Tuesday, 9 August 2011

Eleven Gifts in depth, part 9: s

I have to admit, I was scraping the bottom of the barrel for this one tune. I was out of ideas! All the other tunes just came to me one way or another: either the idea hit me on the right moment, or I remembered I had something that fit; but for this one, neither occurred. So I sort of "cheated": I started listening to old songs from the "project" mentioned in the "c" and "i" posts, trying to see if I could salvage something, but without much hope. Then, suddenly, this incredible bass riff hit me in the face: I had completely forgotten it, and not only it was brilliant and perfect for this spot, but I was delighted to write a "reggae" for the cycle. All I had to do was to start writing.

The beauty here is that I didn't have to change any melodic content at all from its original incarnation. The left hand melody was left intact, chord changes and all, and all I had to do was write the right hand staccatos, and make a crescendo lasting for the whole composition. I was amazed at how good it turned out. This was the very last piece I wrote for the cycle, and after it, I just started recording. A very happy ending indeed.

Eleven Gifts in depth, part 8: l

Among the eight compositions, this is the oldest one. The interesting fact is that it has been published before, on an album that I have pulled off because of its extremely subpar quality. It had eight tracks, and one of them was called "Water", and it contained a quite pretty piano melody that I had come across about 11 years ago. Of course, back then, I simply didn't know moderation, and the song carried on and on to nine minutes.

The only thing that truly saddened me about removing that album from the Internet is that the pretty melody would go to waste... but only until this project came to happen. It was the perfect opportunity to showcase the melody in its glorious simplicity. I didn't change anything substantial, so it's essentially the same as it was 10 years ago. Of course, this version is only one minute and a half long, and features solo piano, but it sounds a lot better now. I have always been quite proud of it, and I was happy that it fit so well in the project. It's a calm, peaceful song without being too cheesy.

To me, the stretch of "i", "j" and "l" is the true crowning achievement of this work for me.