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SNACK'S FIRST ENTRY IN THE CRAPY MUSIC-OFF
http://crapyclawn.net/lolwords/viewtopic.php?t=1997
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Author:  snackpipe [ Mon May 14, 2007 5:03 am ]
Post subject:  SNACK'S FIRST ENTRY IN THE CRAPY MUSIC-OFF

It's kind of preliminary. I need to figure out how to convert mp3's to midis for some samples. And I'm gay.

It's only gay if the balls touch

Edit: Feel free to tell me it sucks. For some reason every thing I make in Fruity Loops sounds the same.

Author:  Hogg [ Mon May 14, 2007 5:41 am ]
Post subject: 

Snackpipe (1873 - ), like Feruccio Busoni, had the misfortune to be born too late to be a Romantic but too early to be a full-blown modernist. Like Busoni, he was one of the first composers to cite JS Bach as a primary influence. Schoenberg and his disciples studied Snackpipe's music assiduously. Writing to Alexander Zemlimsky in 1922 Schoenberg said, "I consider him a genius."

With the benefit of hindsight, one can detect a transitional quality to Snackpipe's music. The themes he uses are rooted in 19th century tonality, "traditional to the point of blandness," to quote John Williamson's exemplary liner notes. What fascinated Schoenberg was Snackpipe's use of extreme chromaticism in developing his conventional material. This, coupled with an intensely contrapuntal treatment, gave the music a feeling of anarchy (Schoenberg, of course, knew differently). At his wildest, in his organ music for example, Snackpipe's music has a polyphonic density that sounds uncomfortably muddy. Listening to it one is never quite certain which voice one is following.

It’s Only Gay If the Balls Touch, however, presents Snackpipe at his best. The string quartet was an ideal form for Snackpipe, the relatively uncluttered textures and the varied voices of the strings keep the polyphony from getting overcrowded in one register. This is especially notable in the finale, which contains one of Snackpipe's most splendid fugues. The quartet also tones down the chromaticism. It was written for the Bohemian String Quartet shortly after they joined Snackpipe in a performance of Brahms' Piano Quintet (however, the first performance was given by the Frankfurt String Quartet on 27 June 1909). The Bohemian String Quartet stressed the equal partnership of all players, standard practice nowadays, but something of a radical break from the tradition of the quartet acting "as a foil for the dominant first violinist, such as had been the case above all in the Joachim Quartet," to quote Carl Flesch. In contrast, the Bohemians "performed as equal partners with unheard-of intensity, freshness, and technical perfection made in heaven."

It’s Only Gay If the Balls Touch was Snackpipe's last completed work (something of an alcoholic, he died of heart failure at the age of 43). Set in the same key as Mozart's Clarinet Quintet, it quotes from Brahms' Clarinet Quintet at several points. Although classed as a "late Romantic," Snackpipe's music often has the emotional ambivalence of Hindemith. Yet this piece has an intensely moving lyricism; it seems to inhabit the same twilight world as the Brahms. The themes played by the clarinet have a similar shape: a quickly rising figure followed by a slower falling cadence. Snackpipe's transitional music reinforces the elusive feel of the piece: harmonically diffuse and unsettled, but equally undramatic, the Wagnerian storminess replaced by a wistful yearning. Even the quicker passages never escape the overall languor.

Both these pieces dispel the cliché that Snackpipe is a composer of great technical mastery but little emotional reach. It is true that one does not find the grand gestures of a Tchaikovsky in Snackpipe's music, but in an age that finds such gestures naïve perhaps that is not the liability it once was.

Author:  assrott [ Mon May 14, 2007 12:27 pm ]
Post subject: 

lol @ about 1:30, priceless.

Author:  Hogg [ Mon May 14, 2007 1:58 pm ]
Post subject: 

Oops, forgot to take the death part out of my review

Author:  BONER JACKSON [ Mon May 14, 2007 3:26 pm ]
Post subject: 

Quote:
Snackpipe (1873 - ), like Feruccio Busoni, had the misfortune to be born too late to be a Romantic but too early to be a full-blown modernist. Like Busoni, he was one of the first composers to cite JS Bach as a primary influence. Schoenberg and his disciples studied Snackpipe's music assiduously. Writing to Alexander Zemlimsky in 1922 Schoenberg said, "I consider him a genius."

With the benefit of hindsight, one can detect a transitional quality to Snackpipe's music. The themes he uses are rooted in 19th century tonality, "traditional to the point of blandness," to quote John Williamson's exemplary liner notes. What fascinated Schoenberg was Snackpipe's use of extreme chromaticism in developing his conventional material. This, coupled with an intensely contrapuntal treatment, gave the music a feeling of anarchy (Schoenberg, of course, knew differently). At his wildest, in his organ music for example, Snackpipe's music has a polyphonic density that sounds uncomfortably muddy. Listening to it one is never quite certain which voice one is following.

It’s Only Gay If the Balls Touch, however, presents Snackpipe at his best. The string quartet was an ideal form for Snackpipe, the relatively uncluttered textures and the varied voices of the strings keep the polyphony from getting overcrowded in one register. This is especially notable in the finale, which contains one of Snackpipe's most splendid fugues. The quartet also tones down the chromaticism. It was written for the Bohemian String Quartet shortly after they joined Snackpipe in a performance of Brahms' Piano Quintet (however, the first performance was given by the Frankfurt String Quartet on 27 June 1909). The Bohemian String Quartet stressed the equal partnership of all players, standard practice nowadays, but something of a radical break from the tradition of the quartet acting "as a foil for the dominant first violinist, such as had been the case above all in the Joachim Quartet," to quote Carl Flesch. In contrast, the Bohemians "performed as equal partners with unheard-of intensity, freshness, and technical perfection made in heaven."

It’s Only Gay If the Balls Touch was Snackpipe's last completed work (something of an alcoholic, he died of heart failure at the age of 43). Set in the same key as Mozart's Clarinet Quintet, it quotes from Brahms' Clarinet Quintet at several points. Although classed as a "late Romantic," Snackpipe's music often has the emotional ambivalence of Hindemith. Yet this piece has an intensely moving lyricism; it seems to inhabit the same twilight world as the Brahms. The themes played by the clarinet have a similar shape: a quickly rising figure followed by a slower falling cadence. Snackpipe's transitional music reinforces the elusive feel of the piece: harmonically diffuse and unsettled, but equally undramatic, the Wagnerian storminess replaced by a wistful yearning. Even the quicker passages never escape the overall languor.

Both these pieces dispel the cliché that Snackpipe is a composer of great technical mastery but little emotional reach. It is true that one does not find the grand gestures of a Tchaikovsky in Snackpipe's music, but in an age that finds such gestures naïve perhaps that is not the liability it once was.

Author:  assrott [ Mon May 14, 2007 3:30 pm ]
Post subject: 

Quote:
Oops, forgot to take the death part out of my review
His death is still mentioned in the 4th paragraph. Idoit. Morno. Retared.

Author:  Hogg [ Mon May 14, 2007 4:51 pm ]
Post subject: 

I know. That's what I forgot to take out. I never said I fickst it.

wtf r u a ritard

Author:  snackpipe [ Mon May 14, 2007 9:58 pm ]
Post subject: 

I would reply but I died from heart failure. This is my ghost typing.

Ghost edit: Putfile fails and won't let me upload this other one.....

Author:  snackpipe [ Tue May 15, 2007 12:52 am ]
Post subject: 

Ghost double poast:

K here's another one for you B-boys and girls.

Move over Dr. Dre!!1

Author:  BONER JACKSON [ Tue May 15, 2007 1:55 am ]
Post subject: 

http://music.colorfinger.net/songofmeat.mp3

Author:  assrott [ Tue May 15, 2007 6:53 pm ]
Post subject: 

Quote:
Mankind can stop achieving things. We have reached our pinnacle.

Author:  Agent_137 [ Thu May 17, 2007 4:30 pm ]
Post subject: 

lamb chops!

Author:  DRAGONHAWK [ Thu May 17, 2007 5:18 pm ]
Post subject: 

BACON!!!

Author:  wardryer [ Thu May 17, 2007 8:26 pm ]
Post subject: 

As soon as I figure out Fruity loops I shall remix the office theme song

Author:  Glimfeather [ Thu May 17, 2007 11:03 pm ]
Post subject: 

Snack, started out greta but then it went into the F*CKING GARBAGE quick with that dr dre nonsense. You can do better.





Much better.

Author:  LiamE [ Fri May 18, 2007 1:58 am ]
Post subject: 

I had a copy of fruity loops somewhere, but then I lost it.

When I learn myself how to load musics onto the intertron I will let loose with some epicness.

Author:  Hogg [ Fri May 18, 2007 2:00 am ]
Post subject: 

Hurry up or Snackpipe will win by default.

Author:  snackpipe [ Fri May 18, 2007 2:03 am ]
Post subject: 

Quote:
Hurry up or Snackpipe will win by default.

Author:  Hogg [ Fri May 18, 2007 3:47 am ]
Post subject: 

My world premiere as a composer:

http://media.putfile.com/Ode-to-M

Author:  BONER JACKSON [ Fri May 18, 2007 3:48 am ]
Post subject: 

Quote:
Hurry up or Snackpipe will win by default.
come on guys the crapy music-off only happens once a year and the boner jackson forum is hosting for the first time ever dont let snackpipe take it

Author:  DRAGONHAWK [ Fri May 18, 2007 8:56 am ]
Post subject: 

Quote:
My world premiere as a composer:

http://media.putfile.com/Ode-to-M
needs a long slow one at the end

Author:  Glimfeather [ Fri May 18, 2007 12:36 pm ]
Post subject: 

Bow down before me.

http://media.putfile.com/Glim-Anthem

Author:  Agent_137 [ Fri May 25, 2007 12:23 pm ]
Post subject: 

which one of the you made the SUmmon the Manhammers classical piece?

that's the winner.

Author:  Hogg [ Fri May 25, 2007 1:01 pm ]
Post subject: 

That was LiamE.

Author:  DRAGONHAWK [ Fri May 25, 2007 1:22 pm ]
Post subject: 

Quote:
which one of the you made the SUmmon the Manhammers classical piece?

that's the winner.
i almost used that for a 3d animation project this past semester. but the animation turned out to be way too long for the song to work

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