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Classical & Contemporary Music artist from USA. New songs free to stream or download. Add to your playlist now.

cover pic

Justin Crowell

Comments 8
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Numi Who
Sep 12, 2008
Why all my comments? You were next to me in the charts; beyond that I don't know! But I do know that commenting helps us reason through things, verbalize notions, and come to understand ourselves; so my comments are for me as much as they are for you... besides, I'm not new to commenting- I've 6500 or so on the writing site I'm at...!
Numi Who
Sep 12, 2008
give me two hundred of these, and I'll pick the best 12 to make an album... and I'll edit if I have to, if there are a dearth of quality moments! I'm not one to create harmony or dissonance for their own sake, they are tools to serve a higher purpose, which is missing in this piece...
Numi Who
Sep 12, 2008
I hear heart and career determination and persistence in the soprano's voice; the rest I don't hear much, no story, no feeling, it seems like rote performing to elitist avant-garde ghosts of the past... on the other hand, if you had to master this style to to become an 'accomplished composer', you can be satisfied... at around 6:10, when the piano is hitting steady quarter notes, I envisioned that the keyboard could have been written to really taken off gymnastically there (to give the piece technical credibility)
Numi Who
Sep 12, 2008
For something like this, I'd recommend improvising while recording for at least a hour, eight hours if you can manage it (owing to your rusty playing!) then editing together the best passages... for I find that the best passages are those where the performer's mind is elsewhere, and that cannot be done on que, but must be captured...
Numi Who
Sep 12, 2008
by your titles, age, and background I anticipate a variety of fare- this time it was a difficult choice as what to listen to next- the Tahiti piece, the brass quintet, vibrations, or guitar piece... this one is interesting, not much yet, but a good base for future elaboration... I think you should add to your influences contemporary Hollywood composers in general- there have been a lot of great scores in the last 10 years, and I detect their influence in your works...
Numi Who
Sep 12, 2008
Song: Sonnet 3
nice modern poem of painted vagaries and elusive emotions of displaced souls; the music is proficient, but emotionless and academic- it is a 'sounds like' piece, like, "write something that sounds like..." for an atonal piece to "work", it must transmit something magical (as with any art); perhaps more dynamics in this one would help bring out the human theme of the poem (and obviously romantic- see what I mean about 'girl' and 'guy' art?)... personally, I think an artist need his/her heart broken a dozen times before their art can be imbued with that ultimate component- human triumph and tragedy...
Numi Who
Sep 12, 2008
definitely minimalist; I'd work on part 1- in keeping the listener's interest- the intro is a bit stretched and will lose a lot of listeners; if you want to put your best foot forward, start the piece with the passage beginning at 4:10, and keep it going somewhere- a mistake of many who try minimalism is not offering any nuances in the repetition, where the listener will fast-forward to see where it is going... keep in mind a listener will 'listen through' what you are doing, no matter how technically gymnastic or not it is, trying and find the heart and mind of the composer/performer, searching for something human to latch on to... if there is nothing, they will assume you have nothing to offer, and might as well be listening to a stamping machine in a machine shop... don't forget there is 'girl' music and 'guy' music- your piece here is heavily 'guy' music (as is most of the 20th century classical/experimental fare, and which is the reason it failed to capture general audiences); in
Numi Who
Sep 12, 2008
quite a line-up for fans of- everyone from Beethoven to Debussy to Schoenberg, I haven't heard of Andriessen, I'll have to look him up (the best place I've found is Amazon.com, they usually have samples of the album)... you have some good s*$& in your zombie piece here, sounds like quality equipment; you've gone beyond your line-up into the 21st century, with music beyond orchestra; a lot of us try to weave the orchestra and choir back into things, but now we have a lot of tools from the electronic world to integrate with them... I don't know if you've tried it yet, but it's clear you could do something greater than a zombie jingle!