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04-Barranco
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A tone poem for our electric orchestra. a flute and plucked string are overtaken by a horn and strings. A transition to a heavy rich string chord progression, and a transition back, ending up with a pastoral pipe.
rock melodic jazz fusion blues complex scales modes sophisticated listening harmonic polyrhythmic chordally minor
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If you like rock and jazz, fire and ice, strange polyrhythms, new chord sequences, aggressive drumming, new looks at old concepts, well, you stand a chance of l
This band is my one-man band. You remember seeing the one-man bands of the past, a guy playing a trumpet and an accordion with strings from his knees to a bass drum? No? Well I'm not like that, except in spirit! Instead I have a Roland W30 Workstation (a la Prodigy!) and three networked computers. All my output is DIGITAL. I compose, my band plays. When I'm tired, it packs up immediately. There're only ten steps from my practice hall to my bed! The band never complains, doesn't need refreshment, and doesn't go on strike for more pay!
Song Info
Charts
Peak #124
Peak in subgenre #39
Author
Tony Duncan
Rights
Tony Duncan
Uploaded
May 25, 2004
Track Files
MP3
MP3 6.4 MB 128 kbps 7:00
Story behind the song
El Barranco del Invierno is a rugged chasm cut through black volcanic rock a short drive away. It inspired this piece. Credit to Mike Cartwright for the chord progression. A very strange piece. I don't know if I like it, but it had to happen this way.
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