This has been without doubt the toughest thing I have ever attempted. Part of me worries it is a bit too busy, the majority doesn't care because its finished!!!!
Also I am NEVER picking something this complex again



#interview with the vampire#iwtv#the vampire armand#assad zaman
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This has been without doubt the toughest thing I have ever attempted. Part of me worries it is a bit too busy, the majority doesn't care because its finished!!!!
Also I am NEVER picking something this complex again
currently untitled (sketch)
the jayhawks - tiny arrows
first heard this track on KUT (90.5 in austin), after the dj said the station had been playing their music and enjoying a good relationship with the minneapolis-area band for several decades. my roommate and i talked for a bit about that point, i enjoyed the song in the background, and i suspected i'd never hear it again, unfortunately. all i remembered was that the band name was something classic/stock. then i heard it again a few weeks later and recognized it because of the appealing chord progressions in the chorus, and the band's name somehow came back to me. searched youtube for a bit and came across this impressive live presentation. singer gary louris (with the curly hair) reminds me of a cross between wayne coyne and ben folds.
they use a lot of satisfyingly open 7th and 9th chords here, and for some strange reason, a phenomenon i can vaguely date back to life as a 10-year old, something about the harmonies reminds me of mortality. i've found that to be the case with several songs through my life....it's closer to a neutral sentiment than a negative or a positive one, more like transcendent reflectiveness than fear or anxiety. i wish i could figure out what the music theory behind this concept is, on a personal level.
there's an interesting dynamic within these older guys and their wondering 'where did it go,' a sense that they've seen a lot, and still have plenty to experience, but just have more questions to go along with their time-expanded perspective. no one has ever found all the answers, and if they feel like they have, they've just stopped asking. this is a lesson in fragility and vulnerability; when overwhelmed, there's always the option to 'sit and watch the river flow; try and touch the sky,' which in turn reminds me of some lyrics by noah lennox/panda bear --
listen in between your notes, there's something big going on while you were busy taking notes and look in between your moments there's something good happening it's good to sometimes slow it down
some of my favorite lines ever. take it at your own pace and do whatever it takes to maximize your experience. how can you be bored? here's another version of 'tiny arrows,' slightly edgier with more wah-wah guitar and strident piano. listen to either one and take a moment to assess your place, assisted by this sonically noble transposition of melancholy and lucidity.