Ernest Bloch takes part in everyone’s favorite holiday – Black Friday. Music is “Sail” by Awolnation.
Author Archives: Scott Barnebey
Fall in Philadelphia
A short stretch of road just outside Philadelphia becomes my favorite place around November. This short video capturing the beautiful colors of Fall is soundtracked by a segment of an unfinished orchestral piece I am currently writing.
Punxsutawney Philharmonic
Does anyone else think the classical music world is missing out by not having a Philharmonic Orchestra in Punxsutawney, PA?
On February 2, the orchestra can host their Gala event. If the conductor comes out on stage and doesn’t see his shadow, then he has predicted the early arrival of their spring program. If the conductor does see his shadow, it will be another 6 weeks of Vivaldi’s “L’inverno”.
Decomposing: Byrd
A tribute to William Byrd. Ave verum corpus is sung here by the Tallis Scholars.
Decomposing: Wagner’s Ring Cycle
Decomposing: Vivaldeagle
The Sound
It’s coming on again
I cannot feel my hands, yeah, yeah
It’s not in my head, it’s in the air
Sometimes I worry that I won’t make it out alive
But it’s all coming out hazy and changing me
I’m slipping through the cracks
I cannot find myself, yeah, yeah
It’s not a disguise, or a lie
My life is falling apart and my luck is turning sharp
and I am emerging safely and gracefully
I’m sifting through the grain
I cannot lift my legs, yeah, yeah
And I am turning proud, and loud
And traces of this moment are starting to be found again
But it’s all running out slowly and fading me
The sound is all I have left
I’m dreaming in circles again
The past was sure to be rough and disorderly
Growing like silence pretends
When it ends ill start the mend
My brain is itching for more
I’ve got a little left down on the broken floor
And when I’m through here, the memories will wash ashore
I’ll take a little drag from my twisted roots
And drink myself through the night
When it’s right, I’ll start the fight
I am waiting so patiently for what could come today
And it’s all turning up bright and changing me
Decomposing: Mounteverdi
Decomposing: What Would Bach Do?
Music theory courses are filled with rules. “You have to learn the rules to break them,” is what young composers are told when they hand-in homework assignments overflowing with parallel fifths and doubled leading tones. Those assignments inevitably come back with the words “What would Bach do?” tattooed across the manuscripts in bright red ink.
We like to compare our compositional output to Bach’s extensive collection of perfection, since he so obviously did things right. Everybody loves Bach, and who can blame them? A Counterpoint professor of mine would talk about Bach like he was an old bar buddy that he would drink with on Thursday afternoons. Another faculty member created special “What would Bach Do?” bumper stickers for all his students to be placed on their old beat-up jeeps, cello cases and Macbook Pros. The only thing left would have been to write-up tickets for those who carelessly broke the laws of Johann Sebastian Bach.
Bach created beautiful music, but music wouldn’t be an art without exploration and development. Sorry Bach, sometimes you have to break the rules. We modernized-Americans cheat on our diets, loiter in front of convenient stores, drive over the speed limit, and yes, occasionally omit the 3rd when harmonizing a chord.
We do need to formulate guidelines for good music based on what’s been done that works, in order to build a foundation for compositional practices. Guidelines are simply important for structure, and a good way to ground your approach to a piece. Thoughts and ideas, however, should never be bound by universal laws.




