Darbietung des Stückes Vonamoe von Georg Vogel am Clavemusicum in Basel www.projektstu... www.georgvogel.net
Пікірлер: 499
@Lucius_Chiaraviglio10 ай бұрын
Sounds like early Baroque music and some kind of 1960s jazz fell in love . . . .
@TiwazGoudsnor10 ай бұрын
jazz is a logical next step after baroque. The classical and new age era are very different while baroque and jazz sound a lot like eachother. Check out early FRESCOBALDI canonza for instance, verrry jazzy. Smart you hear the connection.
@Lucius_Chiaraviglio10 ай бұрын
@@TiwazGoudsnor I couldn't find Frescobaldi canonza, but I found some Frescobaldi canzona -- I'll check them out later. Edit: Did this. I wouldn't call canonza (at least I - IV) jazzy, but the point stands that some Baroque and some jazz do have something in common. This is more readily noticeable with some of the works of Vivaldi (for instance, some of the concertos from La Stravaganza).
@fatitankeris632710 ай бұрын
@@TiwazGoudsnorThe 32nd Beethoven piano sonata has a nice second mvt.
@FougarouBe10 ай бұрын
Hello @@Lucius_Chiaraviglio :) There is no "canonza"; it was simply a misspelling of "canzona" (meaning "song" in italian) ... Cheers :)
@paradiddlemcflam716710 ай бұрын
This actually kind of sound a lot like George van Epps to my tin drummer erar.
@jack-910810 ай бұрын
Ive never heard jazzy microtonal music like this before
@juicedelemon10 ай бұрын
and on the harpsichord!
@CarlosTapia-bw2uu10 ай бұрын
Jazz is boring
@elpapu241010 ай бұрын
@@CarlosTapia-bw2uu brother, no digas eso :c
@keweima558610 ай бұрын
@@CarlosTapia-bw2uu boring straight towards the center of the earth
@zapple531910 ай бұрын
@@CarlosTapia-bw2uu Jazz is not boring, it's just not for you
@Kids_Scissors10 ай бұрын
I love how this microtonal piano looks. Instead of being a weird hexagon board, it's more like... the sequel to the piano/harpsichord It's piano but more
@m00nbeams4210 ай бұрын
nonono lumatone looks CRAZY i want one so bad but they’re expensive af but omg they look so cool
@Kids_Scissors10 ай бұрын
@@m00nbeams42 I love the look of the Lumatone too. I'm just not a connoisseur of microtonal music lol so I'm not sure I'd get a lot of use out of it
@romeolz6 ай бұрын
@@Kids_Scissors the design of the lumatone makes it super easy to just play around in, it gives an intuitive feel to many new tunings that make you truly get what makes them tick (it's an isomorphic keyboard which means there is only one shape per chord that you can transpose where ever you want)
@bragtime10524 ай бұрын
@@romeolzyeah, compared to this keyboard, which looks really cool but requires 31 different fingerings for each scale
@Herr_Flick_of_ze_Gestapo3 ай бұрын
it's not a piano
@user-7465210 ай бұрын
Well, I was certainly not expecting to hear jazz on a microtonal harpsichord today.
@TommyLikeTom8 ай бұрын
One can very rarely plan for these things
@Pigroooo3 ай бұрын
I think it's a clavichord
@aegirosaurusichthyosaur5413 ай бұрын
@@Pigroooo No. It is a harpsichord, clavichords have a quieter and closed sound
@ethandeister656710 ай бұрын
I still don't understand how microtonal music hasn't seen wider popularity and further advancement with how technology and manufacturing have advanced to allow not only more complex designs of instruments, but more complex design of the music itself.
@NathanTax10 ай бұрын
In cases like this, usually the simpler answer is likelier: the added complexity for both the player, listener and instrument builder apparently does not weigh up to the increase in musical enjoyment for most audiences. Another point might also count, namely that in music without tempered instruments, such pure and microtonal harmonies can already be enjoyed. In that sense, it is already widespread in a sense, which would be contrary to your point.
@yinweichen10 ай бұрын
One can argue that LoFi contains elements of microtonal music. It's using continuously shifting microtones to texturise.
@matswessling660010 ай бұрын
because most microtonal music doesnt sound this good..
@nicolasgoulet409110 ай бұрын
my edge-lord hot take : our society is such that it does not produce western tonal harmony composer on par of the great composers of before, i think because we simple do not work enough. These geniuses started working every day of their life in early childhood. We simply do not have that level of commitment nowadays to that precise style of music, because its not like there are no musical geniuses anymore AND THEREFORE since we do not produce such geniuses to dedicate themselves to the new technocological advacenments, there are less works to be appreciated by the wider public. 'cause i think we can all agree this isntrument is just incredible and i am pretty sure that if this instrument had been around in the days of the previoulsy mentionned geniuses, we would have seen tonal harmony compositions where quarter tones are a thing and tonal harmony would have had to adjust to this like how do we even go about analyzing quarter tones? sorry i am very naive and enthusiastic just sharing my very biased opinions i dont see this as the absolute truth haha
@bradycall188910 ай бұрын
It's probably because it's so complex that it's hard to use.
@1.414210 ай бұрын
Though microtonal music may seem modern, this harpsichord is based on an original instrument by Vito Trasuntino, 1606, currently located at museo Internazionale e biblioteca della musica di Bologna. Studio31 has also made instruments with 36 and 24 keys per octave.
@Daring2Win8 ай бұрын
Not to mention that microtonal music is a staple in ancient music globally.
@RRRRRAAAAAAAAAHHHHHH8 ай бұрын
honestly i think the concept of microtonality is really a reflection of what european music theorists took for granted in the context of their own music. "Microtonal" or non-equal temperament music has always been present in other music traditions and continues to do so. That's what's normal for them! So hopefully someday we can understand these different music traditions according to their own understanding of tonality. It would be a music revolution.
@salt88886 ай бұрын
@@RRRRRAAAAAAAAAHHHHHH yeah. all music is about getting used to it, you wont like a hard rock sound in first listen and it might sound like just noise to you but someone who listens to those types of music will call it a masterpiece. people just arent used to hearing microtonal notes, and they classify their sound as "wrong" because of what they are accustomed to, but after listening it for a while it starts to sound really unique and beatiful.
@brucerain21066 ай бұрын
@@RRRRRAAAAAAAAAHHHHHH Equal temperament is great tho’. While I enjoy microtones, It’s rarely pleasant to listen to. In this composition, chords don’t even resolve, there’s nothing to grab onto, so many notes, and they all have weird relations,it just moves like a drunk person, almost with no intention. I feel like it should be done in moderation, with taste. And I think that some people really support this, just because they think that 12tet is some kind of western elitist conspiracy, while in reality 12tet is just a logical, easy to understand, learn, and use tuning. Idk I’m yapping sry
@RRRRRAAAAAAAAAHHHHHH6 ай бұрын
@@brucerain2106 certainly within this song there are some stylistic and aesthetic choices being made. Listen to Gamelan Pegulingan or arabic music or smth and you'll see how non 12TET traditions manage a cohesive and subtle system of note and chord relations.
@terranosuchus10 ай бұрын
There are a lot of parallels between Jazz and Baroque, both are improvisatory and emphasize modal harmony, polyphony and chromaticism (they also led to a simplified harmony in later styles, i.e. classical era/rock and pop)
@hdesertrat10 ай бұрын
Bach's 5th Brandenburg Concerto comes to mind - the extended harpsichord cadenza in the first mvmt.
@gehirndoper10 ай бұрын
Baroque musique isn't modal, but tonal.
@Acoustic-Rabbit-Hole10 ай бұрын
True. However, Bach inter-wove advanced chordal colorings into this works. Therefore, jazz. // Further, and in a real way, Debussy literally transferred these chording out of Classical Music and singlehandedly opened the door to jazz music. Debussy was aware of Scott Joplin's ragtime piano pieces (The Entertainer, Maple-Leaf Rag, etc), and publicly praised and defended his work, esp. Joplin being a black composer in the post-slavery US). Joplin composed in sonata from, and besides his novel rhythmic structures (swing), he lived and communicated in the tonality of the Classical composers. Generally good jazz musicians are familiar with and understand Classical music. @@gehirndoper
@pirojfmifhghek5669 ай бұрын
It's not coincidence. Jazz composers intentionally borrowed baroque tonality to create bebop. Taking a ii-V-I phrase and jamming another relative ii-V-[I] or a relative-V or a tritone sub in the middle of it all like a mutant chord-sandwich is basically Bach's calling card. And the rules of counterpoint created a wonderful structure for melodic improvisation. It was a damn good idea.
@Acoustic-Rabbit-Hole9 ай бұрын
Indeed! From Bach's fascinating usage of fleeting, transitional jazz chordings, to black-slave Gospel sining, plus Debussy & Scott Joplin. Jazz came from these things, and generally, good jazz musicians take an active interest in Classical music and understand it on a deep (theoretical) level.
@ZunnerchiaАй бұрын
This shows how complex blues and jazz are to employ those kinds of microtones, it evokes that cozy warmth of those genres when listening to this. I wish I could learn to play that
@sleeveace2232 ай бұрын
This is absolutely incredible. The harmony legit blew me away
@sinfinalfinisin10 ай бұрын
I am not capable of even understanding a single word in the title, let alone comment on the hypnotizing sound produced by this instrument and musician.
@RunstarHomer7 ай бұрын
It's microtonal - it has pitches that fall between the notes of the 12-tone scale which comprises basically all of Western music, like a note between C and C#. That's why it has so many buttons
@aspensmusicandrestoration8 ай бұрын
It takes an incredible understanding of music theory and how chords work to be able to play jazz on a microtonal harpsichord. Nice job!
@worm85662 ай бұрын
not to mention dexterity
@xcaluhbrationАй бұрын
I’m so in love with this.
@Tomastyr10 ай бұрын
This is amazing music!! So good, I can't believe some people get bored listening to this.
@rodrigogalliano460910 ай бұрын
me
@Maisiewuppp6 ай бұрын
I agree. Not boring.
@JoeMama-ep9kv6 ай бұрын
He is a master at the doodad. Love it
@NonJohns10 ай бұрын
usually i find microtonal music too deep for my taste and i don't know if i just like the standard tuning parts but i find this pretty approachable
@gabrielhicks804310 ай бұрын
I didn't even know this was microtonal until reading the comments
@alexloveday643010 ай бұрын
It’s jazz so it doesn’t matter if it’s microtonal
@sandia2beaumont10 ай бұрын
@@alexloveday6430"It's jazz so it doesn't matter if it's microtonal." That is one of the more astute comments here. Just think of what Billie Holiday and Ella Fitzgerald do with their voices! But perhaps, in jazz especially, the keyboard usually serves as "the reference" in matters of pitch, the "instrument that is neutral and doesn't stray from the true note", and so it is a shock when it suddenly abandons its time-honoured neutrality. Like Grandpa suddenly getting up at the dance and turning cartwheels.
@TheMadisonHang9 ай бұрын
It sounds, interesting
@GizzyDillespee9 ай бұрын
Wow, this music is so xxxxxx. I can't believe other people have a different opinion about it than I do!
@stephenweigel6 ай бұрын
lol
@matthiaspeene56319 ай бұрын
I'm by no means a musical expert but I feel like the microtonal realm has a lot of diffrent emotional potentials. The disapointing thing I see in it is that many people often fly from 1 idea or feeling and rush to the next far too quickly. Instead of expaning on 1 unique chord or small progression and seeying what it has to offer there seems to be some need to move to the next thing. I think this is a shame. I'd love to see a piece that expands on one idea and explores it's possibilieties so the listener can get used to the motive or (mode).
@gonzalez8786 ай бұрын
Very nicely put.
@amoddev34839 ай бұрын
need this on spotify
@basboerboom93286 ай бұрын
For some reason this sounds way too satisfying.
@therecordholder5 ай бұрын
everyone in the comments is calling this piece jazz but imo this is a pretty new sound, love it, new genre unlocked
@nulliosis31746 ай бұрын
please put this on Spotify so I can listen to it constantly
@DJDiskmachine6 ай бұрын
This is equally jarring and wonderful, love it! Thanks for jiggling my preference for music ☺️
@jeremydoody10 ай бұрын
This might be the best version of microtonality that I’ve heard, IMO. Sounds like it’s tempered to provide more true intervals as options, rather than just smaller equal subdivisions. Am I right? Usually microtonal instruments sounds more “out of tune” to me, but the majority of what you played here sounded more “in tune” than 12 TET to me. Are your microtone options the true major third, true perfect fifth, true seventh, etc based on the overtones, by any chance? If not, I’d love to know what you’re doing to make the chords work so well. Bravo!
@rfv61810 ай бұрын
You're right. This types of keyboards favour major thirds (and to a lesser extent minor thirds) at the expense of fifths mostly
@sus-kupp9 ай бұрын
Its 31-tet, which has pretty good thirds and a pretty good 7:4 (the "barbershop seventh").
@Uruz20128 ай бұрын
Only sounds out of tune because your ear is trained to listen for the "normal" scales. If you listened to nothing but this style for a few years, modern pop would sound out of tune.
@jeremydoody8 ай бұрын
@@Uruz2012 do you always assume so much? You don’t know me 🤣
@jzero48138 ай бұрын
@@Uruz2012 No. Dissonance is objective.
@cafela95889 ай бұрын
I get a Piazzolla vibe from this. What a phenomenal instrument!
@Applebutter5210 ай бұрын
I just expanded enormously at this newness.
@Applebutter5210 ай бұрын
and came a little
@Mizantrop__8 ай бұрын
This is perfect, I absolutely need this instrument
@Kat-V10 ай бұрын
The way my eyes widened when I realised what all those extra keys are for! Fascinating
@ridethelightning24710 ай бұрын
This is so cool, I can't stop listening.
@elenab.436510 ай бұрын
After 10 seconds of this I absolutely need to listen to the Wohl Temperiertes Klavier ...
@RyanMichero6 ай бұрын
Well-tempered is for weaklings
@ykrgfk6 ай бұрын
Excellent. Some of those unique modulations are very beautiful.
@georgiyosipov480910 ай бұрын
Solfeggio lesson. Let's start a dictation. Teacher:
@Karlfalcon10 ай бұрын
This is what well-tuned vocal jazz feels like - on a keyboard though, fascinating!
@Kobzar337410 ай бұрын
Very interesting. Sometimes it makes me remember Skrjabin. Thank you for shasring, keep up the good work, and best wishes from Spain!
@rodnaskel212310 ай бұрын
Just thought the same, some chords and cadences are almost middle period of Scriabin's style He probably would love this instrument though
@juicedelemon10 ай бұрын
@@rodnaskel2123 it's because of minor 3rd movements. you can notice the whole dom7 chord moving up/down (i forgot which)
@sirvaniss10 ай бұрын
Very insightful, completely agree.
@darb.musica10 ай бұрын
Crazy! I hear some tango reminiscences, but from a different world
@KaznoMusix10 ай бұрын
There is something mysteriously beautiful to this.
@TommyLikeTom8 ай бұрын
this is the first time I've heard one of these sound good. Very natural sounding cadences
@l3p310 ай бұрын
Maybe I am not ready for this. It just hurts.
@stavats10 ай бұрын
He isn't exactly gentle with some of the enharmonic shifts in his chord progressions. This music is very layered and I don't reckon was made to be accessible. There's a lot to stomach here but I like it. Not all microtonal music is like this
@RuthvenMurgatroyd10 ай бұрын
Honestly, this is the best example of microtonal music that's actually listenable that I've personally come across (not that I listen to much though but anyway). Very nice ideas here and there but barely coherent. It's a story which goes nowhere but ends up all over the place. This is what I imagine a musician would do with the have-baked melodies that I, a non-musician, come up with and humm to myself sometimes.
@KevinTPLim7 ай бұрын
If you come up with and hum your own melodies you are (or could be, depending on definitions) a musician!
@abnormality006 ай бұрын
☹
@Josmitty10 ай бұрын
those are some really interesting cadences and resolutions. Not being a big music buff (getting back into studying theory that I heretofore ignored because I found a lute... and not tuning in equal temperament is fascinating), how do you reconcile trying to get perfect(er) intervals while still meaningfully moving around the tonal center? it seems to me (relative layman) that the more you try to preserve the purity of intervals, the harsher the voices clash. That feels like a limiting factor to how well you can modulate. Is that... true? oh! is it possible for that instrument to do the Collier modulation to G half sharp?
@Lucius_Chiaraviglio10 ай бұрын
The problem is that when you are limited to a manageable number of pitches, improving the purity of one type of interval tends to worsen the purity of others (aside from fortunate synergies that are the exception rather than the rule). To improve the purity of multiple types of intervals generally requires increasing the number of pitches, which makes them harder to use and makes building a fixed-pitch instrument more difficult and more expensive (the latter is especially true for a pipe organ). You can get some mileage out of going to an unequal temperament, but after a certain point this limits your ability to modulate to other key signatures.
@LeakyJAZZ10 ай бұрын
the modulation to G half sharp was done over multiple measures and was a gradual pitch shift, meaning he cannot
@romeolz10 ай бұрын
@@LeakyJAZZ it wasn't a gradual pitch shift (if i remember correctly) it was more similar to a comma pump (look it up)
@LeakyJAZZ10 ай бұрын
@@romeolz ohhh i remember that from an adam neely vid. I remember hearing jacob collier explain it himself and i couldve sworn it was just gradually shifting up but i could be wrong
@matj129 ай бұрын
This probably is equally tempered to 31 tones per octave. So most diatonic intervals are cleaner than in 12-tone equal temperament while it has a manageable number of tones. Transposition works like in any other equal temperament. Modulation to G half-sharp exactly is not possible because there are no quartertones, but modulation by a neutral third is possible.
@hanspecans15 күн бұрын
This was a real beauty.
@arktemperedoreo94826 ай бұрын
This is beautiful. I’d be really interested to see what it would sound like if you played the Piece Backwards
@IlkerTekbasaran10 ай бұрын
Feels like you are switching genres instantly.
@TrateMusic9 ай бұрын
I've been waiting to see a song performed on this instrument since i first saw it in a Short. Really cool!
@ВикторияПриходько-в6н8 ай бұрын
This composition reminded me of the echoes of the musical language of the 20th century composer Alfred Schnittke ❤
@isntitrich00010 ай бұрын
It's so strange and addictive
@andriesscheper20228 ай бұрын
Beautiful tone... Makes a nice jazz instrument!
@calebshockency208310 ай бұрын
Another hot one from the Duke of Ellington.
@federicoferro141010 ай бұрын
It reminded me Astor Piazzolla´s music. Beautiful
@pedrohenriqueamaral315710 ай бұрын
The crossover between baroque and jazz
@vapourmile4 ай бұрын
Interesting and pleasant to listen to. Georg appears to like to draw from many different musical styles covering many different musical eras alongside some original ideas and puts it all together in series so there is always quite a lot happening. It never really stands still.
@ender27l10 ай бұрын
Amaría escuchar la canción de "the lamp is low" tocada por éste instrumento tan fantástico
@ethanotto506210 ай бұрын
Kiss From a Rose would sound gorgeous on this!
@dbadagna8 ай бұрын
Can you clarify in the video description above whether this is in 31-tone equal temperament or whether the 31 divisions of the octave are based on (unequal) natural intervals?
@soupisfornoobs40815 ай бұрын
I believe they're natural intervals but I can't be sure, you can look for this specific one by looking up the clavemusicum omnitonum, which studio31 has as linked in the description
@dbadagna5 ай бұрын
@@soupisfornoobs4081 Maybe the uploader will eventually add this basic information to the video description above, so everyone may learn more.
@DutchmanAmsterdam10 ай бұрын
This sounds fantastic! 😊
@marknesselhaus43768 ай бұрын
Sounds so mellow, I like it 🙂
@zzausel10 ай бұрын
I got big goosebumps because I dreamt of this some night some decades ago.
@sandia2beaumont10 ай бұрын
I think I know what you mean
@slurplie9 ай бұрын
I can’t tell if it’s a mess or if I am not ready for this kinda music
@tomasfraser184610 ай бұрын
This is incredibly beautiful thank you so much for sharing this ❤
@NPAnetwork9638 ай бұрын
This is beautiful! Keep playing!!
@olav337810 ай бұрын
this made me feel some type away
@coolhandphilip9 ай бұрын
This is so beautiful! Why isn't it more widely played?
@handsomeduck67919 ай бұрын
its probably expensive to make but i want one
@m.a.g.39208 ай бұрын
Because most people won't enjoy It, don't you realize MOST Young people listen to trap and horrible "music"?
@thomasbellamy18 ай бұрын
Probably because it sounds like shit
@coolhandphilip8 ай бұрын
@@thomasbellamy1 🤣🤣🤣
@m.a.g.39208 ай бұрын
@@thomasbellamy1 yeah, If you think about it sounds like trying to play the off tuned piano that has been waiting in a basement😅
@MrPSaun10 ай бұрын
This was wonderful.
@ゆうしゃサマ10 ай бұрын
I like this frequent key changing style☺
@PiotrSiedlecki-qv2cd8 ай бұрын
Surprising sound
@npsantoss5 ай бұрын
Essa mistura de músicas do Cartola e outras brasileiras com esse monte de notas e melodias e acordes... Muito bonito.
@marcbrasse7478 ай бұрын
I think it sounds great but I am still glad we went for the present tuning standard. The dissonance in that also has its virtues. For instance by giving certain scales their tension. The best keyboard however is the Janko layout. Inspired by it I have developed a 4 row standard keyboard adapter which combines the best features of a pianokeyboard and …. an oldfashioned typewriter! 😁
@MASASHIATOMU9 ай бұрын
昔の楽器で時間を越えた音楽。タイムワープした楽器が見たユメ
@vidselih10 ай бұрын
This is crazy good.
@pbazant8 ай бұрын
Wonderful!
@hexkwondo10 ай бұрын
If jazz music existed during the 1600’s, this is what it would have sounded like.
@virnafiorellajimenezlanza987210 ай бұрын
In some parts I felt it like jazz but futher than that, you know? I loved it.
@andrewkahler63997 ай бұрын
Wait wait how are the keys here mapped to the 31-tone system? Small black keys are sharps/double sharps and small white keys are flats/double flats?
@riellylane725110 ай бұрын
I can't tell if everyone is serious, but this is way too dissonant for my ear. You are undoubtably a very talented musician and you worked overtime getting something nice out of the instrument. I need to listen to some bagpipes to bring me back to earth.
@DownhillAllTheWay9 ай бұрын
How does this keyboard work? What are the notes on its keys? Does it differeniate between D# and Eb, for example? How many notes to an octave?
@soupisfornoobs40815 ай бұрын
Look up archicembalo or clavemusicum omnitonum It's got I think 31 notes per octave, it does distinguish D# Eb and it includes B# and Cb, E# and Fb. The point of it I think is to have every major third be just
@DownhillAllTheWay5 ай бұрын
@@soupisfornoobs4081 Thanks for that. Yes, I will look it up. I know thatthe 12-tone octave is imperfect, and my piano teacher, all those years ago, noticed the dischord of playing certain notes on it, but we have all got so used to it that I don't think I'd hear the difference between that and a perfectly pitched piano. When an instrument with 31 notes per octave is played, does it sound better, or more harmonious to you? I'll be interested to see if I can hear a difference.
@soupisfornoobs40815 ай бұрын
@@DownhillAllTheWay I wish I had an instrument like that to test myself. I'm looking for something like the one in the video to buy but it seems no one's making them. There are projects on KZbin and such that compare pieces with different tuning systems, I can normally tell the difference but it might also be placebo effect. If you wanna test yourself I'd recommend looking for a comparison of Bach's well tempered clavier on an actually well tempered instrument
@DownhillAllTheWay5 ай бұрын
@@soupisfornoobs4081 It probably isn't placebo. I was educated in electronics, and a friend and myself once set a couple of sine-wave generators up in the lab at tech college, to produce the sound of middle-C - 261.63 Hz (I just looked it up!) and if one oscillator was then set to a frequency just 2Hz higher or lower, and the sound was switched back and forth between the two oscillators, it was quite discenable which one was higher in pitch - we can hear very small differences in pitch. Mind you, that was 60 years ago - I don't know that my hearing still works that well now!
@hugomazeo14795 ай бұрын
This guy is far ahead of other microtonal musicians, his music actually sounds good lmao
@stephenweigelАй бұрын
agreed
@veziculorile10 ай бұрын
Wow! Please consider making an entire album on vinyl for your music! It's what's missing in this world❤ bravo!
@Flies_the_limit10 ай бұрын
As i was listening to this my coworker looked at me and goes "bro... thats giving me constipatiom wtf is that" 😅
@tamanco76017 ай бұрын
Well, i like it
@heartseed4789 ай бұрын
Now, this needs some lofi hiphop beats to go along with it.
@whitecrow20XX6 ай бұрын
Our brain loves novelty. That is the reason we attracted to this.
@papertoymonsters27486 ай бұрын
not sure if that's the only reason seems kind of rude to assume that
@morganjeffreymorgan6 ай бұрын
GENERALIZATION FALLACY
@JellyMonster110 ай бұрын
Sounds fantastic.
@mariovrpereira10 ай бұрын
Que lindo!
@s.i.70578 ай бұрын
Мой организм сначала хорошо воспринял, но очень болезненно реагировал во время второго прослушивания. Да, мне было физически неприятно. Дело привычки. Мы с детства приучены к ХТК Баха.
@Hixoltage25 күн бұрын
this instrument looks so fun to play, but it opens so many subdivisions of theory, like staring into the fifth dimension.
@DesoloZantas6 ай бұрын
This is brokenly bittersweet 🫥 Imagine being in a stunning garden, only to realize that the world is just a dream, and nothing is truly real. Yet, it feels strangely tangible, evoking a mix of derealization and awe-inspiring beauty. * × . + ° . * ☁️ * • . ⛅ . •. + × ☁️ + 🕊️ . * ☁️ . . * • ☁️ +. • × • ☁️ * . ° ☁️ + . ☁️ . 🥀👁️🗨️🥀 🌺 🌹 🌸🌷 🌼🪻🏵️ 🏡
@EuphoniaPooch10 ай бұрын
yeah i don't know. maybe i just need these shifts in tone introduced to me gradually, phillip glass style, so i can digest what i'm hearing. obviously the player is very skilled, but it just sounds out of tune to me. the woodworking on this keyboard however is indisputably beautiful. liked and subbed.
@pigslam10 ай бұрын
bah out of tune doesnt exist. the song sounds beautiful
@singlelit010 ай бұрын
I love this
@roelhemerik57159 ай бұрын
Is that 31ET tuning? I always wondered how to tune such an instrument when the 5ths are less perfect…
@roberthoffhines541910 ай бұрын
love how the gestures are recognizable, but the locus of tonal gravity is from a different planet. Probably one with a lot less mass than earth...
@Seenall7 ай бұрын
Preldues and fugues in all tonalities when?
@Macariotron10 ай бұрын
I love this!
@carajocomer472810 ай бұрын
this is amazing
@congressoftherhino36038 ай бұрын
After the very first three notes I thought this was gonna be a cover of Joan Osbourne’s ‘What if God was One of Us,’ and I couldn’t have been happier to have been wrong
@bobchuseby10 ай бұрын
Beautiful piece of music. I can't help but hear it as being out of tune even though I know it's intentional. I've been conditioned to listen for the lock and ring. Are there "ringing" and overtones with microtonal music like those you'd get with conventional 12-tone just intonation?
@CalebChaffeOfficial8 ай бұрын
There needs to be more songs written for this instrument
@darylvogel899110 ай бұрын
Lovely, kind has it's own sound like to hear more variations...
@maulanakwartanto77419 ай бұрын
modulation changes on upper keys, how to play this thing right? Any certain song played with this? this can't easily played same as piano.
@juliennegreproductions8 ай бұрын
Michel Legrand composition ? Very nice sound !
@Namaster886 ай бұрын
Froberger would have loved to have such a keyboard in his possession
@ottob98048 ай бұрын
Is this included on any of your albums on bancamp?
@chmess310 ай бұрын
Wo kann man die Noten für diese Musik nehmen? Ich tue leid, dass ich kann nicht Deutsch gut