the first piece is made with transverse bamboo flute and recorder. the third one is made with native american flute the fourth one is transverse bamboo flute alone (it's D-flute with six holes)
2013/7/20 Evan Laforge <[email protected]> > It took me a long time to figure out that the kids talking weren't > part of the music... it seemed to fit surprisingly well in the > beginning! > > What kind of flute is it? > > And you're right, the electronic part is too quiet. I can hear that > there is one, and it's doing stuff, but I can't really hear what it's > doing. Sounds like textural backgroundy stuff? It all comes together > nicely though. > > On Mon, Jul 8, 2013 at 11:34 PM, Anton Kholomiov > <[email protected]> wrote: > > So it happened. On the open air near the place of intersection of two > > rivers. > > > > https://soundcloud.com/anton-kho/sets/music-on-the-river > > > > Csound part is too quiet on the record but audible. > > > > What's interesting about the csound part: > > > > - only just intonation > > - strange modes: 1 is myxolydian and 3 is phrygian > > - 3 rythm is 14/8 > > - csound files were generated from haskell code (with csound-expression > lib) > > > > csound + djembe + > > 1 - bamboo transverse flute, recorder, vocals > > 2 - csound is used as a wind > > 3 - native american flute > > > > 4 - bamboo flute alone > > > > I'm playing flutes, guitar, vocals and my firends on african drums. > > > > _______________________________________________ > > haskell-art mailing list > > [email protected] > > http://lists.lurk.org/mailman/listinfo/haskell-art > > > > _______________________________________________ > haskell-art mailing list > [email protected] > http://lists.lurk.org/mailman/listinfo/haskell-art >
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