Saturday, December 23, 2006

Scale of the Day: G Flat Lydian 1% wide

GFlatLydian1PercentWide

The G Flat Lydian 1% wide Scale.

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This scale completes a long sequence. "Scale of the Day" will resume in the new year with a new cycle beginning with the first ever pentatonic scale of the day.

Thursday, December 21, 2006

Tuesday, December 19, 2006

Scale of the Day: E Lydian

Audio sample of the E Lydian Scale.

See also:

E Lydian Notated

E Lydian Interval Analysis

This is the E Lydian Scale found on any conventionally tuned, equal tempered instrument.

Doing the Math

Words have been in short supply at HurdAudio. There will continue to be a great deal of activity offline for a while yet...



There's this great meme/questionnaire spinning around from Do The Math where Ethan Iverson has been probing musical opinions around the blogosphere:

GIVE US AN EXAMPLE OR TWO OF AN ESPECIALLY GOOD OR INTERESTING:

1. Movie score: The Battle of Algiers.
2. TV theme: Knight Rider.
3. Melody: "Lonely Woman" by Ornette Coleman. A painfully obvious choice - but a great melody. Some less obvious choices are: "A Portrait of Hank Williams Junior" by Wayne Horvitz and "Dust Devil" by Bill Horvitz. Great melodies from the brothers Horvitz.
4. Harmonic language: Ben Johnston's string quartets. Not to mention the entire Harry Partch catalogue (the portion that he didn't destroy by fire).
5. Rhythmic feel: Unspeakable by Bill Frisell.
6. Hip-hop track: "Television, The Drug of the Nation" by Disposable Heroes.
7. Classical piece: Twill by Twilight by Toru Takemitsu, Symphony no. 4 by Charles Ives and Socrate by Erik Satie.
8. Smash hit: "Burning Down the House" by the Talking Heads.
9. Jazz album: "Ah Um" by Charles Mingus, "The Jazz Messengers at the Cafe Bohemia Volumes 1 and 2" by Art Blakey and the Jazz Messengers and "Live at Tonic" by Medeski, Martin and Wood.
10. Non-American folkloric group: Ivo Papasov and his Orchestra.
11. Book on music: Meta Hodos and Meta Meta Hodos by James Tenney, Sounding the Complete Violin by Malcolm Goldstein and Jazz: Its Evolution and Essence by Andre Hodier.

BONUS QUESTIONS:

A) Name an surprising album (or albums) you loved when you were developing as a musician: something that really informs your sound but that we would never guess in a million years: Tarkus by Emerson Lake and Palmer.

B) Name a practitioner (or a few) who play your instrument that you think is underrated: Composer: Somei Satoh - Pianist: Paul Plimley

C) Name a rock or pop album that you wish had been a smash commercial hit (but wasn't, not really): Tocsin by Elliott Sharp/Carbon. Why can't everyone be whistling "Raptor" on their way into work in the morning? Am I the only one?

D) Name a favorite drummer, and an album to hear why you love that drummer: Joey Baron. Especially on Where in the World? by Bill Frisell.

Monday, December 18, 2006