First new piece for a couple of months. This time classical, with a string quartet (two violins, cello and contrabass). Comments please.
Category Archives: Music
Frère Jacques and the Three Blind Mice
The final version is now in the main Music > Audios section, in the album Reflections, and by clicking the play button below.
The Restless Mind
After welcome feedback from friends and a few nips and tucks, here’s the final version of this track. Enjoy!
Now part of the album Reflections.
Jacques & Three Blind Mice go on Holiday
New music track, initial version for testing and comment.
Re-release of Delhicatescence
This track has been remastered to bring out the voices using a new dynamic filter called Trackspace. That and a few other tweaks here and there. This is a trial version for assessment in different environments and on different equipment – and different ears. Comments welcome.
Note: this audio file is constantly being updated, so it’s likely a later version than you last heard.
Bach’s Last Keyboard Work
A little known work recorded in Salzberg Cathedral in 2012 by the IT consultant Jorg Stefan Bach.
New track “Opus 7645231” – pre-release version
Warning: this track contains drum and bass, offensive language and scary sound effects. If you are of a nervous disposition or easily offended, do NOT listen to this track.
You have been warned!
New track – “Home Free”
Home Free is the third piece for the new album “Born Again”, a collection of tracks about getting old.
New Money
Herewith final version of my new track “Money”, based on the original “Money (That’s What I Want)” by Berry Gordy and Janie Bradford, also recorded by The Beatles in 1963. This is one of my all time favourite tracks and one I’ve been meaning to pay tribute to for a long time. Enjoy!
This is the official release now, though I may make it into a video…
New music – “Delhicatescence”
This is my latest composition “Delhicatescence”, an Indian flavoured piece of electronica inspired partly by The Doors Concerto (by Jaz Coleman with Nigel Kennedy as the soloist) and the mesmerising sound of Led Zeppelin’s mandolin in “The Battle of Evermore”.
Comments welcome.