06-18-2015, 12:34 AM
(This post was last modified: 06-18-2015, 12:47 AM by BuddyFriendGuy.)
This is a continuation of a discussion from another thread.
@Halogene, thanks for offering to help out. If this contest draws enough momentum, I'll work to allocate the necessary resources. This thing is very costly and I'll be trying to squeeze this project into a slightly tight schedule, so nothing is guaranteed yet.
Another uncertainty is that so far all the Xonotic music is electronic and that may have defined the artistic style of the game, so the orchestral approach is a bold experiment that may fail.
With that said, here I answer your questions:
Since I've worked with this orchestra (and will do so for this project), it'll be the most cost-effective for me to write the music (to minimize rehearsal time). I can consider leaving some space for you to improvise, but I do need to figure out a way to fit your playing with the feel we are pursuing here. For example, my initial idea is to feature the percussive attacks of the piano to go with the orchestra for a fast-paced action movie feel. I haven't started writing so it's not set in stone yet. However, since this is background music, not a concerto, the piano will be treated as one orchestral instrument. That means it won't be as exposed as your solo performance (we can feature you here and there though). That also means I need a dry recording for easier mixing later on. Therefore, don't worry about digging out your acoustic piano (unless you have great mics and a great recording environment). MIDI works better here.
You'll be given something we call a click track to play along with. It's basically a metronome track with some tempo variation (e.g. rubato or other changes). Since I need to sync your playing to the acoustic recording, MIDI wins again here.
I'll try to record the orchestra first for you to play along with, but depending on the scheduling, things may or may not work as expected.
We can talk more about it when this whole thing solidifies.
Actually, perhaps we can have a real Xonotic Orchestra and ask the community the join this project by playing various parts, so we have collaboration rather than competition. It's a ton of coordination work to do though.
Thoughts?
(06-17-2015, 03:56 AM)Halogene Wrote: Thank you for the compliment! I'd sure love to contribute with piano recordings. However, I have currently packaged and stored away my stage piano (hence there are no new recordings on my soundcloud). I still play the (real) piano though - actually even more than before - just can't do any recordings easily at the moment. But I will probably find a way to do that. How would you go on about getting my recording to blend in with the orchestra? Would I play to recordings of the orchestra or vice versa? Personally, I think it would be better if the orchestra part was already done so I could orientate myself on the flow of the orchestra, as I myself don't have a very steady rhythm. What kind of piano part would that be? Who is writing the music? Would I be free to improvise a bit? Might be hard for me to restrain myself not to do so ;o)
@Halogene, thanks for offering to help out. If this contest draws enough momentum, I'll work to allocate the necessary resources. This thing is very costly and I'll be trying to squeeze this project into a slightly tight schedule, so nothing is guaranteed yet.
Another uncertainty is that so far all the Xonotic music is electronic and that may have defined the artistic style of the game, so the orchestral approach is a bold experiment that may fail.
With that said, here I answer your questions:
Since I've worked with this orchestra (and will do so for this project), it'll be the most cost-effective for me to write the music (to minimize rehearsal time). I can consider leaving some space for you to improvise, but I do need to figure out a way to fit your playing with the feel we are pursuing here. For example, my initial idea is to feature the percussive attacks of the piano to go with the orchestra for a fast-paced action movie feel. I haven't started writing so it's not set in stone yet. However, since this is background music, not a concerto, the piano will be treated as one orchestral instrument. That means it won't be as exposed as your solo performance (we can feature you here and there though). That also means I need a dry recording for easier mixing later on. Therefore, don't worry about digging out your acoustic piano (unless you have great mics and a great recording environment). MIDI works better here.
You'll be given something we call a click track to play along with. It's basically a metronome track with some tempo variation (e.g. rubato or other changes). Since I need to sync your playing to the acoustic recording, MIDI wins again here.
I'll try to record the orchestra first for you to play along with, but depending on the scheduling, things may or may not work as expected.
We can talk more about it when this whole thing solidifies.
Actually, perhaps we can have a real Xonotic Orchestra and ask the community the join this project by playing various parts, so we have collaboration rather than competition. It's a ton of coordination work to do though.
Thoughts?