I like them. Kinda sneaky, how you started with that C minor chord--for a split second I thought I was going to hear variations in C minor 🙂. The stuff you did with rhythmic figures and all the meters you used was really clever.
Thanks a lot! Yeah, the subdominant subterfuge was me being sneaky. xD I find it interesting that I was much more ready to explore rhythm and meter back then than now with the fugues. Probably gonna do that again soon. ^^
Surprisingly there is a nice blending of both baroque and modern influence.
@avyaktapurush Thanks a lot! ^^
1:12 Schumann's Kreislariana appears and gets transformed into a waltz.
@@BANERJEEWB Which movement of Kreislariana are you thinking of? (:
Actually it's the last movement of Kreislariana I'm referring to.
@@BANERJEEWB Ah, I see! ^^
5 years ! that is a huge progress...enormous.
@@eytonshalomsandiego Thanks a lot! ^^
that second phrase, if that is the term, when it goes up, is so haunting...
@@eytonshalomsandiego Thank you! ^^
Which bar are you referring to?
Good!
@@HevMusicClss Thanks! ^^
I like them. Kinda sneaky, how you started with that C minor chord--for a split second I thought I was going to hear variations in C minor 🙂. The stuff you did with rhythmic figures and all the meters you used was really clever.
Thanks a lot! Yeah, the subdominant subterfuge was me being sneaky. xD
I find it interesting that I was much more ready to explore rhythm and meter back then than now with the fugues. Probably gonna do that again soon. ^^
This is awesome
It sounds like a recording or is it digital playback
@@toren-touissannt Thank you! ^^
This is the only recording on my channel so far. I played it myself (cf. description).
@@averynhiell cool dawg
Nice rhytmic variations... I dont knowc why.. I expected a fugue to be the final variation, loll
@@alindmay Thank you! ^^
That is actually a decent idea. But I didn’t really know fugues back then.
Me too. I guess when I see Averyn Hiell, I start to expect a fugue. 🙂
@@drtee51 I wonder why that would be. 🤔
Haha, indeed