I'm definitely getting major Bach vibes from this. What a dramatic opening! To my untrained ear I would have thought it was Bach himself or one of his contemporaries! I know it's a large question, but where does one even begin in composing a massive prelude like this??
@@jimbo3847 Hi there Jimbo, wow I'm blown away... thank you, thank you, thank you... I'm humbled by your comment and I take it as a compliment, you stating about the "Bach vibe" .... I must agree with you, many of my pieces you can hear Bach's (and others of his time) influence... I'm just totally inlove with that time period... I can just imagine what type of fugue Bach would have written for a piece like this... but again thank you... your comment moved me and its deeply appreciated...
@@additionalmusic-ox2vj You are very welcome. I search far and wide for folks on youtube making original baroque-classical music. I am slowly trying to understand how to compose such music, while also building my fundamental skills to play it. I'm playing simple realizations of the bach chorales and working on things like the 2 part inventions and easy sections from the english/french suites.
@@jimbo3847 thank you so much and please share your work with the rest of us... I'm certain there's many looking for new, original pieces it inspires us...
very nice! is there a way on musescore i can make the organs sound different for different sections (like some of bachs recordings)? I really like the idea of the "aethereal" soft type of organ sounds being combined with the harsher "settings" of the organ.
A simple way you could imitate the various organ stops would be to use the different orchestral options in musescore that mimic the organ: flutes, strings, trumpet. For the diapason/foundation you could stick with the organ sound but that would likely be obnoxious, so like the other comments say you could use the other organ sounds for something milder.
I'm definitely getting major Bach vibes from this. What a dramatic opening! To my untrained ear I would have thought it was Bach himself or one of his contemporaries! I know it's a large question, but where does one even begin in composing a massive prelude like this??
@@jimbo3847 Hi there Jimbo, wow I'm blown away... thank you, thank you, thank you... I'm humbled by your comment and I take it as a compliment, you stating about the "Bach vibe" .... I must agree with you, many of my pieces you can hear Bach's (and others of his time) influence... I'm just totally inlove with that time period... I can just imagine what type of fugue Bach would have written for a piece like this... but again thank you... your comment moved me and its deeply appreciated...
@@additionalmusic-ox2vj You are very welcome. I search far and wide for folks on youtube making original baroque-classical music. I am slowly trying to understand how to compose such music, while also building my fundamental skills to play it. I'm playing simple realizations of the bach chorales and working on things like the 2 part inventions and easy sections from the english/french suites.
@@jimbo3847 thank you so much and please share your work with the rest of us... I'm certain there's many looking for new, original pieces it inspires us...
@@additionalmusic-ox2vj I will, soon enough! I'll send you a message when I do. I am hoping to upload some compositions in the relatively near future.
@@jimbo3847 looking forward to it with much excitement and thank you taking the time to compose and also to post it...
Carl…. Love this one too!
amazing ! so beautiful and fun !! Congratulations !
Bravo my vriend
Comment peut on avoir la partition s'il-vous-plaît
very nice! is there a way on musescore i can make the organs sound different for different sections (like some of bachs recordings)? I really like the idea of the "aethereal" soft type of organ sounds being combined with the harsher "settings" of the organ.
unfourtunately there are no options for changing stops in musescore there is no soundfonts for them
they don’t have organ stops but there’s different types of organ like drawbar, percussive, pipe, reed, etc
A simple way you could imitate the various organ stops would be to use the different orchestral options in musescore that mimic the organ: flutes, strings, trumpet. For the diapason/foundation you could stick with the organ sound but that would likely be obnoxious, so like the other comments say you could use the other organ sounds for something milder.