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Friday, December 5, 2014

"… And They Were Given Seven Trumpets" [A Soundtrack for the Close of the Age]

[UPDATE: December 5, 2014] Make that twenty plus four. Sorry to say that Amazon has since nixed offering .mp3 samples of CreateSpace audio, so even that short appetizer is now gone. 

Meanwhile, tonight the UD chorus will be performing a selection of Christmas music, the narrative interludes for which yours truly contributed the text, with frequent quotations from Scripture and a previously published poem based on Matthew 2:1-12, which can be found in The Just, Quiet Wind (p. 12). Twenty-four years after my first "music only" recording (instrumental but for the Apostles' Creed), this "words only" contribution. It will be fun to hear what the readers do with it. Perhaps if you are in the area you can come to Heritage Center at 7:30PM.

[FIRST POSTED: December 5, 2013] "It was twenty (plus three) years ago today," … I went into the studio (Woodland West) and recorded this "... And They Were Given Seven Trumpets."



The title is a quotation of Revelation 8:2. It was inspired by an extraordinarily robust, even beefy, trumpet patch on my Yamaha SY-77. Unfortunately, you don't catch that sound on the MP3 sample, and until I migrate over to Bandcamp or something, sampling auditors have to make do with Amazon's short snippets.

Meanwhile, rhythmically speaking, the drum track with its meticulous fills is nicely augmented with the four-mallet vibes. OK, the vibes are also a keyboard patch, but having played in a high school jazz band once with a guest vibraphone player, it only made sense to me that a realistic vibe patch begged an equally realistic use of the same. A musicologist friend of mine, on hearing this piece, said, "The vibes make the track." More recently, someone commented that the "register" reminded him of Rick Wakeman's synth-based work from the early seventies. As for me, I like the way the classic Yamaha DX-7 Rhodes patch (overused though it may be) takes over after the break—a pleasant sound to stabilize matters after the disruption and atop the resumed driving beat of the HR-16 drum "kit." Oh, and I do always enjoy the hair-raising burnouts.

I'm happy to say, it still rocks.

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