Wednesday, 30 November 2016

Band workshop and Songwriting session performances practice for winter gig.

https://plus.google.com/117879285261463035507/posts/cWZ8gBJExKb

https://plus.google.com/117879285261463035507/posts/csdVcgGZ5KA

The one which with my band workshop group are performing is teardrop by massive attackpart 1 and I feel good by James brown.This performance was much better in the yesterday's band workshop class.We just need to practice a bit more for the winter gig.In James brown we had to change the key from D major to C major,to make it sound nice.The teacher and the band workshop members have been very supportive and we could perform well.I am the vocalists,with two to three other girl vocalists named Beatriz,Danielle and Russa,Junior is playing the Drums,Olly is playing the bass,Mimi is playing the guitar/bass and Ivan is playing the piano in I feel good by James brown,We sang the harmonies of the musical part of the song along with the pianist.In teardrop song by massive attack,I am the pianist,Mimi is the guitarist,Beatriz,Russa and Danielle are the vocalists,Junior is the Drummer and Ivan is playing the piano.We kept practicing in every band workshop class for 1 and a half hours and therefore we could perform well and can do even better than this.
We will also be performing our own original songs for the winter gig which we had been doing in our songwriting classes.

https://youtu.be/-RZEDBGVM4U
This is the video of our original song we made in our songwriting sessions and we will be performing  this as well for the Winter gig.

1 December 1974:Manchester Utd fans behind bars,Context/External gig

"The Stretford End of Manchester United football ground ground is a kind of cademy of violence,where promising young fans can study the arts of intimidation," wrote Keith Colquhoun in the text accompanying Ray Greens photograph. The shot indeed captured the club at an extremely low ebb,relegated to the second Division and bedevilled by hooliganism. A pitch invasion following defeat to Manchaster City-with a late goal from former United hero Denis Law- led to the construction of 9ft spiked fences behind both goals,through which their fans are seen urging the team on in this photograph.AC.

Tuesday, 29 November 2016

Live Review:Iron and Wine at Birmingham town hall

The band started off,surprisingly,with a funky rendition of  'Boy with a Coin'. At once,I could tell it was going to be an amazing show;Sams beautiful,raw voice was heightened by the full sound of the new band.A few songs later a beat started,indicating that the next song was going to be an acoustic one, prompting the audience to clap along as soon as they realised this was the prelude to 'Freedom Hangs Heaven'.The keyboards joined in,and gradually more instrumental layers were added until the song ended with a big sound integrating the entire band.'House by the Sea' served as a showcase for the talented sax player,who gave an incredible solo towards the end of the song.Another old favourite-'Sea and the Rhythm'- was skilfully transformed into a slower version with new sounds,most notably high -octave piano notes to polish the song off.

https://plus.google.com/117879285261463035507/posts/7QGYV8oDAEm
https://plus.google.com/117879285261463035507/posts/
https://plus.google.com/117879285261463035507/posts/67JpQJWqvaN
https://plus.google.com/117879285261463035507/posts/67JpQJWqvaN

Monday, 28 November 2016

Composing task Decades 2

So far,we had been working on two three tracks and we are supposed to have to tracks in our soundcloud,related to James brown and Stevie wonder.I had been using various instruments to create a track similar to the songs which we had been doing in class and then making an actual song of my tracks.I have been playing similar chords of the songs.I had been using volume and pan for the sound of the instruments with a help of a radiator.Hence,sounds interesting.I had been cutting and chopping into pieces and using microphones to speak as part of practice in one of the tracks.I had been shifting some pats of the tracksfrom one side to the other.I added more instruments along with the sound of instruments being played on my track.Basically whatever songs we were listening to in the composing class,we had to make our own track whatever came into our mind,and should go with the beat.I was taught how to make a song by putting my various instruments in place.
What techniques,I had used is after I used the instruments,I put them in the right place in the song,The verses and the choruses are being repeated with other instruments and as well as the intro and outro sound the same as to when we know that which is the starting and ending point of the song.Hence to make the parts of the song sound the same,I did some editing ,copying and pasting of some of the instruments in the tracks I used so far.What I feel is that when I click on any instruments in my track and start playing it,Some of them are played in a different way as to not to go out of time and beat.I tried going with the beat.I gave starting point of my track of especially the piano tune and then the drums and so on with other instruments.Th ever sees consists of mostly the piano and the choruses consists of Brooklyn instruments.Stevie wonder track is a continuous mixed track which there are lots of instruments put in.Why I had used audio files is because I felt that it would be a practice and I will get an Idea as to how I am doing in both my sequencing as well as composing classes/tasks.I just basically wanted to make some tracks randomly of my own because I am used to doing this but I shortened it before sharing and embedding it into Soundcloud and deleted some instruments which were not required.Superstition is the best song of Stevie wonder.
https://plus.google.com/117879285261463035507/posts/ZSx2Nu68641

https://plus.google.com/117879285261463035507/posts/fyh9hu9dUYf

http://farzmusic.tumblr.com/post/153171060972/subtractive-synthesis

http://farzmusic.tumblr.com/post/152913695272/vocabulary-for-all-levels

I also learnt that each verse chorus intro and outdo are similar/sound the same.

Rolling stone:-

Most of the love songs on talking Book have a romantic idealism reflected in the shimmering,translucent quality of music."You Are the sunshine of My Life," "You and I (We Can Conquer the world)," " Lookin' for Another Pure Love"and "I believe (When I fall in love it will Be forever)"all share this quality without becoming redundant.Stevie Wonders second album this year is in many ways a reprise with variations of the first,Music of my mind. Both are ambitious, richly-textured,almost entirely the work of Wonder himself,who produced(with assistance,primarily on the Moogwork, from Malcolm Cecil and Robert Morgouleff),composed the music and all but a few of the lyrics,plays the bulk of instrumental tracks (aided here and there on Talking Book by eight musicians including,on one cut,Jeff Beck and Buzzy Feiten)and sings densely multi-tracked.

Pop matters:-

Okay.As concepts go,this one is unusual to say the least. While its common for musicians to record songs they love that are written by other musicians,I've never heard a singer re-releasing another singers entire record.That,in a nutshell,describes Macy Grays version of Talking Book,Stevie Wonders seminal 1972 album and the one that contains a couple of songs that even non-Stevie fans will recognise ("You are the Sunshine of my life ","Superstition").

New statesman :-
It says that it has been 40years since Stevie wonder showed off the otherwordly range of this keyboard.
The notes made by this made by this unobtrusive little rectangle sparkle through the 1970s like space dust falling on the disparate worlds of a musical Galaxy.In the late 1950s and early 1960s Hohner-best known for harmonics-had been experimenting with portable versions of familiar keyboard types.
https://plus.google.com/117879285261463035507/posts/4uYsDovr9ir


Aristotle:-
In the age of social media,the overuse of superlatives tends to render each assessment meaningless.His three plus hour recreation of the 1976 album Songs in the key of Life laid out a
sprawling extravaganza of emotion.It took nearly 30 musicians, a string section,and a gospel chorus to mirror the 100 or so who participated in the original production.This is by Aristotle.

To what extent,I can agree is about the songs of Stevie wonder especially on the song superstition.It is a very old album and was produced /published or recorded by someone else in some cases.

By Barry Walters

When Kate Bush debuted in early 1978 with "Wuthering Heights," arguably pops most uncanny ballad,she arrived as England's first and perhaps only out of the box genius. Several years earlier,a publicist and Bush family friend gave Pink Floyds Dave Gilmour a demo of over 50 songs recorded when she was only 15.

On this and 78's follow up Lionheart, Bush sang fearlessly of religion, incest,murder,homosexuality,and much more.Theres room for a life in your womb,woman,"she crooned with the earnest of a Michigan Womyns Music Festival radical,and did so while much of Europe was watching.

Variety film review:-
An outwardly normal suburban Perth couple who abduct,torture,and murder schoolgirls must face their funny games in debuting writer-director Ben Youngs genre bending powerhouse thriller "Hounds of love".
It's Christmas time 1987 in the sun-baked western Australian city as Evelyn and John White (Emma Booth,Stephen Curry) brutalise and kill a teenager in a discretely photographed sequence that reveals little blood but a chilling routine.

Funding organisation Screenwest claims the film is the first to be developed,filmed,and posted entirely in the state of WesternAustralia. This bodes well for the local industry, as "Hounds of love" is a calling card not soon forgotten.
Rolling stone:-

Most of the love songs on talking Book have a romantic idealism reflected in the shimmering,translucent quality of music."You Are the sunshine of My Life," "You and I (We Can Conquer the world)," " Lookin' for Another Pure Love"and "I believe (When I fall in love it will Be forever)"all share this quality without becoming redundant.Stevie Wonders second album this year is in many ways a reprise with variations of the first,Music of my mind. Both are ambitious, richly-textured,almost entirely the work of Wonder himself,who produced(with assistance,primarily on the Moogwork, from Malcolm Cecil and Robert Morgouleff),composed the music and all but a few of the lyrics,plays the bulk of instrumental tracks (aided here and there on Talking Book by eight musicians including,on one cut,Jeff Beck and Buzzy Feiten)and sings densely multi-tracked.

Pop matters:-

Okay.As concepts go,this one is unusual to say the least. While its common for musicians to record songs they love that are written by other musicians,I've never heard a singer re-releasing another singers entire record.That,in a nutshell,describes Macy Grays version of Talking Book,Stevie Wonders seminal 1972 album and the one that contains a couple of songs that even non-Stevie fans will recognise ("You are the Sunshine of my life ","Superstition").
New statesman :-
It says that it has been 40years since Stevie wonder showed off the otherwordly range of this keyboard.
The notes made by this made by this unobtrusive little rectangle sparkle through the 1970s like space dust falling on the disparate worlds of a musical Galaxy.In the late 1950s and early 1960s Hohner-best known for harmonics-had been experimenting with portable versions of familiar keyboard types.
https://plus.google.com/117879285261463035507/posts/4uYsDovr9ir

These are some lies/paragraphs of articles Coles/reviews about Stevie wonder talking book and Kate bush hounds of love.

These are some more things about stevie wonder and kate bush as to whatever we have been doing in the composing class.
the main tracks which I had uploaded to my sound cloud and then to my blog which is the last post are James brown and Stevie wonder tracks

I used some of my own audio tracks to create a song out of my tracks.


Tuesday, 22 November 2016

External gig,Review 3,lowky gig

https://youtu.be/1xkOsJwwr6M
This gig was amazing because apart from performers who stand and move as they perform,The performers who supported lowky,moved in excitement,walked around the stage and were successful in engaging on the stage and towards the audience,I also liked the audience singing along with the performers.The way the performers performed on stage was a way of expresses feelings and making the whole audience and everyone enjoying the show.It was like a sound and light show because ,the light reflects on the person who is performing,when the performer speaks very fast,The words are not very clear,as to what is happening.The performers had a good sense of rhythm and this show was a lovely experience for me.They also wanted to thank everyone for this show like the supporters,security etc.They rocked the stage and I liked the audience taking videos of the performers.Especially,in the Song called terrorist/Soul,I liked the way the performer was waving his hand towards the audience.Actually,all the performers were successful,they had a lot of confidence and enthusiasm towards themselves.Hence,I enjoyed.The performers were successful in talking about the meaning of their songs.People clapped,shouted etcSome of the performers were those who were supporting lowky,hence that is why it is called the lowky gig.The final performance was the performers who were singing a song as part of their performance called Ahmed.The Audience enjoyed,which is why the performer said thank you all for coming.It has been a wonderful evening as the performers rocked the stage.The overall impression of this entire event is I also enjoyed and like the sound,rhythm and everything.I also liked moving with the musical beat.

Critically Cubed 2

In the age of social media,the overuse of superlatives tends to render each assessment meaningless.His three plus hour recreation of the 1976 album Songs in the key of Life laid out a sprawling extravaganza of emotion.It took nearly 30 musicians, a string section,and a gospel chorus to mirror the 100 or so who participated in the original production.This is by Aristotle.

To what extent,I can agree is about the songs of Stevie wonder especially on the song superstition.It is a very old album and was produced /published or recorded by someone else in some cases.

https://plus.google.com/117879285261463035507/posts/https://plus.google.com/117879285261463035507/posts/ZLKE8QHHytJ

https://plus.google.com/117879285261463035507/posts/ZLKE8QHHytJ

https://youtu.be/VerK4zwMRQw

http://wkcchloeherington.blogspot.co.uk/2016/12/john-williams-film-composer.html

Barry Walters

When Kate Bush debuted in early 1978 with "Wuthering Heights," arguably pops most uncanny ballad,she arrived as England's first and perhaps only out of the box genius. Several years earlier,a publicist and Bush family friend gave Pink Floyds Dave Gilmour a demo of over 50 songs recorded when she was only 15.

On this and 78's follow up Lionheart, Bush sang fearlessly of religion, incest,murder,homosexuality,and much more.Theres room for a life in your womb,woman,"she crooned with the earnest of a Michigan Womyns Music Festival radical,and did so while much of Europe was watching.


  • Variety film review:-

An outwardly normal suburban Perth couple who abduct,torture,and murder schoolgirls must face their funny games in debuting writer-director Ben Youngs genre bending powerhouse thriller "Hounds of love".
It's Christmas time 1987 in the sun-baked western Australian city as Evelyn and John White (Emma Booth,Stephen Curry) brutalise and kill a teenager in a discretely photographed sequence that reveals little blood but a chilling routine.

Funding organisation Screenwest claims the film is the first to be developed,filmed,and posted entirely in the state of WesternAustralia. This bodes well for the local industry, as "Hounds of love" is a calling card not soon forgotten.

https://progarchy.com/

In the previous post mostly,I have included ,some articles/descriptions etc. About Kate bush from Pop matters and Aristotle similar to critically cubed 1 of Stevie wonder.

Critically cubed 2.Album analysis.Hounds of love.

By Barry Walters

When Kate Bush debuted in early 1978 with "Wuthering Heights," arguably pops most uncanny ballad,she arrived as England's first and perhaps only out of the box genius. Several years earlier,a publicist and Bush family friend gave Pink Floyds Dave Gilmour a demo of over 50 songs recorded when she was only 15.

On this and 78's follow up Lionheart, Bush sang fearlessly of religion, incest,murder,homosexuality,and much more.Theres room for a life in your womb,woman,"she crooned with the earnest of a Michigan Womyns Music Festival radical,and did so while much of Europe was watching.

Variety film review:-
An outwardly normal suburban Perth couple who abduct,torture,and murder schoolgirls must face their funny games in debuting writer-director Ben Youngs genre bending powerhouse thriller "Hounds of love".
It's Christmas time 1987 in the sun-baked western Australian city as Evelyn and John White (Emma Booth,Stephen Curry) brutalise and kill a teenager in a discretely photographed sequence that reveals little blood but a chilling routine.

Funding organisation Screenwest claims the film is the first to be developed,filmed,and posted entirely in the state of WesternAustralia. This bodes well for the local industry, as "Hounds of love" is a calling card not soon forgotten.
Rolling stone:-

Most of the love songs on talking Book have a romantic idealism reflected in the shimmering,translucent quality of music."You Are the sunshine of My Life," "You and I (We Can Conquer the world)," " Lookin' for Another Pure Love"and "I believe (When I fall in love it will Be forever)"all share this quality without becoming redundant.Stevie Wonders second album this year is in many ways a reprise with variations of the first,Music of my mind. Both are ambitious, richly-textured,almost entirely the work of Wonder himself,who produced(with assistance,primarily on the Moogwork, from Malcolm Cecil and Robert Morgouleff),composed the music and all but a few of the lyrics,plays the bulk of instrumental tracks (aided here and there on Talking Book by eight musicians including,on one cut,Jeff Beck and Buzzy Feiten)and sings densely multi-tracked.

Pop matters:-

Okay.As concepts go,this one is unusual to say the least. While its common for musicians to record songs they love that are written by other musicians,I've never heard a singer re-releasing another singers entire record.That,in a nutshell,describes Macy Grays version of Talking Book,Stevie Wonders seminal 1972 album and the one that contains a couple of songs that even non-Stevie fans will recognise ("You are the Sunshine of my life ","Superstition").
New statesman :-
It says that it has been 40years since Stevie wonder showed off the otherwordly range of this keyboard.
The notes made by this made by this unobtrusive little rectangle sparkle through the 1970s like space dust falling on the disparate worlds of a musical Galaxy.In the late 1950s and early 1960s Hohner-best known for harmonics-had been experimenting with portable versions of familiar keyboard types.
https://plus.google.com/117879285261463035507/posts/4uYsDovr9ir

Kate bush Hounds of love and Running up that hill are very good songs and Some of us had been practicing in Band workshops and learning about it in other lessons such as context classes.

Monday, 21 November 2016

Group presentation

What we had been doing so far in our songwriting sessions is we thought of a metaphoric
song,we named it "to the river running free don't mind me let em be". The topic is Life and as well as freedom and also why we did this is so that the performers can give an opinion about this song.The band consists of Hasna playing the guitar,Russa on the Bass ,Samarth which is me on the piano playing the obstinato which means a repeated phrase throughout most of the song,Marco and Kyrah as the vocalists meaning singers.I am playing the obstinato on the chorus and singing silently with the others.The producer is Kyrah/Hasna/Russa.We kept thinking of the words in a song and kept working it out.It was Ok,  meaning not too good or bad because we were out of beat and time,but we will improve on the main performance,We are trying very hard.The song is like the verse chorus verse chorus and verse.More like poem of rhyming words.Concept was clear in mind.Chords are E C and A.C major scales related stuff are in the song which we will be performing.Ostinato is the main element.The song talks about who we are and what we feel towards the river.Progress is Ok.Kyrah is the producer and Russa as well.I felt OK as we kept rehearsing during these songwriting sessions.We have also got one Music production student named Junior,he is doing beat basing on the stool using it as a drum beat for the song.If we do songwriting on our own meaning that if only one person does it alone and composes it,it requires a lot of work.It is fun and a good experience if we do it more with group members,therefore we are working and understanding each other and the teacher can help us and it is much more fun and we can understand what is going on.However,we must also try and apply our mind,therefore,I am getting an idea of my and my groups progress while we are doing work on the song during these practical sessions.Hence we can improve it a bit more.Director is Hasna/Kyrah and Marco.Mostly Kyrah,Hasna and Russa had been working on the lyrics and how to sing it.Marco was the singer.I was figuring out the chords by listening to the guitar and bass,then finally I tried matching the Ostinato.I played notes A and E.Creative negotiations were positively and diplomatically done.

Kyrah was the artistic director

Russa -Hasna-Samarth instrumentalists.

Marco and Kyrah vocalists

We were all producers as we all contributed with it.
In today's presentation on 5th December,Kyrah was absent means that she didn't come.So only Marco,!e,Hasna,Junior and Russa were there but it was still ok.We will do better on Friday.
We changed the key today and I had to change the Ostinato to match the chords of the song.
https://youtu.be/-RZEDBGVM4U
Here is the video of today's presentation.

Critically cubed part 1

Rolling stone:-

Most of the love songs on talking Book have a romantic idealism reflected in the shimmering,translucent quality of music."You Are the sunshine of My Life," "You and I (We Can Conquer the world)," " Lookin' for Another Pure Love"and "I believe (When I fall in love it will Be forever)"all share this quality without becoming redundant.Stevie Wonders second album this year is in many ways a reprise with variations of the first,Music of my mind. Both are ambitious, richly-textured,almost entirely the work of Wonder himself,who produced(with assistance,primarily on the Moogwork, from Malcolm Cecil and Robert Morgouleff),composed the music and all but a few of the lyrics,plays the bulk of instrumental tracks (aided here and there on Talking Book by eight musicians including,on one cut,Jeff Beck and Buzzy Feiten)and sings densely multi-tracked.

Pop matters:-

Okay.As concepts go,this one is unusual to say the least. While its common for musicians to record songs they love that are written by other musicians,I've never heard a singer re-releasing another singers entire record.That,in a nutshell,describes Macy Grays version of Talking Book,Stevie Wonders seminal 1972 album and the one that contains a couple of songs that even non-Stevie fans will recognise ("You are the Sunshine of my life ","Superstition").

New statesman :-
It says that it has been 40years since Stevie wonder showed off the otherwordly range of this keyboard.
The notes made by this made by this unobtrusive little rectangle sparkle through the 1970s like space dust falling on the disparate worlds of a musical Galaxy.In the late 1950s and early 1960s Hohner-best known for harmonics-had been experimenting with portable versions of familiar keyboard types.
https://plus.google.com/117879285261463035507/posts/4uYsDovr9ir


Aristotle:-
In the age of social media,the overuse of superlatives tends to render each assessment meaningless.His three plus hour recreation of the 1976 album Songs in the key of Life laid out a sprawling extravaganza of emotion.It took nearly 30 musicians, a string section,and a gospel chorus to mirror the 100 or so who participated in the original production.This is by Aristotle.

To what extent,I can agree is about the songs of Stevie wonder especially on the song superstition.It is a very old album and was produced /published or recorded by someone else in some cases.
The articles which are being spoken about Stevie wonder are very interesting and of course the romantic and love songs such as Superstition are very good songs.

Sunday, 20 November 2016

Critically cubed part 2.Decades project Album analysis

https://plus.google.com/117879285261463035507/posts/ZTX2t4ScVEC

https://plus.google.com/117879285261463035507/posts/byUaYeyAVCc

https://plus.google.com/117879285261463035507/posts/6vFhFwSfssn

https://plus.google.com/117879285261463035507/posts/335r7fTbVGd

https://plus.google.com/117879285261463035507/posts/TYXHz69kaUD

https://plus.google.com/117879285261463035507/posts/4c62yKH2TZc
https://plus.google.com/117879285261463035507/posts/dU5Vr1qiadj
https://plus.google.com/117879285261463035507/posts/c2LReY1RhbU

https://plus.google.com/117879285261463035507/posts/J3nP7vCYoRx
https://plus.google.com/117879285261463035507/posts/J3nP7vCYoRx
https://plus.google.com/117879285261463035507/posts/6c1cYeBmMws
https://plus.google.com/117879285261463035507/posts/FQXwLF8sAX5

This is all got to do with Kate bush.

She is a very good singer,especially in Hounds of love and Running up that hill.




Hounds of Love



    EMI
 • 1985
10
With her self-produced fifth album, Kate Bush became a total auteur, embracing the possibilities of digital sampling synthesizers and creating a perfect marriage of technique and exploration.
When Kate Bush debuted in early 1978 with “Wuthering Heights,” arguably pop’s most uncanny ballad, she arrived as England’s first and perhaps only out-of-the-box pop genius. Several years earlier, a publicist and Bush family friend gave Pink Floyd’s Dave Gilmour a demo of over 50 songs recorded when she was only 15. Impressed, Gilmour bankrolled Cockney Rebel arranger Andrew Powell to produce three tunes, one of which, “The Man with the Child in His Eyes,” would become her second surrealist smash. EMI signed her at 16 so no other label would snag her, then kept her under wraps. By the time she released The Kick Inside at 19, Bush’s songwriting had already achieved a sophistication reserved for Bacharach-level vets, while her keening soprano, literary references, and wide-eyed silent-film-star presentation positioned her firmly left-of-center—not the usual place for a prodigious pianist singing symphonic soft rock.
On this and ‘78’s follow-up Lionheart, Bush sang fearlessly of religion, incest, murder, homosexuality, and much more. “There’s room for a life in your womb, woman,” she crooned with the earnestness of a Michigan Womyn’s Music Festival radical, and did so while much of Europe was watching. She exuded brains and beauty and suffused both with an unyielding otherness that made her an LGBT icon and spiked her international cult with aliens of every stripe, from African-American bohos like Prince and OutKast to Johnny Rotten. Despite her overnight success, she would never conform to conventional stardom: Instead, she reversed the usual rock ‘n’ roll process where once-provocative artists cave to commercial pressure and shake off the quirks that initially made them distinct: Maturity would only make Bush more daring.
But by 1985, the year of Hounds of Love, she needed to reaffirm her appeal. Thanks to MTV, UK pop had exploded in worldwide popularity since The Dreaming, her self-produced record that EMI nearly returned for lacking potential singles; its only hit, “Sat in Your Lap,” was 15 months old by the time the album finally reached stores in 1982. Raging and experimental, it was akin to Public Image Ltd. and Siouxsie and the Banshees, not early Sheena Easton, and sold far less than its predecessors. So Bush and her romantic partner/bassist Del Palmer abandoned London for a 17th-century farmhouse, spent the summer gardening, and built a 48-track studio in her family barn where she doubled down on the Fairlight CMI, the pioneering digital sampling synthesizer that ruled The Dreaming.
The Fairlight was a notoriously expensive and complex computer; the few who could afford and figure out how to play one during their ‘80s heyday were either established stars like Peter Gabriel and Stevie Wonder who were invested in cutting-edge sounds, or similarly brainy upstarts who funded their techno-pop through production. One such boffin, Landscape’s Richard James Burgess, helped program Bush’s Fairlight on the very first album to feature it, 1980’s Never for Ever, which was also the first UK chart-topping album by a British female solo artist, one that marked a transition between the symphonic sweep of Bush’s earliest albums and what followed. On Never for Ever, the instrument was mostly a means to wrangle the sound effects that heighten her melodrama. By Hounds of Love, she’d mastered it as a musical instrument unto itself.
What set Bush apart from Fairlight wizards like Thomas Dolby, who made a point of their geekdom, was that she also drew deeply from the world music that captivated her older brother Paddy Bush. His balalaika, didgeridoo, and other centuries-old folk instruments tempered her Fairlight’s inherent futurism. She didn’t employ it to create walloping beats like the Art of Noise, or use it to spew out orchestral blasts like the Pet Shop Boys. She used the Fairlight the way Brian Wilson used cut-up tape and how today’s avant-garde exploit Pro-Tools—to create perfectly controlled cacophony.
Take, for example, Hounds of Love’s lead cut, “Running Up That Hill (A Deal With God).” The song was Bush’s first U.S. hit, and it brought to the mainstream gender-equality issues  that female-led post-punk acts like Au Pairs had been thrashing out for years in the underground. She delivers the bulk of it tenderly like a love song, but also poses pointed questions: “Is there so much hate for the ones we love?/Tell me, we both matter, don’t we?”
But as the track climaxes, weaving in and out of perception is the Fairlight-manipulated sound of Bush screaming, as if trying to escape her body, sex, and consciousness. “If I only could, I’d be running up that hill,” she sings once again at the end, but this time her soprano is joined by a down-pitched rendering of her own voice, to suggest technology had made her trans-gender prayer come true. Armed with equally advanced machines and melodies, Bush now creatively trumped nearly every mid-’80s rocker; only Prince and a few others were in her league.
This was a striking achievement for a quintessentially femme star: Among her gender-bending UK generation, Bush had the highest chirp, the most flowing locks, and the tightest leotards; when she shed the latter for the fantasy segments of her “Babooshka” video, she transformed into a scintillating windblown warrior with disco levels of exposed flesh and shameless camp. Both “Breathing” and its video is set in a uterus; “In the Warm Room” exalts vaginas the same way Led Zeppelin sang about dicks.  
Hounds of Love proved there were no compositional mountains Bush couldn’t climb. While the second side asserted her vanguard bent, the first side yielded four UK Top 40 hits. Neither synth-pop nor prog-rock, Hounds of Love nevertheless drew from both with double-platinum rewards on her home turf, and yielded her first U.S. hits, even without a tour. And its idiosyncrasies have only fueled Hounds’ lingering influence: Florence and the Machine cribs its Gothic angst. Anohni mirrors its animal divinity. St. Vincentdraws from its sexual politics and sonic precision. Utah Saints sampled it and the Futureheads covered it, both with UK Top 10 results. Coldplay’s “Speed of Sound” goes so far as to paraphrase “Running”’s rhythm, chords, climax, and highland imagery. It’s the Sgt. Pepper of the digital age’s dawn; a milestone in penetratingly fanciful pop.
Bush’s talent was so undeniable that she could sneak into contemporary music’s center while curbing none of her eccentricities. The album’s second single “Cloudbusting” celebrates Wilhelm Reich, a brilliant Austrian psychoanalyst but crackpot American inventor. Full of details gleaned from his son Peter Reich’s A Book of Dreams, it’s specific to their teacher/pupil relationship, which is played out further in its video featuring Donald Sutherland. But “Cloudbusting” also deals with a much more universal situation: Children long to protect their parents, despite having no adult power to do so. Accordingly, Bush resorts to the one thing all children possess in abundance—imagination. “I just know that something good is gonna happen,” she sings, a string sextet sawing insistently as martial drums beat a battle cry that morphs from helplessness to victory, however imaginary. The son she portrays wills himself into thoughts nearly delusional as his dad’s, and the result is optimistic yet poignant, as he ultimately believes, “Just saying it could even make it happen.”
Imagination’s pull is the subtext to Bush’s entire oeuvre, but that theme dominates Hounds of Love, and not least in the title track. Whereas her piercing upper register once defined her output, here she’s roaring from her gut, then pulling back, and the song shifts between panic and empathy. “Hounds of Love” boasts the big gated ’80s drum blasts Bush discovered while singing background on Gabriel’s “Games Without Frontiers,” and yet its cello just as percussive: It builds to suggest both her pulse and the heartbeat of the captured fox she comforts and identifies with. She fears love: “It’s coming for me through the trees,” she wails. Yet she craves it, so desire and terror escalate in a breathless Hitchcockian climax.
On Hounds of Love, the singer who started directing her own videos at this point becomes total auteur, and takes such a firm grasp on every aspect of the recording process that she often replaces Del Palmer, her own lover, on bass. On “Mother Stands for Comfort,” an all-knowing maternal contrast to the delusional papa of “Cloudbusting,” she duets with German jazz bassist Eberhard Weber, who plays yielding mother to Bush’s wayward daughter. Her Fairlight clatters with the crash of broken dishes while her piano gently wanders, but Weber’s fretless bass maintains its compassion, even when Bush lets loose some freaky primal-scream scatting toward the end.
Skies, clouds, hills, trees, lakes—along with everything else, Hounds of Love is also a heated paean to nature. On the cover, Bush reclines between two canines with a knowing familiarity that almost suggests cross-species congress. She honors the sensual world's benign blessings on “The Big Sky” even while Youth’s raucous bass suggests earthquakes. Bush references its elements with childlike awe: “That cloud looks like Ireland,” she squeals. “You’re here in my head like the sun coming out,” she sighs in “Cloudbusting,” and her stormy emotions are reflected by the music’s turbulence. But nature’s destruction can also inspire us to seek solace in spirituality, and that’s what happens on Side Two’s singular suite, “The Ninth Wave.”
Bush plays a sailor who finds herself shipwrecked and alone. She slips into a hypothermia-induced limbo between wakefulness and sleep (“And Dream of Sheep”), where nightmares, memories and visions distort her consciousness to the point where she cannot distinguish between reality and illusion. Is she skating, or trapped “Under Ice”? During her hallucinations, she sees herself in a prior life as a necromancer on trial; instead of freezing, she visualizes herself burning (“Waking the Witch”). Her spirit leaves her body and visits her beloved (“Watching You Without Me”). Then her future self confronts her present being and begs her to stay alive (“Jig of Life”). A rescue team reaches her just as her life force drifts heavenward (“Hello Earth”), but in the concluding track, “The Morning Fog,” flesh and spirit reunite, and she vows to tell her family how much she loves them.
As her sailor drifts in and out of consciousness, Bush floats between abstract composition and precise songcraft. Her character’s nebulous condition gives her melodies permission to unmoor from pop’s constrictions; her verses don’t necessarily return to catchy choruses, not until the relative normality of “The Morning Fog,” one of her sweetest songs. Instead, she’s free to exploit her Fairlight’s capacity for musique concrete. Spoken voices, Gregorian chant, Irish jigs, oceanic waves of digitized droning, and the culminating twittering of birds all collide in Bush’s synth-folk symphony. Like most of her lyrics, “The Ninth Wave” isn’t autobiographical, although its sink-or-swim scenario can be read as an extended metaphor for Hounds of Love’s protracted creation: Will she rise to deliver the masterstroke that guaranteed artistic autonomy for the rest of her long career and enabled her to live a happy home life with zero participation in the outside world for years on end, or will she drown under the weight of her colossal ambition?
By the time I became one of the few American journalists to have interviewed her in person in 1985, Bush had clinched her victory. She’d flown to New York to plug Hounds of Love, engaging in the kind of promotion she’d rarely do again. Because she thoroughly rejected the pop treadmill, the media had already begun to marginalize her as a space case, and have since painted her as a tragic, reclusive figure. Yet despite her mystical persona, she was disarmingly down-to-earth: That hammy public Kate was clearly this soft-spoken individual’s invention; an ever-changing role she played like Bowie in an era when even icons like Stevie Nicks and Donna Summer had a Lindsey Buckingham or a Giorgio Moroder calling many of the shots.
It was a response, perhaps, to the age-old quandary of commanding respect as  a woman in an overwhelmingly masculine field. Bush's navigation of this minefield was as natural as it was ingenious: She became the most musically serious and yet outwardly whimsical star of her time. She held onto her bucolic childhood and sustained her family’s support, feeding the wonder that’s never left her. Her subsequent records couldn’t surpass Hounds of Love’s perfect marriage of technique and exploration, but never has she made a false one. She’s like the glissando of “Hello Earth” that rises up and plummets down almost simultaneously: Bush retained the strength to ride fame’s waves because she’s always known exactly what she was—simply, and quite complicatedly, herself.

Friday, 18 November 2016

Weekly Rehearsal diary 6

https://youtu.be/7-_222WYQtg

The review on the previous target was to play major 1st,2nd,3rd perfect 4th and 5th chords etc.

What I focussed on this week is to play major,minor and Sus 4chords.

What I did was that I set a metronome on the keyboard and played the chords after every 4counts,some after one or two counts as well.

I kept learning,when I was a kid,and even now whatever I am doing in the music classes in College.

My areas did not show any areas of weaknesses.

I had been doing all these Rehearsal Diary technical target during this induction project and will continue to do more when I have time in the year and always.These are good excercise and good knowledge and techniques for piano and keyboard skills.



Review 1/2,Comparison of the shows 17th October and 16th October

Yesterday's show was also good but not as fun as the show on Wednesday which was16th November,Because when some students who came from university to perform in the college,there were no dance performances like musical theatre, unlike on Wednesday which was the show before yesterday evening.But it was still good. I still liked it as their are many other ways of enjoying as being a good audience.The band was not too loud like the day before yesterday evenings show.There were many breaks in between after each performance.On the day before yesterday's show,there was only one break in between.Even though the show was not as fun as the previous one,We kept moving,screaming,clapping etc.There were no saxophonists on the stage like Olly and two other students.I liked the harmonies by all the singers and a good sense of rhythm as usual.Hence,I had a good time in both the shows.I was also singing a little bit along with the performers.I liked the way the students of university the band called Cee plus the sirens performed on the song On and on by Erykah Badu because that reminds me up performing with my other friends in the induction show on October.

Thursday, 17 November 2016

Weekly Rehearsal Diary 5

https://youtu.be/smORIhnDCxM

The review on the previous weeks target was to play the black keys on the piano and make a music and play smoothly.

What I had focuses on this week was to play major 1st,2nd,3rd and perfect fourth and fifth chords etc. along with a metronome.

What I did was that I used the metronome and played each and every chord after 2 and 4beats.The actual time Signature was 4/4 and 2/4 meaning 2 and 4cratchets in 4 bars.

I learnt about it in my music theory class and being able to practice and playing it properly.

My rehearsal did not show areas of weaknesses.

These are the five targets which I had to do for every week for the Decades project but,I did it much earlier than that because considering that I have understood what to do and how to-develop a technical target,When I have time,I could do it,rather than wasting time and utilising it as part of an excercise which I learn in my music classes wherever I go for learning music.

Review 2,About the band performance on 16th November 2016

Yesterday ,it was a beautiful and amazing performance and we all enjoyed.We moved,Screamed in Joy and clapped along with the beat.Now I am going to give out a brief description about the performance.

It was like a sound and light show and the second year of the the music students were performing and then after the break,all those students who had already done a course in Westminster Kingsway College,had also performed.I mean to say all those students who passed out from college.It was more like a musical theatre performance than an actual band as some of the students were dancing along with the drummers,Guitarists and the bass players as well.This was the best part of the performance,and also when they were calling some people from the audience to Dance,I also began to Dance,and enjoyed with the band performers last evening in the college.They had a good sense of rhythm and I liked the movement of the performers,especially the singers when they were performing,there were also good feelings of the performance,they enjoyed which is why we could also enjoy the entire performance.There were also good harmonies,especially,when the singers were performing in the first 2 to 3 performances in the show.We could not hear the words of the songs in which the singers were singing but I still enjoyed because if it is a rock band,it needs to be loud so that the performers are having enough enthusiasm in themselves and confidence as well.Hence we can say that it was not at all stressful and none of the band performers were nervous which is why we could enjoy.I hope there are more performances in the college like this.Also many thanks to the teacher named Olly and two other saxophonists who performed extremely well and some of the first year students as well.The second year students could perform well on their own,but it was also good with the support of some of the first year girl Singers and the Saxophonists with Olly.Hence the performers were successful in engaging the stage.The standout moment for me was that when there was a break in between the performances,there were songs which were being played in the speakers in the theatre,I also enjoyed listening to that as well and especially when the song On and on by Erykah Badu was playing,I reminded my friends Kenny and Manuella that this was the song in the induction gig in which we had performed.What I felt that the techniques they used were that they made a good rhythm,especially the Drummer and everyone of the band members as well.They had been working very hard and practicing very hard. The performers who had passed out from college were trained very well,which is why there was a lot of enjoyment with musicians and Dancers which together makes a musical theatre.The content was that they were in time and they were not off beat.They knew what they were doing.My overall impression of the entire event was that,I was happy,Excited and moved and clapped a lot with the audience and participants(performers).The performers could engage the entire audience with the extra help with the help of  some of the first year students and one of the staff in the college because Olly usually helps them.It was also good that I had also came up on the stage and dance along with the performers to show that I am enjoying with them.It was an Awesome and amazing participation amongst the performers and audience.And also as the gig was performing on the stage,I liked the way the objects were rotating on the screen.