Search the Community
Showing results for tags 'Flute'.
-
Hello, I play the final excerpt of the song Unity, Duty, Destiny from The Mask of Light OST, in my Xiao flute, let me share with us the video. https://youtu.be/38IbOcROWEk
-
So, I can't seem to find this anywhere, but has anyone figured out what the notes are on the flute patterns in MNOLG? I mean, I know the pattern to play it in, but the flute isn't set up in the standard C scale and I'm awful at figuring out notes by ear. I want to be able to play it on real instruments and possibly put them into music (eventually). So, if anyone knows, that would be great!
-
April Musician Spotlight - Ian Anderson
HeavyMetalSunshineSister posted a blog entry in blogs_blog_1774
Yes, yes, I know. I'm a lazy sod and should be shot on sight for so terribly neglecting the Spotlight for this month. I know. On the plus side, I have great (if stupidly delayed news) for you all. On April 2nd (3rd in the States, aka where I'm at), Ian Anderson, frontman for Jethro Tull (you might recognize them as the legendary band behind albums like Aqualung, Thick As A Brick, and Stormwatch) released a sequel to Thick As A Brick, forty years after the release of the original. Owing to, from what I've heard from a couple ill-remembered sources*, a certain disinterest on the part of guitarist Martin Barre (who is doing his own solo tour and album, so fret not about him!), this album was released as an Ian Anderson solo album, but, with a full cast of other musicians assisting him, including a couple of full-time Tull members, Ian has managed to produce an album that is every bit as powerful as the original, if a little bit less nostalgic. Unlike the original Brick, TAAB2 is split into multiple tracks, each one outlining a different possible past for Gerald Bostock, whom you might remember as the fictional boy credited, on the mock-newspaper album sleeve of the original, with writing the lyrics to Thick As A Brick. The premise of this sequel album is, essentially, a musing on what might have become of the 10-year old boy, forty years later. It's an interesting question, and one that is answered in four different ways - he either ended up homeless, a corrupt banker, a preacher, a soldier wounded in action, or a shopkeeper with a fondness for model trains. If you enjoy progressive rock, or just liked the original Brick, I suggest you buy this album, as its feel is much more like classic Jethro Tull than Ian Anderson's solo albums in recent decades.- 2 comments
-
- flute
- jethro tull
-
(and 3 more)
Tagged with: