This is an ambient piece, picturing something mesmerizing, unusual… There is a feel of a miracle there. You can picture slow steps, hear drops of water, echoing strange sounds in a cavern. – Synthesizers, processed piano // Length 3:02, No signature, Slow motion
Blue tag =for a demonstration only; not for sale. One more symphonic piece; this is the 2nd movement from the Suite for Oboe and Orchestra. The mysterious feel and relaxed flow of this music, the rhythmic elements of the bolero, the sound of castanets, and mid-eastern intonations remind of hot summer nights somewhere near Spain. – Symphony orchestra, oboe // Length 2:55, 82 bpm, 4/4
Blue tag = for a demonstration only; not for sale. It may feel like a windy, cloudy evening, turning into a rainy thunderstorm. The music is emotional, yet it gives you a hidden feeling of comfort and enjoyment. – Symphony orchestra, oboe, flute (orchestra stage layout by E.Dohnanyi) // Length 3:33, 120 bpm, 4/4
Neo impressionism? – Maybe. This is a cue with a feel of rather rapid moving through a winter landscape – maybe, it’s about skying from a hill in a snowy forest, or just driving through a backroad. You can feel the snowdrift, the texture of the sparkly crust. The absence of the metric signature adds a sense of openness.
Synthesizers // Length 1:58, 122 bpm, No signature
This is an ambient piece, picturing the mood of a mesmerized viewer of beautiful caverns. You can also imagine the starry sky with satellites, or very calm surface of the sea…
Synthesizers // Length 1:47, No signature, Slow motion
Calm and soothing, this piece could be relevant as a companion to any video with beautiful nature, sunny weather, or happy memories and peaceful mood. A small climax in the ending part gives a feel of elevation. – Piano, strings, harp, glockenspiel, solo violin in the orchestra // Length 2:07, 96 bpm, 4/4
The piece consists of 2 contrasting parts.The 1st part, the Intro (1st minute of music), is very picturesque, almost ambient, picturing something like early morning, the first rays of the Sun and colorful Indian landscapes. It doesn’t have fixed rhythmic structure; it just floats freely, harmoniously weaving together expressive timbres of national Indian instruments.
The 2nd part (from 1:01 to 2:15) is rather fast; it’s very rhythmical and happy, and has Indian pop music feel to it.
This piece could perfectly garnish any program about India, where there are views of the country, Indian landscape, movement. The parts can work as one piece, as well as separately. – Sitar, tanpura, sarangi, bansuri, finger cymbals, tablas, dhapali, drums, bass guitar, synthesizers // Length 2:16, 1st half – rubato, 2nd half – 134 bpm, 4/4