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Sorry, but I sent the sax-player home.
#1
This band will probably not hire me, because I simply couldn't find room for the sax in this.

I used all other tracks, but I just couldn't find anyway to fit the sax into things.

My center-of-attention in this one is the beat or groove, not any of the individual instruments, in an attempt to turn it into a 'dance-track' (Think body-movement, not electronic music) that swirls around the listener encapsulating the listener.

I don't know what the band envisioned for this song, but I see an inner-eye music-video of our protagonist who have ventured into a forest of magical creatures and now finds him/her self surrounded by them. Elves and fairies with flutes and harps doing their mesmerizing ballet around the listener, enticing on a trance-like state that leads to our listener giving in to the urge to let their body slip its rational restraints and start dancing primitively.

We've all seen that movie, right? Smile
Where the rule-ridden office-clerk ends up giving in to more earthly pleasures and discovers life is more than correctly stamping snarly forms that always come per regulation in copies of 5.

Anyway, that's my reasoning behind trying to make this version more beat-driven than story-driven.

I had a lot of trouble with the snare. No single track had it fully present, but rather it was scattered across several tracks (hit on one, body on another, and so on)
So I had a hard time getting it to 'fill up' the space and make it more prominent. I wish it had less of a cardboard-box sound to it, but I couldn't get around it completely so it is what it is.






.mp3    Turbosauro - Magilla (JELmix).mp3 --  (Download: 9.81 MB)


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Sorry, but I sent the sax-player home. - by JEL - 27-11-2019, 08:30 AM