"it was the kind of day that makes you think the coffee just isn't enough anymore, i need something stronger. Then you mix coffee with redbull, and the next thing you know, you are naked on a table at a hooters covered in vasaline and oil and the police look disturbed. Life is funny.
Had to pull the project file out of my archives. The chords mostly draw on Cm but they don't repeat often so there's not that many patterns. The easiest thing might be for me to just give you the midi files honestly: drive.google.com/drive/folders/1BrnelbnuyF8LhCsV34R0n_Y66dPQ33Bf
@@AnubhabSett Thanks for your efforts! But I'm a complete beginner and wouldn't know where to even start when it comes to reverse engineering something like a midi file into scales that I could learn. I hope someone else finds the files useful though.
@@MikeyJ1572 I see. In that case, the scale is G minor and the main chord progression usually moves from Cm to Gm like: Cm Cm B♭-Edim E♭maj7 Gm Gm A more accurate but more complex version of the same progression would be: Cm9 (Cm9/G) Cm9 B♭9 C9/E Cm9/E♭ Gm9/D Gm9/D
Great work Anubhab! I really enjoyed it! I am keep listening your creativity! The more I am listening, the more I am liking it! Keep doing great work! Enjoy life!
Tbh having listened to both versions of Ginshanada after all this time, I actually realised that this one really was better than the first version... But I love both equally!
Wow, the church organ feel was definitely surprising, in a good way. While the melody itself is quite classic in terms of organ music (and reminds me of the bgm of 8-bit games, somehow?), the sudden drop-offs of volume made me check my sound system lol, it was super jarring Unless, that was the effect you wanted to give? XD
Oh yeah that was totally the intent, but in hindsight the volumes in this piece are all over the place, if I wrote it today I would have kept the dynamic range a little less chaotic.
I decided to listen to your music while doing assignments and I've gotta say, it's pretty good ⭐️ This particular one really maintains this sort of tension from start to finish but there are some surprisingly playful parts, which I really like~ This piece really would do well as a movie OST imo