Why Does all the Music Sound the Same?
Why does all the music sound the same? Have you ever asked that question?
How about spicing it up with some serialism, or some retrograde inversion…or maybe some augmentation or diminution?
If you’re in a rut musically and you’re looking for some ideas, check out how you might be able to use some Classical Music disciplines to spice up your creativity and sound like no other band out there. (For more ideas, see my article What Is "Classical Music?")
I’m not saying you’re going to like this short song I wrote for a Christmas Eve service at my church, but it shows how Classical disciplines can be applied to make something completely different.
When I wrote “God of the Heavens” I sat down and asked myself, “What would it look like to write a song using a simple contemporary song-structure, but a fully orchestrated use of contemporary Classical techniques and motivic development…no holds barred ?”
Here’s what came out, it’s not with a real orchestra, since I don’t have one. I used Apple Logic to build it. Hopefully someday it could be performed with live players. Nevertheless, I stated the theme with the opening instrumental section, then used it to develop Verse 1. Verse 2 is an inversion of Verse 1, to portray the fact that Jesus came from Heaven to Earth, a mirror image, upside-down from heaven. There are other motivically developed ideas that I used as well…so essentially, it’s a Christian/Pop-song/Contemporary Classical piece.
I guarantee you…you’ve never heard ANYTHING else like it!
The God of all eternity,
The God Who spread out all the heavenlies
has come to the earth as a tiny seed,
planted into the earth, just for you and me.
The God of all the life we see
has come into the very air we breathe,
and has given Himself to us
that we would be set free
from disease and inflicted poverty.
God of the heavens,
God of the miracles we see,
God of the true reality,
You came to earth,
You came through birth.
(repeat)
God of the heavens,
You came to earth.
You came to earth.
You came through birth.