Urizen music
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====A musical tradition==== | ====A musical tradition==== | ||
Urizen does not have a popular concert tradition. However, many Stargazers who are also musicians use musical improvisation and composition to structure their ritual magics; one such major tradition is the [[ | Urizen does not have a popular concert tradition. However, many Stargazers who are also musicians use musical improvisation and composition to structure their ritual magics; one such major tradition is the [[Silutarian Method]], which utilises the connection between musical modes and the realms of magic. | ||
===Further examples=== | ===Further examples=== |
Revision as of 20:07, 4 December 2012
The Music of Urizen
Style summary
The Urizen musical tradition mirrors their tranquil, philosophical approach to life. More in meditation than performance, traditional Urizen musicians gather to improvise fluid, shifting melodies and harmonies around a series of repetitive themes, usually choosing a concept such as 'tranquility', 'hope' or 'grief' around which to base their compositions. They favour picked strings, tuned percussion and light, breathy woodwind, though any instrument can be played as part of the soundscape.
Real world inspiration includes gamelan, minimalists such as Phillip Glass and Ludivico Ianoudi, Vangelis and Mike Oldfield, though with acoustic rather than electric instruments.
A musical tradition
Urizen does not have a popular concert tradition. However, many Stargazers who are also musicians use musical improvisation and composition to structure their ritual magics; one such major tradition is the Silutarian Method, which utilises the connection between musical modes and the realms of magic.
Further examples
Songs
Urizen does not have its own song tradition, although bards will happily purloin the songs of other nations to sing in bars and around campfires. See Music for songs known throughout the Empire.
Children still sing songs and nursery rhymes, such as the following: Hungry Goat
Instrumentation
Bells, glockenspiels, Hand pans, hammer dulcimer, soft pipes, long notes from bowed instruments or drone instruments such as singing bowls or wine glasses.
Other performance traditions
Performers in Urizen more commonly recite poetry than sing. There is more information about Urizen art here.
How to adapt your repertoire
- Take any tune and repeat a phrase over and over, allowing others to improvise around it.
Our sources
Any gamelan, Philip Glass and other minimalists but preferably played on tuned percussion, Michael Nyman, Solaris soundtrack.
Here is a youtube playlist of appropriate or inspiring music for Urizen.