eSong One
A pretty crazy Electronic song that I made just for the fun of it. No particular reason… just felt inclined. It has a far-east flavor at some points.
[audio:http://www.glenrhodes.com/audio/SONG-ONE.mp3|titles=eSong One|artists=Glen Rhodes]A pretty crazy Electronic song that I made just for the fun of it. No particular reason… just felt inclined. It has a far-east flavor at some points.
[audio:http://www.glenrhodes.com/audio/SONG-ONE.mp3|titles=eSong One|artists=Glen Rhodes]Kind of melancholy, but it builds, and it is ageless, because it could be from a few different eras in the last 20 years… In a very minor key. (All songs Copyright 2000-2011, Glen Rhodes)
A song I wrote that reminds me, for some melancholy reason, of my earliest childhood home. I’m not exactly sure why, but it just feels that way. I always compose with an image or a theme in my head. [audio:http://www.glenrhodes.com/audio/childhoodhouse.mp3|titles=The Childhood House|artists=Glen Rhodes] (All songs Copyright 2000-2009, Glen Rhodes)
The feeling of time passing, quite some sadness in this – especially the clarinet and the flute. This one is a hybrid because it has both drums and orchestral. (All songs Copyright 2000-2011, Glen Rhodes)
This song was inspired by a few things. First, my first solo flight in an airplane while I was taking flying lessons, and second by the movie “The Aviator”. It’s tells a story; whimsy, tension, relief (landing). [audio:http://www.glenrhodes.com/audio/firstflight.mp3|titles=First Flight|artists=Glen Rhodes] (All songs Copyright 2000-2009, Glen Rhodes)
A quick, hoppity sounding song, with elements of funk with, some orchestra thrown in, and a synthesized voice. The song slowly transitions in its feel as it progresses. Acoustic guitar comes in. [audio:http://www.glenrhodes.com/audio/SONG-ONE2.mp3|titles=eSong Two|artists=Glen Rhodes] (All songs Copyright 2000-2009, Glen Rhodes)
A more recent recording I did of a group of choirs singing the Jenkin’s song, “Adiemus”. The words actually have no meaning, but it’s the music that counts. The choirs originally sang along to a solo acoustic piano, and the orchestration and all percussion was scored and added afterward.