Meditation/Relaxation music 432Hz

MassiveShoutOuts

The Force is Strong With This One
Hey guys!
This morning I whipped up a little spacey guitar music to sink(sync) into. My partner and I were awoken by some storms at 3am and so I was very tired when I put this together, but let me know what you think!
I play around with different tunings and this one is in the classic 432Hz. Its really a 10minute song that I reassembled into 50-odd minutes for the purpose of falling asleep to. ENJOY!

 

I whipped this one up this morning as an experiment to see if I could use only guitars. For my recent tracks I was using a synthesizer to create the background sound. However, going off what the C's said last session and then the following discussion:

Q: (luc) I had some interesting results creating an orchestral piece based on my own melody, chords, etc. with AI music.

Would that technology be worth it for people to experiment with, with the goal of creating some more uplifting or "STO energy" sort of music?

A: No

Q: (luc) My impression is that instrumental music might work, and that human input is crucial (no shortcuts), and that collaboration might be worth exploring. Any comments, warnings or pointers on that?

A: Electronic music is antihuman.

Q: (Niall) Boom!

(L) (to Ark) You're gonna have to throw your keyboard away, dear. [laughter] What do you mean anti-human?

A: Messes with cellular vibrations and intracellular communication.

Q: (luc) Are they referring to AI music specifically, or just generally to electronic music genres?

(L) I think they said electronic music.

(Chu) Yeah, but like a keyboard or music produced by a computer?

(Joe) Define electronic music.

A: Artificially produced.

Q: (Joe) Is that because of the tempo of it?

A: No

Q: (Joe) Is it okay to listen to music played on natural instruments?

(L) ...That are amplified?

(Joe) Via the radio?

A: Yes

Q: (L) Can we listen to music that is played on instruments that are run through amplifiers?

A: Yes

Q: (Andromeda) So it's just how it's generated that makes a difference.

(Joe) The key is the vibration, or the frequency.

(T.C.) May I ask a question about that?

(L) Yes.

(T.C.) One of the major breakthroughs in late 20th century music was the synthesizer. We used the synthesizer to reproduce sounds that sound very similar to things like strings, pianos. So, for example, luc has a piano, it's an electronic piano, but it sounds like a normal piano. So we're getting into a grey area there. If luc produces a piece of music that has strings in it, for example, that's a synthesizer creating those sounds. Is that bad?

A: Yes

Q: (L) So people should be producing music on natural instruments. Is it really harmful?

A: Not severe unless overindulged.

Q: (Joe) So there's obviously some essential difference between the sound or the vibration of sound that is produced by a natural instrument, and ones created with electronics?

A: Yes

I decided to instead record literally one guitar note and slow the whole thing down so that the note played for a minute rather than a second.

Enjoy!
 
Here we have another! Continuing on from my last creation where I slowed a guitar track to give that resonating background, this one has a REAL acoustic guitar in it. Alll natural!
I think in the midst of all this worldly hectic goodness going on at the moment, a time out is now more valuable than ever. I hope these little tracks can give you one :)

 
From what I feel when I listen to your videos, this last one is the one where I feel good.

Not in the others.

Perhaps it's just my imagination, but that's how I feel.

Thank you.
Thanks for your feedback :) I think so too. I think each one I do improves on the last, and your feedback helps me lock onto what works best :)
 
Back
Top Bottom