@TimondeNood

Easy?! By no means playable of course ;) , but the harmony and use of motivic material is quite straightforward. In this short introduction we examine some of the building blocks that Ravel used in his famous toccata. Although the harmonic language is full of extentions and colouring notes, the bass provides a good guideline and shows simple & familiar progressions. For this introduction I've limited myself to the exposition of this piece, as it contains already all the building blocks that will be used in the development and recap. 

Piano performance by Brecht Valckenaers: https://www.youtube.com/ @brechtvalckenaers5108  
Full Tombeau recording: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BgBj6h7MVxk

Timestamps:
00:00 introduction
00:28 Toccata performance (exposition)
02:04 Analysis Theme 1
04:40 Analysis Transition
04:54 Analysis Theme 2
06:09 Analysis Climax + transition
06:40 Development
07:00 Outro + Denis Matthews review

@DivergentIntegral

Yet another great analysis. Keep 'm coming!

@donotapply6202

Amazing!

@dylankelly5511

❤❤❤

@aloshapolice7678

Awesome analysis! I subscribed for more. 
I have a question: how are you making those color highlights in your video scores? In which program, like a video editor or something else? Could you tell me more specifically how you are doing it? I have made video scores in the past, but today I noticed that highlighting notes would make it more efficient in some cases.

@thegoodgeneral

Great content but your audio could use a lot of improvement. Your pick-up is unclear as there are a lot of early reflections, sounds like from the surface (desk or table) you’ve placed your mic on, and there is maybe a little too much distance between you and your mic. A lot of random bass noise, as though you are touching the surface the mic is on, that could be cleaned up or prevented. And finally your edits… you have to introduce small fade-ins, fade-outs, and crossfades… as they are there are lots of little pops and clicks.

edit: also record your VO in mono. No reason to have. VO sounding panned to one side or the other. It should sound balanced between the ears.