Don't be fooled by the "Grand Battle" part; it's not epically dramatic.
What it is, however, is a piece that sounded rather regal and battle-y in nature even though that was not my intention at first.
But, this is my first piece I have done that is classical in quite a long time. So, I figured I would upload it. It does have a structure, but it's not really set in stone. So, after this description/story it is up to you to draw conclusions.
"You have entered the battle field," this is the very beginning, before anything real fancy "and you see your opponent standing on the other side of a desert-like European battleground. The signal to draw your swords is given. Then, very shortly after, the signal to fight is given as well."
This is about the time in the song where I had begun changing it up; the bridge, if you will. "You attack first! The opponent saw your attack coming, however, and is not really phased by it. You opponent attacks back and cuts you; nothing special, but a wound nonetheless. You attack again, this time you leave a gash in your opponent. Slowly, but surely, your opponent realizes it will have to keep it's distance from you if it wants to succeed at all."
This is the part after the one measure bridge. "You battle, and battle. One attack after another. Both of you exhausted; both of you carrying serious battle wounds."
This next part is after the whole note and one measure bridge. "You both begin to put bandages on while avoiding the others swings and attacks. after a short period, you gain the upper hand, but not for long."
The solo is the next part up. "You turn your back for maybe a second or two, then you are attacked, you suffer a serious gash to the arm. If you don't find medical attention soon (these being the seemingly medieval days) you will die, no doubt."
After solo. "You prevail however, to fight to your dieing breath. As your last act of vengeance, you kill your opponent just minutes before you bleed out." END!
Enjoy!
Composed by: ©
dragonkingofages May 26, 2010 Under http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/2.0/ license.
What it is, however, is a piece that sounded rather regal and battle-y in nature even though that was not my intention at first.
But, this is my first piece I have done that is classical in quite a long time. So, I figured I would upload it. It does have a structure, but it's not really set in stone. So, after this description/story it is up to you to draw conclusions.
"You have entered the battle field," this is the very beginning, before anything real fancy "and you see your opponent standing on the other side of a desert-like European battleground. The signal to draw your swords is given. Then, very shortly after, the signal to fight is given as well."
This is about the time in the song where I had begun changing it up; the bridge, if you will. "You attack first! The opponent saw your attack coming, however, and is not really phased by it. You opponent attacks back and cuts you; nothing special, but a wound nonetheless. You attack again, this time you leave a gash in your opponent. Slowly, but surely, your opponent realizes it will have to keep it's distance from you if it wants to succeed at all."
This is the part after the one measure bridge. "You battle, and battle. One attack after another. Both of you exhausted; both of you carrying serious battle wounds."
This next part is after the whole note and one measure bridge. "You both begin to put bandages on while avoiding the others swings and attacks. after a short period, you gain the upper hand, but not for long."
The solo is the next part up. "You turn your back for maybe a second or two, then you are attacked, you suffer a serious gash to the arm. If you don't find medical attention soon (these being the seemingly medieval days) you will die, no doubt."
After solo. "You prevail however, to fight to your dieing breath. As your last act of vengeance, you kill your opponent just minutes before you bleed out." END!
Enjoy!
Composed by: ©
dragonkingofages May 26, 2010 Under http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/2.0/ license.
Category Music / Classical
Species Unspecified / Any
Size 71 x 120px
File Size 2.35 MB
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