hello! i'm starling, composer for games + media ⭐️ nice to meet you!
i also record oboe + cor anglais, tin whistle, recorder + cello/keys 🎻
RTs appreciated if you like what you hear 🩵
What a difference. It looks like you’ve created a nice ambience there. Having a creative space you’re comfortable with is important. It took me some time changing/adjusting my own small studio before finding something I was happy with.
Wow it’s not just my music that has grown but my studio too - here’s some ‘before’ and ‘after’ pics…. it's 'warm creative vibe' verse 'cold tumble weed'...
I’m beyond grateful to have this space to create all my music like ‘All As One’ - it’s officially my happy place! 🙏🎹🧡
#CreativeSpace #MusicEvolution #Grateful
If I was limited to making airship music every day for the rest of my life, I wouldn't complain 🤣
Thank you to @HorizonOfAchaea for allowing me to share my love of orchestration with the world 🙏🏻
Do you want to know my technique for coping with the world being a (sometimes) grim/unsettling/worrying place? I just try to do something good. Even if it's small, just *something* that's within my power, which I can achieve and see though. 1/?
Super day yesterday touring the excellent new @RHULMusic recording/music-tech facilities! Looking forward to recording/sampling some of the huge variety of world instruments in their superb collection!👍🙏🎼
Excited to announce the release of my recording of In Paradisum from Fauré's Requiem, featured in the final episode of @EndeavourTV#Endeavour performed by the wonderful @LonMetOrchestra conducted by myself.
https://t.co/VAfVLfOSWQ
@jarvbone @johnehartley Great set up you've got there, Carol. Looks like those changes have made a big difference to your creative workflow. I can see why it's your happy place.
I completely agree. It takes time, dedication and a lot of patience. But the feeling you get when the theory and the practice finally start making sense and coming together, definitely makes the journey worth it.
Learning an instrument properly takes years. It’s pretty naive to think that you could jump on an instrument and play it properly in such a short space of time. You could probably play a song or two, but there’s so much more to it than that.