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EPISODE · Sep 7, 2004

In a Perfectly Wounded Sky

from In the Hands · host Paul Cantrell

Today’s recording is a composition of my own, which I see I play a bit faster than I did three years ago. I like the new version — I think the faster tempo in the middle sustains the structural momentum a bit better — but of course I may have changed my mind about that three years from now. That’s the fun of interpretation: it’s never done! The title is based on my mishearing of a Tori Amos lyric (from Cruel). I generally go for titles that are evocative and somehow seem to fit, without actually having any clear meaning that listeners will try to impose on the piece — I want the title to be an opening into the music, not a box to stuff it in. Another one of those “openings into the music” is the little epigraphs I often put at the end of the piece. I almost always choose both the quote and the title after writing the music, so they’re more a reflection on where I ended up than an explanation of what I was doing. The epigraph for this piece is a hokku by Masahide: Now that my storehouse has burned down, nothing conceals the moon. Music readers and visual aesthetes can follow along with the score. Paul Cantrell ▶️ In a Perfectly Wounded Sky Paul Cantrell, piano View score for In a Perfectly Wounded Sky ⬇️ Download audio file for In a Perfectly Wounded Sky (5:04 / 6.3 M) For those following along with the audio engineering side of things, I used a touch of a look-ahead limiter on this one (which I usually don’t do), because of the huge variance between the attacks on the harsher chords and the very quiet intervening sections. I also cranked the scaling on the Gain Shaper a hair higher than usual. The opening chord of this piece was the starting point for Saturday’s recording, Lingle.

Episode metadata supplied by the publisher feed · Published Sep 7, 2004

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Today’s recording is a composition of my own, which I see I play a bit faster than I did three years ago. I like the new version — I think the faster tempo in the middle sustains the structural momentum a bit better — but of course I may have...

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