Weltschmerz [Disquiet0258] by Suss Müsik published on 2016-12-10T14:45:48Z It's winter at Suss Müsik headquarters; today is the first truly cold day of the season. The first evidence of winter is usually the hollow sound of the wind blowing through our chimney and rattling through the studio ductwork. The greenery outside has begun its period of dormancy, the colorful vibrancy of fall replaced with a neutral thicket of browns and greys. We may get snow tonight. WInter coincides with the holiday season. Bells can be heard ringing through the streets and there's a sentimental magic to the air. After the holidays, an abyss takes over where sunlight is scarce. Those who embrace the festivities of December will isolate themselves come January, especially when winter storms are fierce and roads are impassable. An aside: Suss Müsik recalls spending time in the farthest reaches of the north, where the construction and logging industries come to a halt between November and April. Unemployment in those parts is rampant during the cruel winter months. People exist in quiet desperation, waiting in solitude for the spring thaw with only cabin fever and a bottle of Thunderbird for company. For this short piece, Suss Müsik attempts to channel three elements of the winter season: the first breaths of an early snowfall, the Yuletide celebration, and that moment of terror when the walls close in. A simple piano motif builds upon a bed of mallet percussion and ceramic flute, followed by an insistent beat topped with fuzzy bass and snarky guitar feedback. We didn't intend to make such a dark piece, but the muse goes where it goes. The piece is titled Weltschmerz, a German word that describes the melancholy feeling of being disconnected from the physical world. Featured are the beautifully spatial tones of ceramic artist John Kulias playing a homemade Native American flute. Check out his work at http://meadowlarkflutes.com/ and he has a YouTube channel (see his wonderful playing at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=m9adgdBlJZE). More on this 258th weekly Disquiet Junto project — “Sonic Climate: Express your local weather in sound” — at: http://disquiet.com/0258/ More on the Disquiet Junto at: http://disquiet.com/junto/ Subscribe to project announcements here: http://tinyletter.com/disquietjunto/ Project discussion takes place on llllllll.co: http://llllllll.co/t/disquietjunto0258sonicclimate/5632 There’s also on a Junto Slack. Send your email address to twitter.com/disquiet for Slack inclusion. Genre Disquiet0258 Comment by Mister_Niles how do you do it? You always pull of your intended, musically induced emotional states. 2019-06-06T19:07:11Z Comment by W:I:L great 2017-03-03T18:56:03Z Comment by W:I:L beautiful 2017-03-03T18:55:25Z Comment by Formant the slow build throughout is great 2016-12-13T18:40:01Z Comment by Suss Müsik @pfaender: Thank you! 2016-12-13T12:15:21Z Comment by Suss Müsik @user-242143924: Thank you! 2016-12-13T12:15:16Z Comment by Suss Müsik @user-651760074: We've all been there. Thank you! 2016-12-13T12:15:09Z Comment by Hypoid Perfect representation of these seasonal emotions, right up to the loneliness of late January after all have left...beautiful but sad 2016-12-13T04:05:08Z Comment by Pfaender Awesome piano motif - winter calm. 2016-12-11T16:22:31Z Comment by FJNA very beautiful song 2016-12-11T06:55:03Z Comment by Suss Müsik @rudzupuke: Vielen Dank 2016-12-11T00:36:49Z Comment by Suss Müsik @daniel-diaz: Humbled. Thank you! 2016-12-11T00:36:24Z Comment by Daniel Diaz This is beautiful, builds spectacularly yet quietly. My favorite track of yours. 2016-12-10T15:21:52Z