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Devine Lu Linvega

@patchlore so, for the audiobook of @rek's upcoming novel, there's a short poem in it, that is told by a group of people who has this whistled language. They're supposed to be good whistler, but neither of us are, and it'd be nice if it was a bit different than human whistling, so I thought maybe the gestling would be able to do it. What do you think?

14 comments
Devine Lu Linvega

@patchlore Could I give you a couple of notes to see how it sounds?

The poem is:

And, I met a flower
Upon a mountain so green
but forever, they slept.
And, here for ever, I wept.

<12> re, dore dodo refasol farefado
<12> mimiresi fadomido laremifa
<12> soldo solla dofa dodo remisoldo
<12> re, mila solla dore fasisol fasi.

patchlore

@neauoire lemme gimme it a shot.

It's a pretty poem. I'd love learn more about the context of the poem and the people performing it!

Devine Lu Linvega

@patchlore It's used by a people who live on the back of these large 4 legged creatures, high up in the clouds. The creatures and the residents of its back whistle to each other over long distances.

The poem is sung by one of its inhabitants who fell from the back of the Ilk and climbs a mountain and find someone sleeping there, and they wait for the person to wake.

patchlore

@neauoire here's an initial stab at it. Call it a rough cut, but it gives you the gist of it. I didn't implement proper articulation yet, so the double notes sound as one note.

Went for a Gregorian-chant-but-whistling sort of vibe. Also wanted to try to make it sound like it was coming from some distant mountains.

Devine Lu Linvega

@patchlore Oh wow, this is incredible. This is exactly what we had in mind! It's so freakin pretty. Would you like to clean it up a bit and send us a copy? Could you also soften the attack on the noise? We'll give a special thanks and credit to you in the audio book release over the winter. :)

You made @rek cry tears of joy, btw. Imagining one of the story's character whistle this poem at the top of the green hill is really nice. 🖤

R E K

@neauoire @patchlore yep yep yep, this is incredible. Thank you :>... i've no words, rly.

jakintosh

@rek @neauoire @patchlore my partner heard this playing quietly off my phone from another room and came to ask what it was, and for me to play it again for her because she liked it so much

patchlore

@neauoire @rek yay glad you both liked it :)

This weekend I'll go back and polish things up a bit.

patchlore replied to Devine Lu Linvega

@neauoire @rek another attempt. I reworked the whistle sound to try to make it less noisy while still breathy. for articulation, I decided to go with ornamentation between two notes with the same pitch. I also added vibrato that's coordinated with the phrasing, which reminded me of Gandalf's piercing Shadowfax whistle.

Devine Lu Linvega replied to patchlore

@patchlore @rek It's better now! The noise is just enough, it was a bit distracting in the first version. I think this is it!

I had one more request, but if it's too much, feel free to ignore.

So, at the end of the book, there are 3 characters who whistle a song(which I haven't translated yet), it's a bit of a funeral song, but not a sad one, when an ilk goes to its final resting place, and the character who whistles the poem you've already implemented, is joined by 2 characters.

Devine Lu Linvega replied to Devine Lu Linvega

@patchlore @rek Do you think you might be able to have 3 variance on the wistling synth, where one character is Lupin(the current one), is joined by Uno(very tall character, more bellowy maybe?) and Eka(light footed)

patchlore replied to Devine Lu Linvega

@neauoire @rek here is that whistle a little bit louder. Sorry about the quiet levels before. I'm having the hardest time trying to mix this to sound decent on my phone speakers.

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