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Pica Music
Berlin
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Cinematic Classical
Cinematic classical is a contemporary stream of concert and media-oriented composition that merges classical orchestration with the pacing, narrative arcs, and textural sound design of film music. Typically centered on piano and strings, it favors slow-moving harmonies, ostinatos, spacious reverb, and emotive, diatonic melodies that build in dynamic intensity. Many works adopt a minimalist or post-minimalist vocabulary—repetition, gradual change, and clear tonal centers—while incorporating modern production techniques (felt piano, tape saturation, synth pads, subtle pulses) to achieve a widescreen, evocative sound. The style thrives both in standalone albums and in sync contexts (film, TV, trailers), where self-contained “cues” develop clear arcs—intro, build, climax, release—designed to support visual storytelling without sacrificing musical integrity.
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Neo-Medieval Folk
Neo-medieval folk is a modern revivalist style that reimagines the sounds of medieval and early Renaissance Europe through contemporary folk aesthetics. It favors acoustic, historically inspired instruments (hurdy-gurdy, bagpipes, lute, harp, nyckelharpa, recorders, shawms, frame drums) and modal melodies, often sung in historical or reconstructed languages. While rooted in academic early-music practice, the genre is more atmospheric and narrative-driven than strictly scholarly. Artists blend courtly songs, dance forms (such as estampie and saltarello), drone-based textures, and ballad traditions with modern songwriting and subtle production. Depending on the act, it may lean toward dark wave and gothic timbres or toward pastoral, festival-ready folk.
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Melodding was created as a tribute to
Every Noise at Once
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