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Hit track "Gregorian House #14" from the smash album "Gregorian Haus", coming to you live from the world of Neo Yokio. (Feat. "Indian Spirit" by Klartraum) This is a fan-made mash-up where I decided to spin off the idea of "Gregorian house" that was briefly mentioned in Neo Yokio. What would it sound like as a genre? Well, maybe this. And now, some liner notes. After the aural density of the previous track, I was craving something more spacious, and somehow darker in tone, where the chant could really shine... I also wanted to muck around with some more Hildegard of Bingen. I'd only made one track so far that featured her compositions exclusively, and I wanted to hear another one. The special challenge here, for myself, was to see if I could staple together a chant component that felt really well paced, instead of somewhat randomized, as it occasionally is. (And as an extra difficulty level, I told myself that I couldn't trim the base track, and had to use it in full. All nine minutes of it.) The most obvious example of me working out the pacing in this mix is that I used two different pieces of Hildegard: the intro chant is a different piece than most of the rest of the chant, and in a different mode/key. (It has a recall later in the track, though, for some nice symmetry.) Since there are two modes/keys present in the chant component, it kind of refreshes the ear and keeps it interested when the modes change, and it also means the intro is interesting in a different way than most of the rest of the track -- so when the rest of the track starts, it's not just more of the same intro, but something new. Anyhow, I like this overall chant/track combo a lot. I think the dark coolness of "Indian Spirit" works so well to offset the lightness of the Hildegard. I also like how the occasional jazzy harmonies coming from "Indian Spirit" combine with the chant. This one's a definite success, and makes for a good relisten. (For full backstory behind what's up with these tracks and also why I added in liner notes, see my comments on Gregorian House #1.)