CitricAcid wrote:The mood certainly befits Spike. I can picture Spike waltzing in his sleep with an invisible partner to it. My main gripe is that the piece doesn't seem to go anywhere. Shouldn't it get more exciting when Spike sees himself as a big dragon? Or sad when he has to leave? What about his awkward teenage years?
Nonetheless, it made me think of this piece:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QB3qchkzxHI
That is whole point when I said minimalism. It doesn't need to go anywhere, Erik Satie wrote some songs which is just a repetition over and over and over and over

. Same thing like Debussy. Debussy created a few songs which seem to be fine at the start but then at the later stage, the mood is completely diferent than when it started, nothing like the beginning.
I pictured this piece to be more of a departure of spike as an young adult, so that explains the major 7th chords and 6th Chords. When the piece ends on its structural sudden, in this case the final fade out, which means Spike has left completely in the horizon and he finally went deep asleep. I wanted to capture the mood part of the feelings that human as with instrumentation.
Here is another thing, the timbre does seem to fit the atmosphere like you said but since this is minimalism and expressionism... It doesn't need to be like Classical or Romantic, which you start and then finalize it. No! Quite the opposite with the modern ages. I have heard, Erik Satie's Gnossiene Nº 1, 2 , 4 and 6. Their uni-directional way seems quite airy! His songs are like hair. They may go to one place, but that place is the place we haven't thought, the same progression over and over!
You might think and say? Where is your argument or where you want to go with this... All that I can say, is to search deep in your feelings and emotions.
Cheers,
Docinterlude