Music
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Though Mitch Gallagher is perhaps best known as a music technology writer and recording engineer/producer, he is equally skilled as a musician and composer. He began singing in a choir and playing trombone at age 10. He picked up the guitar at 15, and immediately formed his first band. Countless gigs around the upper Midwest as a lead guitarist and vocalist followed. He graduated from Moorhead State University with a Bachelor of Arts degree in music, and pursued Master’s studies in music composition and classical guitar at the University of Missouri, Kansas City. The eclectic music he has written ranges from rock to classical, fusion to “academic” electronic music, film score to solo guitar, and ethnic to new age. | _“Did you really win a Grammy?”
_Yes,
in 1991 Mitch won a NARAS (Grammy) award in the best New Music/New
Classical category. The award was for an instrumental piece composed
while he was at the University of Missouri, Kansas City.
Mitch had been playing around with the Fibonacci number series
(yes, playing with mathematical sequences for entertainment is the
text-book definition of “geek”), and discovered that when he applied the
series as a means to order the 12 musical pitches, the resulting tone
row repeated every 24 iterations. This 24-note row supplied the raw
materials upon which the music was based. The piece, entitled Prophecy #1: First Glance,
was scored for synthesizers (recorded to tape for the live
performances) and percussion ensemble (two marimbas, piano, tympani,
bass drum, snare drums, various percussion). The UMKC Percussion
Ensemble debuted the piece at a new music concert, and a recording of
the performance was submitted to NARAS and eventually won the award.
Mitch subsequently composed two companion pieces (Prophecy #2: Second Sight, and Prophecy #3: Third Eye)
based on the Fibonacci-generated musical materials, and using processed
samples and synths. Many of the raw samples for these pieces came from
striking pipes and metal and plastic objects in his father’s plumbing
shop.
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