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Everyone Dies Eventually

by T.C. Crosser

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  • Streaming + Download

    Pre-order of Everyone Dies Eventually. You get 3 tracks now (streaming via the free Bandcamp app and also available as a high-quality download in MP3, FLAC and more), plus the complete album the moment it’s released.
    Purchasable with gift card
    releases February 14, 2020

      $7 USD  or more

     

  • Full Digital Discography

    Get all 3 T.C. Crosser releases available on Bandcamp and save 35%.

    Includes unlimited streaming via the free Bandcamp app, plus high-quality downloads of Everyone Dies Eventually, The Book of Arius - Act I, and 1981. , and , .

    Purchasable with gift card

      $12.35 USD or more (35% OFF)

     

1.
Mon Autre Moitié - D
2.
3.
Always The Heart Leaks
4.
Mon Autre Moitié - B
5.
Let's Have A Tea Party
6.
7.
Killing My Pathos
8.
9.
Mon Autre Moitié - C
10.
Gracefully I Exit
11.
Thanks For Everything
12.
Everyone Needs A Coat
13.
Mon Autre Moitié - A
14.
Everyone Dies Eventually

about

“Everyone Dies Eventually” is a 45 minute instrumental kaleidoscope of extremes. The album is a visceral work; narrating you as the central character throughout its many soundscapes. T.C. Crosser’s compositions (recorded by renowned string players Maria Im, Jannina Norpoth, Kallie Ciechomski, and Caleigh Drane) are routed heavily through guitar effects pedals, amps, and a large patchpay of found equipment. Taking punk-rock production into the classical music world, “Everyone Dies Eventually” is a journey that breaks conventions of time and tonality.

13 years in the making, the foundation of “Everyone Dies Eventually” came from T.C. Crosser’s first (never publicly released) instrumental work “Mon Autre Moitié” (originally scored for accordion, bells, violin, and cello). Using a decade of punk and grunge band recording techniques, T.C. Crosser was finally able to completely realize his vision with a phenomenal all female all-star team.

The album itself uses reverse looping and a plethora of analog effects to help reflect on the composer’s own journey from a drug addicted homeless vagabond up to now in his mid thirties 5 years sober. The main message behind “Everyone Dies Eventually” is simple: redemption through contemplation.

To score the album a unique technique was developed to route the notation software MIDI data (Finale) into Logic Pro X which then fed into a patch bay of 15 different pedals and amps. This allowed instant realization of what the scores would sound like through the specific effects and equipment prior to tracking the actual string quartet. Most of the process was streamed on Twitch with an emphasis on live user feedback in assisting with the technical aspects. There was even feedback and assistance from producer/DJ Deadmau5 in the beginning stages of this process.

Cellist Caleigh Drane (credits include: Imogen Heap, Ra Ra Riot, Belle and Sebastian) has been a long time contributor to T.C. Crosser’s many works (over ten years running) and was brought on early as the Music Supervisor. This allowed T.C. to push the limits of what the various effects and amps could produce while still maintaining musical coherence to make the process as enjoyable as possible for the string quartet when it came time to tracking.

To truly bring “Everyone Dies Eventually” to life T.C. Crosser enlisted studio-powerhouse Christal Jerez (credits include: Lil’ Kim, Jaafar Jackson, Jay Critch) to oversee and collaborate on engineering, mixing, and mastering. Together they employed unconventional mixing techniques stemming both from T.C.’s rock and instrumental work, Christal’s expertise in Hip Hop and R&B, as well as their mutual love of studio legend Sylvia Massy. The culmination of these talents significantly broadened the scope and they utilized four different recording studios throughout New York City to produce the final album.

Caleigh Drane contracted violinists Jannina Norpoth (credits include: Itzhak Perlman, Jay - Z, Beyoncé, John Legend), Maria Im (credits include: Sara Bareillis, Banda Magda, Daft Punk), and violist Kallie Ciechomski (credits include: New York City Ballet, Snarky Puppy, NY Philharmonic) to track the scores in the studio. Giving them free reign in a collaborative environment, T.C. and Christal took many different takes of many different styles for each song to weave together a “patchwork quilt” that is the album you now hear.

A Note From The Composer:
This two year journey was the most collaborative, ambitious, and experimental project I have embarked on to date. At its core the album is about community and from the very beginning this work was birthed with the hard work and dedication of many people from many different walks of life. While the title can be seen as “provocative” it is also meant as an optimistic statement. Everyone does die eventually; what matters is what we do to contribute to society in the time given.

credits

releases February 14, 2020

Composer / Producer: T.C. Crosser
Engineer / Mixer / Masterer: Christal Jerez

Violin I: Maria Im
Violin II: Jannina Norpoth
Viola: Kallie Ciechomski
Cello: Caleigh Drane
Piano / Percussion: T.C. Crosser

Liner Notes:
Dedicated To Aaron and Mitch
Recorded At: GSI Studios, Platinum Recording Studios, Bunker Studios, Do What Sounds Good Studios
Special Thanks To: Deadmau5, Saul Williams, Slash, EarthQuaker Devices, Ibanez, Jeorge Tripps

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about

T.C. Crosser New York, New York

After years of composing, playing piano, and producing west-coast punk and indie bands in the early 2000's, T.C. Crosser blends chamber strings and rock/pop to tell narrative stories with instrumental music.

He's scored music for commercials (such as Microsoft), television (such as Visionaries: Inside The Creative Mind), and performance art companies (such as Leslie Seiters Dance).
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