Author: Zach Sprowls

  • The World Was Flat. Now It’s Flattened by Ted Gioia

    The World Was Flat. Now It’s Flattened by Ted Gioia

    Ted Gioia’s “State of the Culture”

    The World Was Flat. Now It’s Flattened by Ted Gioia

    The state of the culture, 2025

    Read on Substack
  • Rejecting the race to the bottom by Network Notes

    Rejecting the race to the bottom by Network Notes

    On quitting Spotify

    đŸ”” Rejecting the race to the bottom by Darren Hemmings

    Quitting Spotify and engaging with a more emotionally affecting approach to listening to music

    Read on Substack
  • Vangelis and the Journey to Ithaka (2013)

    Vangelis and the Journey to Ithaka (2013)

    A documentary on Vangelis (composer for Chariots of Fire and Bladerunner). What a great man. I’ve found myself deeply moved and inspired by him. Free to watch on YouTube:

  • Behind the Scenes: Little Shop of Horrors Studio Log | Ep 103 | Mar 7, 2025

    Behind the Scenes: Little Shop of Horrors

    Studio Log | Ep 103 | Mar 7, 2025

    I played Keys 2 for a run of Little Shop of Horrors here in Scranton the last couple weekends. Threw a camera up for the last show and put together a quick little edit of it.

    I was using my Nord keyboard as a MIDI controller into Mainstage on my computer that had all the sounds. You’ll see my right foot pressing a pedal to advance to the next sound and my left foot (obscured) is operating a volume pedal.

    It was fun getting to play music with a couple local legends I hadn’t gotten to play with yet. Esther, the music director, was excellent.

  • INSCAPE by Alexandra StrĂ©liski

    INSCAPE by Alexandra Stréliski

    I referenced her influence on my writing of the song, Growing Up. Here’s one of my favorite albums of hers. (Her newest album, NĂ©o-Romance, is also excellent.) I think you’ll immediately notice her influence on my writing.

  • Vestiges & Claws by JĂłse GonzĂĄlez

    Vestiges & Claws by JĂłse GonzĂĄlez

    Alt-folk, singer/songwriter album from 2015. I loved this album when it came out and have been listening to it quite a bit again recently.

  • Looking for Some Nice Quality Accidents How my new synthesizer is helping find new ways of working.

    Looking for Some Nice Quality Accidents

    How my new synthesizer is helping find new ways of working.

    It was my birthday last weekend. After years of drooling over Moog synthesizers, I finally treated myself to one. Nothing beats a Moog’s deep, ever-present bass and lush, evocative pads. As a modern composer who writes for film, loves electronic music, and tries to blend the old and the new, having a Moog is a rite of passage. After years now of trying to mimic Moog sounds (unsuccessfully) on software synths, I’ve finally joined the family.

    This model, the Matriarch, is 100% analog and semi-modular which, besides meaning nothing to most non-nerdy people, is the reason I got it. It’s old school. It doesn’t have modern features, like being able to store sounds. What you see and what you create with your fingertips is what you get. The semi-modular part simply means that I can re-route the circuitry in a literally endless number of ways, creating sounds and evolutions that are totally unique and will be totally lost forever as soon as I turn a knob (if I don’t record it first).

    While this limitation might seem like a liability, I find it to be a feature.

    I’m making a lot of changes this year, all in a direction from the virtual toward the corporeal: from social media to hanging out face to face, from streaming music to attending live shows, from my phone’s screen to physical books, from Netflix’s shitty programming to actual DVDs that I foraged at secondhand stores, and, in my music, from the safety and controllability of software and MIDI programming to organic and unpredictable hardware.

    It’s a learning curve for me. I was taught to play what was written and to compose with notation. Everything controlled, precise, repeatable, and practiced to the point of no mistakes. I’ve had to learn on my own (sometimes the hard way) how to rely on my intuitions.

    And that’s what I want to get better at: relying on my intuitions. I think Rick Rubin addresses this topic brilliantly in his book The Creative Act. He calls it “experimental faith” and “innate instinct rather than learned behavior.” I’m currently reading Alan Watts’ The Way of Zen. He’d call it the “peripheral vision of the mind.”

    He also said in the same chapter: “superior work has the quality of an accident.” And that’s what I’m hoping for with this new, tactile instrument – some nice quality accidents.

  • New Composition: Growing Up Studio Log | Ep 102 | Feb 27, 2025

    New Composition: Growing Up

    Studio Log | Ep 102 | Feb 27, 2025

    Last fall, I was approached by a label based in Barcelona, Spain, called AD21 Music to write and record a song for Piano Day that would be included on a compilation album of theirs.

    (For the unaware, Piano Day is an international celebration of the piano held on the 88th day of the year [for the 88 keys on a piano]. This year it falls on March 29.)

    I’m not a big label guy (as I mentioned in my last post), but for several reasons – reputable label with a long history, other composers already signed on that I’ve long wanted to connect with, excellent contract terms, and just plain desire – I decided to do it.

    The album doesn’t drop until March 29, but I can share my song with you here. It’s called Growing Up. It’s a tuneful little waltz. My sister said it reminded her of the Married Life theme from the movie Up. I guess it is in a similar vein – nostalgic, charming, dramatic. I hope you enjoy it!

    And here’s a little background on the song:

  • The Music Business is Healthy Again? Really? by Ted Gioia

    The Music Business is Healthy Again? Really? by Ted Gioia

    The music industry right now. It’s not good.

    The Music Business is Healthy Again? Really? by Ted Gioia

    I express deep skepticism

    Read on Substack
  • How work took over our lives by Jared Henderson

    How work took over our lives by Jared Henderson

    This isn’t the first time I’ve come across someone making the connection between Protestant theology and our society’s perverted view of work. The first time was several years ago when I first read Oliver Burkeman’s book Four Thousand Weeks. I thought my experience was unique, but it seems not.