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Future Blog Improvements

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I have been looking at ways to improve this blog and make it more beneficial to others, rather than just being a vehicle for my personal inane ramblings.

I want to create something that provides value to others, provides information, fosters and engenders communication between like-minded people.

Intention is great, but at this point it is more about implementation.

What ideas do I have to increase the value of this blog.

I would like to start to create content that matters, even if only to a small number of people that are interested in the composition of music or just enjoy music in general.

I am exploring the idea of forums so that there can be free and easy communication in a more organized format that merely as comments associated with a specific post.

I am also looking at adding some tutorials and providing a free tier with expanded versions of the tutorials available in the paid tier, alongside exclusive information and freely downloadable documents only available on the paid tier.

I will also continue to post about my adventures in composition and the coursework and assignments that I have.

I am intending to do more reviews, not only of music related books that I am reading, but also of different hardware, software, and musical instruments.

Hopefully this will make this a place that people want to visit and return to. That is my dearest hope.
If anybody has any suggestions of things that they would like to see or advice on making this a hub for people to learn and share, then I would love to hear them.


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5 responses to “Future Blog Improvements”

  1. I personally think more photos of you and your guitar collection would improve this blog. 🥰

    1. Thank you. I will do they. I may need someone to take the photos though.

      1. Kids!!!!! Go help your father.

          1. Yep, i agree!

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About Me

I’m Julian — composer‑educator and the creator of PhysMuse. I share my journey through music engraving, theory, and creative study, building clear, beautiful resources for musicians and learners. This blog is where I document the process, the experiments, and the things I’m learning along the way.

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