Here you are.
- Morning Pie
Here’s a song I made a few days ago; it’s less inscrutable than it could be, and more playful. Someone should add drums to it.
- Good Night Baby Beasts
The band Baby Beasts is effectively deceased, and promises to be reborn in other forms.
- Elements of Several Things
Thrown together, something interesting happens.
- September Songs
Song 1: A song with wind on wires.
Song 2: An acoustic song, with improvised lyrics (did the vocals in one take). It turned out interestingly enough. Here’s what came out, as far as I can tell:
I’m so happy today I got my nurse a raise,
She was walking past me when I of a sleepless gaze:
Songs is so bizarre and I am not alone, you are not my song song.
Give me some, give me leave me alone.
I should get a haircut, maybe you will come?
Something touch me it’s been so very long,
And I can’t remember singing you this song.
I am happy without you,
but now that I’ve met you I can’t either be happy too.
You are my giraffe you have a sore throat on your back;
Your neck is long, your feet are tired, you haven’t got a loan.
You had a loan. I have a loan.
Lemme lend you money, let me make you biscuits and gravy.Song 3: Also improvised lyrics, less interesting though.
- Sketches for Songs
My songwriting process may need refining. I’ve belched out a couple long and unfocused something somethings recently (playing with my new Ableton Live software), frowned and grown sick of them before I could shake some sense out of them. For what it’s worth, here they are. Maybe I’ll come back here some day and mine them for something.
Sketch 1 (>6 minutes): Broken into a few distinct vocal sections. The first mumbles. The second, I seem to be pulling some kind of David Byrne thing, which decays utterly into gibberish.Sketch 2 (<11 minutes): Some nice melodic chunks here and there, some good fuzz. Few and far between.
- Songs

songs by Nathan Rosquist.
- Papyrate
Songs by Kevin Haworth and Nathan Rosquist, aka Papyrate, aka Yeti Chomp.
- Formlessness
by Nathan Rosquist
- Fragments
Songs to be, songlets, and fully formed half-ideas, by Nathan Rosquist.

- Songs ‘05

by Nathan Rosquist

