Is chord progression necessary?

Chords, scales, harmony, melody, etc.
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Hey guys,
hope you can help me:

I looked up some house music remakes on YouTube, for example Sebastian Ingrosso-Reload. I realized that in a lot of them there is only one melody line, so really no chord progression but I am not sure if this is what the 'big' producers also do.

So question is: Is chord progression necessary?

If yes, how to put chords under the melody so that you don't have something like a new melody or chord progresion which 'destroys' the actual melody?

If no, how to make the melody as a big sound. Only layering in differnt octaves or are there more tricks how to handle it?

I really hope, you can help me. :wink:

Thank you
Julian

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Juljan wrote:Hey guys,
hope you can help me:

I looked up some house music remakes on YouTube, for example Sebastian Ingrosso-Reload. I realized that in a lot of them there is only one melody line, so really no chord progression but I am not sure if this is what the 'big' producers also do.

So question is: Is chord progression necessary?

If yes, how to put chords under the melody so that you don't have something like a new melody or chord progresion which 'destroys' the actual melody?

If no, how to make the melody as a big sound. Only layering in differnt octaves or are there more tricks how to handle it?

I really hope, you can help me. :wink:

Thank you
Julian
seems to me that if you have more than one chord you're going to have a chord progression...it also sounds to me like you're talking about counterpoint and I found this to be a fairly good read on the subject of counterpoint :)
The highest form of knowledge is empathy, for it requires us to suspend our egos and live in another's world. It requires profound, purpose‐larger‐than‐the‐self kind of understanding.

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What is neccecary and what isn't depends on what you're trying to achieve. As you're talking about house music, no, a chord progression isn't neccecary. House is about groove and feeling, so you could have a track based on one chord, or rocking back and fourth between two chords (commonly something like A minor and G major).

Putting chords or harmonizing motifs under a melody and having it fit in with the bassline requires either a feel for music and a reasonable ear, or an understanding of basic music theory, or ideally both. Stacking octaves is fine but if done a lot it will sound redundant, because of the equivalence of octaves.

Getting a "big" sound is about the entire mix. Practice and the ability to evolve a sense of taste and sensibility are important. Learn how mixing tools like compressors work in isolation, then begin combining them. Find tutorials. Listen to lots of music, and listen to what's going on both in the mix and in the music.

These questions are massive in scope, so good luck. There are some great tutorials out there but remember that information and knowledge aren't neccecarily the same thing. So get experience with sound. Become intimate with it. Have a relationship with it. I can't stress that enough.
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But the short answer is no. A piece of music can have no chord changes if that works for you.

Why do you worry about what the "big producers" do? Don't you want to create your own music?

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+1, +1
The highest form of knowledge is empathy, for it requires us to suspend our egos and live in another's world. It requires profound, purpose‐larger‐than‐the‐self kind of understanding.

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Sendy wrote:What is neccecary and what isn't depends on what you're trying to achieve. As you're talking about house music, no, a chord progression isn't neccecary. House is about groove and feeling, so you could have a track based on one chord, or rocking back and fourth between two chords (commonly something like A minor and G major).
What do you understand under "house music"? Martin Garrix animals? :o

I listen to a lot of house music, and they all have chord progressions, at least for the bass lines...

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Sendy wrote: or rocking back and fourth between two chords (commonly something like A minor and G major).
There are so many variations on this that you could create hundreds of house tracks and never play anything else. One thing that I would suggest (for the OP), however, is to post an example of what you think is a house track. This isn't just about snobbery, although, I fully admit to being of the opinion that most shit called house isn't, rather, it relates to the wide variance in music form that gets lumped under the moniker house.

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ghettosynth wrote:
Sendy wrote: or rocking back and fourth between two chords (commonly something like A minor and G major).
There are so many variations on this that you could create hundreds of house tracks and never play anything else. One thing that I would suggest (for the OP), however, is to post an example of what you think is a house track. This isn't just about snobbery, although, I fully admit to being of the opinion that most shit called house isn't, rather, it relates to the wide variance in music form that gets lumped under the moniker house.

My house ... s'out of the ordinary ...
Image

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Tricky-Loops wrote:
Sendy wrote:What is neccecary and what isn't depends on what you're trying to achieve. As you're talking about house music, no, a chord progression isn't neccecary. House is about groove and feeling, so you could have a track based on one chord, or rocking back and fourth between two chords (commonly something like A minor and G major).
What do you understand under "house music"? Martin Garrix animals? :o

I listen to a lot of house music, and they all have chord progressions, at least for the bass lines...
It really depends on what you're willing to call a chord progression. A progression leads onto something else. For me, two or three chords in a loop isn't a progression, it's a loop, a groove, a sequence... And that's not a bad thing. I'd rather hear a soulful track on one to three chords than something with lots of different chords that sounds shitty. The notion that one can go "upmarket" by adding more chords to your house is a bit snobby. Sometimes it works, sometimes it doesn't.

Where it really gets interesting is when instead of going all out with lots of chords, you keep the tonality ambiguous, so there's not much actual music material in there, but it fits together in interesting ways that don't go for the obvious "look here are chords this is real music" gambit :)

Look at the stuff by Frankie Knuckles, it's not trying to be epic with big cinematic chords and wotnot, it's just pure understated groove, a pool for you to dip your body into or not, as you choose.

If I was more of a house music connoisseur I could probably give you more interesting and less generic examples, but I'm not :) But the same principles apply for other dance music like drum and bass.

I'm really sick of this trend in EDM for "epic cinematic" chords, in fact the trend of trying to be EPEEHHHHHHHCK! by walloping the listener over the head with desperately "impressive" stuff has really gotten old to me. My taste in dance music veers more to the oldschool.
http://sendy.bandcamp.com/releases < My new album at Bandcamp! Now pay what you like!

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Sendy wrote:
Tricky-Loops wrote:
Sendy wrote:What is neccecary and what isn't depends on what you're trying to achieve. As you're talking about house music, no, a chord progression isn't neccecary. House is about groove and feeling, so you could have a track based on one chord, or rocking back and fourth between two chords (commonly something like A minor and G major).
What do you understand under "house music"? Martin Garrix animals? :o

I listen to a lot of house music, and they all have chord progressions, at least for the bass lines...
It really depends on what you're willing to call a chord progression. A progression leads onto something else. For me, two or three chords in a loop isn't a progression, it's a loop, a groove, a sequence... And that's not a bad thing. I'd rather hear a soulful track on one to three chords than something with lots of different chords that sounds shitty. The notion that one can go "upmarket" by adding more chords to your house is a bit snobby. Sometimes it works, sometimes it doesn't.

Where it really gets interesting is when instead of going all out with lots of chords, you keep the tonality ambiguous, so there's not much actual music material in there, but it fits together in interesting ways that don't go for the obvious "look here are chords this is real music" gambit :)

Look at the stuff by Frankie Knuckles, it's not trying to be epic with big cinematic chords and wotnot, it's just pure understated groove, a pool for you to dip your body into or not, as you choose.

If I was more of a house music connoisseur I could probably give you more interesting and less generic examples, but I'm not :) But the same principles apply for other dance music like drum and bass.

I'm really sick of this trend in EDM for "epic cinematic" chords, in fact the trend of trying to be EPEEHHHHHHHCK! by walloping the listener over the head with desperately "impressive" stuff has really gotten old to me. My taste in dance music veers more to the oldschool.
Most so called "chord progressions" consist of 4 (or more) chords. I've never seen any chord progression with 2 chords only...

But you're right in the impression that most EDM music is so filled with chords, octave-doubling and the most epic layering that it rather sounds like a lawn mower. It's like a competition: Who's the phattest of 'em all? Many producers forget that music needs to breathe, too :!:

(That's why I liked "The Magic Key" by Cool-T, because of this lo-fi chiptune lead! :love:)

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Yes, it's not black and white. There's a lot of grey area between a simple two-chord motion and something that registers as a progression. Four chords would be where I would draw the line as well, though sometimes three. It depends if there's a sense of motion, which in turn depends how different these chords are from eachother.

Generally, I feel it isn't really a "progression" if you can vamp over it all in the tonic key. When you look at a lot of chord loops many chords are simple alterations and substitutions of the ones before them. Am and C for example. That's just a pet theory, though. I feel that a lack of melodic/harmonic motion may actually cause the rhythmic motion to become more pronounced, which is how you get that hypnogogic trance type feeling.
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A "Chord Progression" is when one chord goes to another chord. If you are composing diatonic music, regardless of genre, and use notes outside of a single chromatic scale, you are using a chord progression. It may be 2 chords going back and forth, it may be 4 chords. If it goes from one discernible chord to another, it's a progression.

Minimalists using micro-tonality and one or two tones manipulated over the course of 40 minutes don't use chord progressions. They also have a VERY niche audience.

Just because you are playing the "chord" doesn't mean it isn't part of a progression - especially if there's a conventional melody involved

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Sendy wrote:I feel that a lack of melodic/harmonic motion may actually cause the rhythmic motion to become more pronounced, which is how you get that hypnogogic trance type feeling.
Isn't it rather because of the fast tempo? Imagine you'd slow down a trance tune to 80 BPM - it wouldn't have that hypnotic effect anymore, and for a chill-out track it might be too repetitive...

EDIT: Now that we have "slow food", maybe there will be "slow trance", too? :hihi:

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You can make music with nothing but drums, so it's definitively possible to make music without chords...

That being said, chords is really the strong point of western music. It's where European music stands out compared to other traditions such as Arabic music or Indian music (which is traditionally just a melody line over a drone). Western melodies are simple and cheesy in comparison, but it makes up for it in harmony, including all sorts of voice leading, multiple overlapping melodic/harmonic lines, funky bass lines, etc.

Doing western music without chords is kinda like doing French cooking without dairy products... It's totally possible, but you're skipping over all the best stuff it has to offer, and concentrating on the weak points.

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Tricky-Loops wrote:
EDIT: Now that we have "slow food", maybe there will be "slow trance", too? :hihi:
Yeah, it's called ambient? :hihi:
http://sendy.bandcamp.com/releases < My new album at Bandcamp! Now pay what you like!

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