Breezy chords. need some inspiration!

Chords, scales, harmony, melody, etc.
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I was in need of some inspiration and was just idly browsing my sample lists when I landed on some chord samples (the breezy sort used in dnb songs).

So fired up my little midi keyboard and tried to doodle some replicates, but can't honestly say I found anything dreamy, windy (umm have I said breezy yet?)

After some googling I just found some Am, G, F, Em progressions, nothing spectacular really.. :)

Got any ideas? What would you use?

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larm wrote:I was in need of some inspiration and was just idly browsing my sample lists when I landed on some chord samples (the breezy sort used in dnb songs).

So fired up my little midi keyboard and tried to doodle some replicates, but can't honestly say I found anything dreamy, windy (umm have I said breezy yet?)

After some googling I just found some Am, G, F, Em progressions, nothing spectacular really.. :)

Got any ideas? What would you use?
What do you mean by 'breezy'?

Maybe the effect is more to do with the position of notes within the chord rather than the chord itself? (For example, are the notes close together, or far apart?)

My post on Scales, Modes and Chords might contain some examples you can experiment with.
Unfamiliar words can be looked up in my Glossary of musical terms.
Also check out my Introduction to Music Theory.

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Hmm, I thought breezy was a good term but apparently not.. :)

OK, trying to hunt down some samples .. brb

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aha!

using some FFT I could find theese notes:

f a c e = should be F + note e, which is... umm Fmaj7

another one was Cm7

so.. breezy in my world would be to add 7 to end of chords :oops:

Now, I guess I need to search for progressions with 7:s in them :)

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Perfect fourths, man. Perfect fourths. Play the root note of the chord on top, play a perfect fourth down from that, and then another perfect forth down from that. Move it around the scale of the key in question until you get a progress you like. Gotta love it.
GLHF! (Gandalf Lives, Hobbits Forever!)

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interesting, seems sneeky :)

so if I play

c e g b .. which would be chord with root G and perfect four B right?

next would be .. thinking .. crunching

a# c d# g

correct??

:hyper:

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When I hear the term "breezy," I think of Virtual Insanity by Jamiroquai.

Is that breezy?

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hmm.. yeah that probably is the correct usage of the term.. And forget my G chord rambling up above :bang: :idiot: .. I'm so bad at chords! (and I'm too tired waiting for the xt2 release.. need-bed-sleep-now :D)

I'll study that four thing tomorrow .. seems very interesting!

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larm wrote:so if I play

c e g b .. which would be chord with root G and perfect four B right?
No, a perfect 4th is four notes (counting both starting and final) but five semitones. (See my Introduction to Music Theory.

So, a perfect 4th above G would be C. A perfect 4th below G would be D.
Unfamiliar words can be looked up in my Glossary of musical terms.
Also check out my Introduction to Music Theory.

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I think sixth, major 7, or 6/9 chords might be considered "breezy."

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Try added nines. They're pretty breezy. The Am add nine is A E B C. The Gadd9 would be G D A B, The Fadd9 is F C G A. The Emadd9 is E B F# G.

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larm wrote:aha!

using some FFT I could find theese notes:

f a c e = should be F + note e, which is... umm Fmaj7

another one was Cm7

so.. breezy in my world would be to add 7 to end of chords :oops:

Now, I guess I need to search for progressions with 7:s in them :)
You use FFT analysis to find the notes of a chord?
That blows my mind!

D

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Also try really open voicings.

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when you said "breezy" the first thing that came to mind was major 7ths. I've always found that major 7 chords add some sort of wistful, almost beach-like feeling to a song. Very warm, content sounding chords. Listen to Broken Social Scene - "Looks Just Like the Sun" or any M83 to see what I'm talking about.

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Any combi of 6, 9 and maj7 may be considered windy, as in new wave from the eighties. Or restrict polyphony to only the white keys on your keyboard ;)

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