I listened many times to my pieces and finally figured out which one was the worst part (
What should I do? Is there any trick am I missing?
deastman wrote:I find my best writing comes from improvisation. Start your sequencer recording, and just jam along with the song for a while. Keep only the best bits, and either use it as-is, or learn to play the part you came up with and then perform it again.
i need to try that! Good idea, thanks.deastman wrote:I find my best writing comes from improvisation. Start your sequencer recording, and just jam along with the song for a while. Keep only the best bits, and either use it as-is, or learn to play the part you came up with and then perform it again.
nuffink wrote:A bit more explaination from a clever old git called Hal Galper...
There is a tacit conditioning that occurs to most music readers from an early age who eventually perceive music as moving in "chunks" of bars as opposed a continuous flow of music. They play the bar-lines as if they existed as actual musical notation rather than just scratches on a piece of paper who's only function is to count the passage of meter by. The end result of all this is the realization that we have, from our earliest musical instruction, been conditioned to perceive music backwards from the way it is really played!
We see "one" of the bar before we see any other beat or note in a bar because that's the note we count from.
We have also named it the first beat of the bar. From years of perceiving music this way, we have become conditioned into thinking of "one" as the first beat of the bar.
It would then seem logical that melodic ideas begin at the beginning, on the first beat of the bar, or "one."
However, Tension and Release Theory states that "one" of the bar is the strongest beat of the bar and as such, is the ultimate resolution beat in the bar. As "resolution" means that something has ended, then "one" of the bar is not the first beat of the bar, it is the last beat of the bar. It is the beat at which melodic ideas end!
Excellent!nuffink wrote:"Everything is a pickup" - Miles Davis
Never truer than in a bass line. You're usually expected to hit the one with a bass note. With a lot of week bass lines that's where it all starts going to shit. Treat the one as the culmination of the line, not the start.
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