melody creation
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- KVRian
- 738 posts since 11 Feb, 2006
Hi
I have been producing for about 5 years and i feel i need to make more of a effort to learn how to make melodies/lead lines. i have a basic understanding of scales and some chords but get frustrated sitting at the keyboard trying to make melodies maybe im trying to make them too complex...
i really like tracks like this
is there any books that anyone recommends?
i appreciate any help any one has to offer
I have been producing for about 5 years and i feel i need to make more of a effort to learn how to make melodies/lead lines. i have a basic understanding of scales and some chords but get frustrated sitting at the keyboard trying to make melodies maybe im trying to make them too complex...
i really like tracks like this
is there any books that anyone recommends?
i appreciate any help any one has to offer
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- KVRer
- 14 posts since 12 Jun, 2010 from USA
An old book, but good enough for melody writing.
http://www.archive.org/download/cu31924 ... 370559.pdf
http://www.archive.org/download/cu31924 ... 370559.pdf
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- KVRist
- 38 posts since 28 Aug, 2010
- KVRAF
- 26033 posts since 20 Oct, 2007 from gonesville
Seems to me your ambition is ahead of your understanding. If you aren't *hearing* melodies over your chords or what-not, 'making' them isn't going to bear very much fruit I don't think.evileye wrote:Hi
i have a basic understanding of scales and some chords but get frustrated sitting at the keyboard trying to make melodies maybe im trying to make them too complex...
I would recommend relaxing, and forgetting for a moment the idea you must be a 'producer' of music, and get involved with making music from the standpoint of a musician, playing songs and gaining experience with melody from that, and experimenting away from the computer... singing tunes, finding from your experience how it fits for you, over chords, over 'not-chords', a process of discovery that won't come in a vacuum.
I think you should not so much expect this kind of result from reading a book and faithfully performing the exercises, or anything that tells you 'guaranteed theoretically correct results'. Theory is a cart that won't really pull that horse for you. You might find you don't love what's 'correct' and be in favor of some things just because they sound good to you.
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- KVRer
- 16 posts since 24 Feb, 2011
That book looks informative - thanks for posting.
"I would recommend relaxing, and forgetting for a moment the idea you must be a 'producer' of music, and get involved with making music from the standpoint of a musician"
Exactly. When writing music, you cant think too much, you have to just do it.
"I would recommend relaxing, and forgetting for a moment the idea you must be a 'producer' of music, and get involved with making music from the standpoint of a musician"
Exactly. When writing music, you cant think too much, you have to just do it.