Happy minor songs & sad major songs.

Chords, scales, harmony, melody, etc.
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Hi,

when we start learning music, we are taught that minor is sad, major is happy.

Let's do a list of counter-examples:

Happy minor song:

Sad major song:

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I've read that and heard that regarding classical music but I've never taken it to heart. Tempo, and metre have a greater impact on happy/sad then major and minor (in my opinion)

Eric Turkel has some great writing regarding expression through accents metre timbre and note placement.
http://www.amazon.com/Arranging-Techniq ... 082561130X

It's the best book I've ever read on composition and arrangement.
Dell Vostro i9 64GB Ram Windows 11 Pro, Cubase, Bitwig, Mixcraft Guitar Pod Go, Linntrument Nektar P1, Novation Launchpad

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How's this--upbeat, poppy, light, breezy, and miserable in mood:



Of course, about 1/2 of the Smiths' songs in major are sad, but what better example than a song titled "Heaven Knows I'm Miserable Now?"

Another great example is this nearly ecstatic sounding major key tune from Zimbabwe's Thomas Mapfumo:



Which sounds like heaven to me (those intertwining guitar lines just drive me mad with joy). It's about misery that accompanies alcohol abuse.

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jmeier wrote:How's this--upbeat, poppy, light, breezy, and miserable in mood:



Of course, about 1/2 of the Smiths' songs in major are sad, but what better example than a song titled "Heaven Knows I'm Miserable Now?"
What a cool melody line :-o

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halfstep wrote:
jmeier wrote:How's this--upbeat, poppy, light, breezy, and miserable in mood:



Of course, about 1/2 of the Smiths' songs in major are sad, but what better example than a song titled "Heaven Knows I'm Miserable Now?"
What a cool melody line :-o
what cool lyrics!
:love:

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Dreadlock Holiday, Gm but somehow happy:)

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Those rules are there for a purpose.

If you start trying to write happy songs with minors and sad songs with majors you will reverse the polarity of the earth and we will go spinning of into the black void.

Stop it, stop it stop it! Please, before it is too late.

Dan
Those that can, do. Those that can't, argue about it on k-v-r

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bluedad wrote:
halfstep wrote:
jmeier wrote:How's this--upbeat, poppy, light, breezy, and miserable in mood:



Of course, about 1/2 of the Smiths' songs in major are sad, but what better example than a song titled "Heaven Knows I'm Miserable Now?"
What a cool melody line :-o
what cool lyrics!
:love:
I still remember listening to Morrissey and the Smiths alone in my room when I was a depressed and miserable teenager, and I realized that I was not alone in the world. Morrissey's poetry and Johnny Marr's music :hail: :hail: is the perfect combination of happiness and sadness at the same time. [/quote]

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This is the problem facing me now. I'm remixing a trance song for this singer. It's great, she's great, but it's called 'I Know I'm Losing You'(not happy), and she's sung it in D major!!!!
Could I get away with a minor equivalent, or does it work that way??

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osiris wrote:This is the problem facing me now. I'm remixing a trance song for this singer. It's great, she's great, but it's called 'I Know I'm Losing You'(not happy), and she's sung it in D major!!!!
Could I get away with a minor equivalent, or does it work that way??
Take a look at this: http://howmusicreallyworks.com/Pages_Ch ... ter_6.html
This really helped me to construct harmonic progressions that make sense :-) and there is some discussion on that topic.

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@ dgkenney That's HILARIOUS 8)
Last edited by bpgeez on Sun Apr 03, 2011 8:27 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Much LOVE

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osiris wrote:This is the problem facing me now. I'm remixing a trance song for this singer. It's great, she's great, but it's called 'I Know I'm Losing You'(not happy), and she's sung it in D major!!!!
Could I get away with a minor equivalent, or does it work that way??
Well in the words of Einstein, "Everything's relative" (Relative minor that is :hihi: ) D major = Bm
Much LOVE

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i find it's more useful to think of minor as "soft" and major as "hard," which is what i've been told are the literal translations of "aoelian" and "ionian." though google translate doesn't seem to think so.

so i'd put in danny elfman's Corpse Bride score in for a bittersweet, sometimes downright cheerful minor piece.

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this "duck" or "boney m" song is Major, not minor - chords are pure major - and why do you think that "Gymnopédie" piece is sad? I think it's very tender.

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I guess I discovered that myself (D major - B minor) because that's exactly what I've got going now. Thanks for the help!

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