Big Chords

Chords, scales, harmony, melody, etc.
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Hey, I'm getting to the point in music production now where I have practised as many technique's as i can and i want to start getting my own tunes done. One thing that is puzzling me at the moment is when you have big lead chords, say for example :

(44 seconds)

is this normally a lead line then layered by chords, e.g a lead written then just duplicated a 3rd/7th etc. Or is it common to be mixing your chords up completely, i.e lowering say your mid notes and highering your higher notes etc.

Also i have recently finished reading 'The dance music manual' Book and there is a section on music theory that i have in front of me and the guy is saying it is uncommon for chords to have 4 notes in them.. When i am writing my chords/ leads (like the example above) - I tend to use at least 4/5 notes per hit. Is this why i am not getting very far with my leads or is that lack of creativity at the moment?

I also hate the way i find myself sometimes just copy and pasting say my first 4 notes, then dropping them by a 3rd/5th etc. - sounds so typical.

I know 'if it sounds good it is good' - But at the moment it doesn't so i could do with a little knowledge if i am doing things 'wrong' or if there is a best practise to try -

Thanks :)

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I'm just an amateur ... but this link on orchestration might help regarding the effects of voicings on a chord.

http://www.wisemanproject.com/education ... oSato.html

I also wonder in the dance manual they meant notes in the sense of the 7 notes of the typical scale ... not whether there were two of the same notes in different octaves.

I think the above link is helpful because remember, whether it is the same instrument playing a chord, or several instruments/ voices playing notes at the same time, at the moment of the sound it is harmony.

One reason why you may not be getting the sounds you want ... could be because you aren't following the 'rules' of voice leading when you change from one chord to another. There are things we are used to hearing that 'sound right,' and if certain 'rules' are not followed the progression can lose it's impact.

Also, try different inversions of your chord with the notes spread over greater distances octave wise and see how it sounds.

There is also a little rule about not using more than one note that is a third in the chord. So in C Major, for example, you might make a chord with G1/ C2/ C4/ and G5 ... but only one instance of a E'something' in the chord.

Como
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If you are using a thick tone like these massive unison leads, then it is hard to use dense textures with 7ths or extended chords. What I hear in a lot of this music is a nice lead riff, probably doubled in a lower octave or by the bass, and the middle lines are fleshed out with basic chords. You can start out using just I, IV, and V chords to fill in the harmony, and in many cases that is all that is being done.

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Big chords do not equate to big delicious sounds.

Big chords can be muddy (that evil term) if the notes are too close, as within the basic octave. The human brain likes notes a third and perfect fifth apart in a chord such that they can be tasted...

That is prob why they say the chords are usually 3 notes, like is often the case in rhythm guitar enabling speedier shift between chords and less mud. By using the tonic, third and dominant, all the color is there, albeit in its simplest. Two notes is an interval, a triad is a chord. If the bass is playing the root, you might get away without the tonic enabling a pseudo-big chord adding the 9... now I'm lost in my own rambling error prone prose :-o

Now I am not a theoritician....

If the notes are far apart as with 13th and 9th noted chords etc.., there may be less mud.

muddy waters thinks so too


al
Heinrich Heine wrote: "Nothing is more futile than theorizing about music."
Me write: "I have no talent and regularly prove it in the Music Cafe contests"

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As mentioned earlier, big chords don't always make bigger and better sounds.
In this kind of electronic music, it wouldn't be common to hear much more then major/minor triads and fifths (power chords...). Perhaps a sus2/4 or a 7th chord placed tastefully, but like I said, not common.
When programming, be careful to keep your bass notes on roots especially, then fifths if you'd like, adding thirds, sevenths or anything else creates mud like peppy mentioned.
In your example, I'd say bass note fifths, and major/minor triads (corresponding to the songs key) would be a safe assumption or a good start at least in the video you've posted.
Hope this helps

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Blah blah blah, Much of using big chords is performing on the correct instrument. The more I listen to Gospell/funk/fusion/smooth jazz the more I hear big complex chords sounding great. Same goes with Modern Jazz and Bebop.
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Thanks so much for the replies :)

After sitting with my music book for a while now playing around with different sounds/chords i think it is just as much as the actual sounds you are using aswell as the chords..

I was watching an interview with deadmau5 and he was saying 'i hate it when you can tell what chord is going to come next' - i think i was trying too hard to create ones that i havent seen before (trying to get creative without the knowledge) and it was getting messy.

Thanks :)

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they layer different instruments. Typically in this 'swedish' style of house it's the korg M1 sample i think most use. they then layer it with a bassline synth, a synth playing the same chords and a topline. The chords are normally of a major scale and 2 - 3 notes rich. the power doesnt come from massive chords but the layering of the chords with the added topline and bassline which makes it seem like there is 4-5 notes per chord. Pretty simple to produce as far as production goes.

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Check out northern sounds. They have a free orchestration tutorial online. (sorry I don't have the link right here)

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Hey, torry011, is this the link? An online forum titled "Principles of Orchestration." Looks interesting...
http://www.northernsounds.com/forum/for ... on-On-line
Northern Sounds wrote:
  • Lesson 01 - GENERAL REVIEW - Strings & Woodwinds
  • Lesson 02 - GENERAL REVIEW - Brass, Percussion & Other Instruments
  • Lesson 03 - MELODY - Strings - Melody in Stringed Instruments
  • Lesson 04 - MELODY - Strings - Grouping in Unison
  • Lesson 05 - MELODY - Strings - Doubling, Thirds & Sixths
  • Lesson 06 - MELODY - Wood-wind - Melody in Wood-wind
  • Lesson 07 - MELODY - Wood-wind - Unison & Octaves
  • Lesson 08 - MELODY - Brass - Melody, Unisons & Octaves
  • Lesson 09 - MELODY - Different Groups of Instruments Combined
  • Lesson 10 - MELODY - Different Groups of Instruments (Cont.)
  • Lesson 11 - HARMONY - General Observations
  • Lesson 12 - HARMONY - String Harmony
  • Lesson 13 - HARMONY - Wood-wind Harmony
  • Lesson 15 - HARMONY - Brass Harmony
  • Lesson 16 - HARMONY - Combined Groups - Wind & Brass
  • Lesson 17 - HARMONY - Combined Groups - Wind & Brass (cont.)
  • Lesson 18 - HARMONY - Combined Groups - Strings & Wind, Three Groups
  • Lesson 19 - COMPOSITION - Orchestrating the Same Music
  • Lesson 20 - COMPOSITION - Tutti
  • Lesson 21 - COMPOSITION - Soli
  • Lesson 22 - COMPOSITION - Range Limits, Transference, Alternating Chords
  • Lesson 23 - COMPOSITION - Volume of Tone Qualities, Repetition, Sfz, Emphasis
  • Lesson 24 - COMPOSITION - Crescendo and Diminuendo
  • Lesson 25 - COMPOSITION - Effects, Rhythm & Color

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If the notes are far apart as with 13th and 9th noted chords etc.., there may be less mud.
No that really depends on the timbre of the instrument and the range. Piano's do a find job of clusters chords. Organs in the mid to lower registers not so much.
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These big chords in your example are just triads (chord consisting of three different notes). Mayby the bass is doubled in octaves, and that sound sound is a unison sound with lots of detune, wich makes these chords sound bigger then they are.

As to the relationship between the chords and the melody, I'm glad you asked. Many books on harmony address the kind of progressions that were used in classical music, this is where the I-IV-V-I talk is coming from. In dance music the same rules need not (most often do not) apply.

The chords in your example are chosen for their melodic quality. They are just a little riff, "harmonised" by paralel moving triads. The lead is playing against the riff with different rhythms and movement.

This kind of chord riff, can be part of a slower moving harmonic movement, indicated by the bass. The riff could use maybe up to 4 or 5 different chords while the bass is staying in place for 1, 2, 4 measures, or even the whole song.

So, if you want to really get that anthem sound, you could have slow harmonic movement indicated by the bass (and maybe a soft pad sound, or high strings, plus a chord-riff in the middle, as a kind of small hook, plus a big lead on top.

And, of course, you could move (temporarily) to an entirely different key somewhere in the middle of you track, for a nice build-up or break.

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Thanks for that reply it was a great help :)
Anybody can do anything if they set their mind to it

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