That is what I said several pages back, but I think some people miss-understood what I was saying.JumpingJackFlash wrote:just that if you want it to have one key, then the easiest and most definitive way to establish it is to have some kind of dominant to tonic progression.
I think I can relate to you. You understand that something may not be 'technically correct' or by the book, but it still sounds good. I think some don't make that connection too well.
It's all about understanding the different systems of harmony and then using them in your music.
Some people don't understand that by it's very nature, tonal harmony can be a bit limiting for today's ears, not to even mention diatonic harmony, the most basic form of tonality.
If people don't want to be hemmed in by the limitations of tonal harmony, you find harmonic system that's more suited to your music. It's as simple as that.
Sir Harrison Birtwistle, like many of his peers, thought that 12-tone harmony didn't allow him to write the music he wanted and as such does not use it as his harmonic language.
Harmony is the real power of music, but in order to use it well, you have to understand it as a theory first, and then as application. Often, particularly with EDM, people try to do it the other way 'round.
You don't go to uni and play a bunch of chords THEN work out the theory - you study the theory, then build the chords. Or scales, or cells, or whatever.