I personally don't find this as cheesy as a lot of the other J-Pop stuff, and to me it seems danceable.
P.S. Just ignore the underage girls and stare at the two in red shirts---they are college aged here.
I had to look away anyway, the lyric subtitles were doing my head in. But that wouldn't sound out of place on MTV after a spot of, er, translation. Then again, they looked as though they could have come out of a slightly cleaned-up Ke$hanator.A.M. Gold wrote:Since we are on the subject of Japanese uptempo pop, here's some I quite like (remember I did say POP).
I personally don't find this as cheesy as a lot of the other J-Pop stuff, and to me it seems danceable.
P.S. Just ignore the underage girls and stare at the two in red shirts---they are college aged here.![]()
I also have this story of someone overhearing Avicii working on a song in a studio. They had some issues with dissonance and neither he nor his entire production team could figure out what was causing it. The person in question offered to help, figured out in a few of seconds that they were mixing major and minor chords and fixed it for them. I think anecdotes like these really drive home the point on how DJs and home producers have changed the norms of dance music.A.M. Gold wrote:Yea, that Squarepusher track was alright. Sort of reminds me of Air.
As far as DJ's not playing instruments (this is a side note but somewhat relevant), I was a little shocked when one of my favorite hip hop producers, DJ Toomp, had a video I saw on YT in which he did a little seminar for a crowd of people gathered around him somewhere. He made up a live beat from scratch, and he just had a laptop and a little two octave USB keyboard hooked up to it.
The upshot: he couldn't even play in key. He kept hitting wrong notes, and I know they weren't intentional because he was acting a little embarrassed. And this is a guy who has done a fair amount of hip hop production which I believe to be all original (i.e not sampled loops) which I found fairly impressive. He obviously worked it out in the DAW, but I still found it kind of weird that he had never even established the most basic competence on keys.
Yea, it's very true in hip hop too. People just fiddle with the piano roll a lot and it covers a multitude of sins, so to speak.GeckoYamori wrote:I also have this story of someone overhearing Avicii working on a song in a studio. They had some issues with dissonance and neither he nor his entire production team could figure out what was causing it. The person in question offered to help, figured out in a few of seconds that they were mixing major and minor chords and fixed it for them. I think anecdotes like these really drive home the point on how DJs and home producers have changed the norms of dance music.A.M. Gold wrote:Yea, that Squarepusher track was alright. Sort of reminds me of Air.
As far as DJ's not playing instruments (this is a side note but somewhat relevant), I was a little shocked when one of my favorite hip hop producers, DJ Toomp, had a video I saw on YT in which he did a little seminar for a crowd of people gathered around him somewhere. He made up a live beat from scratch, and he just had a laptop and a little two octave USB keyboard hooked up to it.
The upshot: he couldn't even play in key. He kept hitting wrong notes, and I know they weren't intentional because he was acting a little embarrassed. And this is a guy who has done a fair amount of hip hop production which I believe to be all original (i.e not sampled loops) which I found fairly impressive. He obviously worked it out in the DAW, but I still found it kind of weird that he had never even established the most basic competence on keys.
Hip Hop was always sample-based. They sampled old records and made Hip Hop songs out of them. So it isn't surprising that most of them don't compose great piano music with tons of melodies and modulation, but rather simple instrumental and drum loops.A.M. Gold wrote:People just fiddle with the piano roll a lot and it covers a multitude of sins, so to speak.
Hey, nothing wrong with playing by ear, it's mostly what I do, but there are very good reasons for getting real skill on at least one instrument too, and for working ITB, keyboard is the best bet I think.
Try these guys: https://soundcloud.com/brandtbrauerfrickSpiritos wrote:Personally I would like to see EDM move more towards a jazz-approach (repetitive modulation -which can be traced back to Bach!) but the world of music is so broad that I think there's enough room for everything and everyone.
And also mentioned near the start of the thread, a lot of the actually successful artists who stand the test of time (well, 10 - 20 years since the modern dance music thing started happening) do have a lot of musical experience.As stated earlier in this thread a lot of todays producers don't have a clue about chord-progressions, keysignatures let alone for eg. contrapoint or syncopation and are unable to play a traditional instrument.
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