thecontrolcentre wrote: ↑Mon Nov 08, 2021 3:41 pm I wonder if the OP worked out the chords for the bassline![]()
We don't know until we ask:
Hey @Passante, were you able to work it out? Did any of this discussion help at all?
thecontrolcentre wrote: ↑Mon Nov 08, 2021 3:41 pm I wonder if the OP worked out the chords for the bassline![]()
We don't know until we ask:
Hey @Passante, were you able to work it out? Did any of this discussion help at all?
starflakeprj wrote: ↑Mon Nov 08, 2021 3:12 pmHow would you feel if someone said, "Did you start learning English an hour ago?". What if he did?
Hi, for now I found my own way to move forward with this, it's very rudimentary but is my only option as of now.BertKoor wrote: ↑Wed Jan 12, 2022 11:28 pmthecontrolcentre wrote: ↑Mon Nov 08, 2021 3:41 pm I wonder if the OP worked out the chords for the bassline
We don't know until we ask:
Hey @Passante, were you able to work it out? Did any of this discussion help at all?
That sounds not bad. Do it more often and you'll become better.
Humming is a good way to go, that way you're operating based on what actually sounds good!Passante wrote: ↑Fri Jan 14, 2022 1:38 pmHi, for now I found my own way to move forward with this, it's very rudimentary but is my only option as of now.BertKoor wrote: ↑Wed Jan 12, 2022 11:28 pmthecontrolcentre wrote: ↑Mon Nov 08, 2021 3:41 pm I wonder if the OP worked out the chords for the bassline
We don't know until we ask:
Hey @Passante, were you able to work it out? Did any of this discussion help at all?
I basically hum the melody/notes in my head while playing until I land on the right pitch. I try every note of the scale and decide what feels right in the context.
I do think that learning to play piano would help me massively but that takes much time that I don't have atm.
Some suggestion are more useful than others, some are just too complex for me considering where I am right now.
Once again I'm back at this topic and want to underline and thank strummy especially for this comment he made. That reply resonanted for many months in my mind after I read it and made me think. It was an eye opening moment for me, his explanation about passing and target notes specifically. It doesn't mean that I follow a formula now in creating the harmony but is something I always take in consideration.strummy wrote: ↑Fri Nov 05, 2021 8:30 am I agree with fmr, you're most of the way there with melody and bass.
Here are a few things to consider in general -
-You don't have to harmonize each melody note with a different chord. Listen to your melody and try and hear where you feel the chord changes should be.
-Once you have a set of notes that you'd like to harmonize, see if your melody implies or outlines a certain chord. For example if your song is in the key of C and your melody goes G E C you are spelling out a C chord, and probably want to play a C chord. But if your bass note is an A, then you're probably looking at an Am7 chord.
-Decide which notes in your melody are "target notes" and which notes are "passing notes", most likely you'll want your "target notes" to be one of the chord tones in whatever chord you're in. Again in the key of C, if your target melody note is G, you're probably looking at a C or a G chord.
-All of these ideas really depend on how stable or animated you want your melody note to be. If you want one of your target notes to have more potential energy, meaning it isn't at rest and wants to go somewhere else, you can either have it not be one of the chord tones and/or be an extension of the chord like a 7th or 9th. Using the example above, a G note over a G or C chord will be very stable, while a G note over an Am7 chord will have more motion and potential for movement. This same G note in an Am7 will have a desire to come to rest somewhere else either moving to different melody note or having the chord move underneath.
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