advaya wrote:Jesus dude... There is a big difference between 'playing out of tune' and having different sections 'detuned' from one another... You've been spewing out a lot of crap lately, and shlepping it off as if it were holy doctrine...Manc Chris wrote:And I have written 100+ pop songs. Most of them are NOT good, but a few of them have floated around various pop charts, and ..... I know very little about music theory. (Not attempting any kind of one upmanship there btw, just showing other side of the coin)herodotus wrote:"Basically, he knew everything there is to know about music theory. However, his personal opinion was that he would not have a clue how to write a pop song. He may have known how/why they work, but he could not do it himself."
This doesn't prove that the reason he couldn't write a pop tune was because he knew music theory. It just proves that he couldn't write a pop tune and he also knew music theory.
I know lots of things about music theory (although nothing like "everything") and I have written over 40 pop tunes.
I'm not saying that they are all good, but they are pop songs
PS - You didn't know that Orchestra's don't play in tune though did yaeh?
You did
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Its common practice for many different genres of music to play with different sections detuned from each other. (detuned... not out of tune!). It creates a certain level of thickness (you sort of mentioned that in an earlier post) as well as separation between parts. Two rhythm guitarists will usually have slight discrepencies in their tunings on purpose to create a 'musical bed' upon which the lead sections (vocals + lead guitar) perform.
The fact that an orchestra has detuned sections means absolutely nothing in regards to music theory... It does show an understanding of acoustic phenomenon and wave interaction...
And again, because this 'friend' knows everything there is to know about music theory, does not mean that's the reason he can't write a pop song...
Hey, just relax man. I would have thought the use of smilies would have emphasised the jockular tone. Obviously not. And WTF does 'Shlepping' mean? ...
