Agh, what a guess...
One I always liked was c#m->E->B->D#->c#m
It sounded great in context, the verse looped around that a number of times before keeping a c#m groove for a while. It had a very particular melody with it, and the D# sounded almost dominant, tho' of course it had nothing to do with the key..
DSP
Quick chord progression guide
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- KVRAF
- 8389 posts since 11 Apr, 2003 from back on the hillside again - but now with a garden!
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- KVRian
- 1408 posts since 9 May, 2003 from Manchester, UK
Whereas I just sit strumming Cmaj7 to Fmaj7 for hours on end. Nodding my head in an Ian McCulloch/Robert Smith fashion.
"The killing moooooon" etc.
"The killing moooooon" etc.
http://chrisamusic.bandcamp.com/
"It's square to be hip"
"It's square to be hip"
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- KVRian
- 1239 posts since 17 Jul, 2003
For the fun of it I enhanced that page (the big one), so it will send the chords to the midi port you select (needs midi yoke or maple to send to a host/vsti). (finally found a usage for Jammer Livelo3q wrote:Related to this: here's is an interesting series of articles, with ideas on how to build chord progressions:
http://chordmaps.com/part3.htm
(this is a link to the basic version - there's a more advanced chord table later in the series)
It's designed to be useable by people who can't read music - which is a good idea![]()
Still, when I play around with these kind of formulas, I begin to understand why computer generated music never really seems to GO anywhere...
I guess you need some kind of broader structure on top of this basic chord-to-chord stuff...
http://www.mypage.bluewin.ch/ncplus/download/MIDIX.zip
It's the one .. well you'll guess, make sure to register the ocx first
marc
PS : don't follow the arrows
