This HAS to be THE most important thing that defines the "feeling" of music. Quick chord changes keep things exciting mostly, and long drawn out chords are more immersive.
Discuss, please
The harmonic slowing down of music is something that really seperates Baroque from Classical from Romantic era stuff. If you look at Bach, for example, the chord will change on every beat, wheras compositions in later periods move to about one chord per bar.camsr wrote:An interesting idea - the rhythm of the main chord changes in the music. Make it more interesting than the a chord change on every 1 beat. One I like is CxxxXxcxXxxxXxxxXxxxXxxxXxxxXxxx (x's are steps, c's are chord changes and capitals are beatmarks) and also CxxxXxcxXxxxCxxx.
This HAS to be THE most important thing that defines the "feeling" of music. Quick chord changes keep things exciting mostly, and long drawn out chords are more immersive.
Discuss, please
Bah. I studied classical guitar and had 3 years of music theory every morning at 8am in college and Schenkerian analysis was perhaps the most uninspiring stuff I ever learned.Xnah wrote:Read (Heinrich) Schenker and (Joseph) Schillinger publications... both early last century.
If you find what you are looking for, I'm interrested, but for this, it would realy to know what kind of music you are making, cuse chord rhythm seems to have a lot to do with that...camsr wrote: The whole point of this kind of analysis is to, Im hoping, is to discover new beat and groove in the music that percussion doesn't make. Imagine using a polyrhythm and having the chord change every beat on it. It would sound crazy! lol. I think the rhythm of the chords is as important as anything else.
I make music based on electronic elements, leaning towards trance and house.jee_pack wrote:If you find what you are looking for, I'm interrested, but for this, it would realy to know what kind of music you are making, cuse chord rhythm seems to have a lot to do with that...camsr wrote: The whole point of this kind of analysis is to, Im hoping, is to discover new beat and groove in the music that percussion doesn't make. Imagine using a polyrhythm and having the chord change every beat on it. It would sound crazy! lol. I think the rhythm of the chords is as important as anything else.
Submit: News, Plugins, Hosts & Apps | Advertise @ KVR | Developer Account | About KVR / Contact Us | Privacy Statement
© KVR Audio, Inc. 2000-2026