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attn musicians, musicologists, people who know music-- help me understand
what exactly did jim o'rourke rip off from pink floyd's great gig in the sky for his through the night softly?
my ears can hear it clearly, but i lack the knowlege/theory to explain. is it notes? is it what? i lack the language. -- edit: http://www.uploading.com/files/NFLZUUFJ/Jim_O'Rourke_-_Eureka_-_04_-_Through_the...mp3.html i trust everyone knows the pink floyd track? |
the immense overwhelming sense of boring suck?
;) I have not heard o'rourke's tune. tyou got a youtube link or something? let's compare |
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hold on and let me listen to it and i'll tell you |
i was going to help you, but then i dont have the jim o rourke song.
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sorry it thought this was more common
it's from eureka here's an upload: http://www.uploading.com/files/NFLZUUFJ/Jim_O'Rourke_-_Eureka_-_04_-_Through_the...mp3.html see theres the piano the saxophone kinda going like the woman lots of little bits & pieces but what are the... how should i call this.. musical... qualities or relations that are being mimicked? fuck i need to study music. |
something in the chord changes
if you ever watch live at pompeii, or the making of dark side of the moon on classic albums, when rick wright is messing about on the piano working out the chord sequence...yeah. needless to say the great gig is an infinitely better song. the sax is reminding you of us and them, not the great gig. |
chord changes...
what's a "chord" and how does it "change"? ha ha ha im so fucking ignorant i really need to learn this shit gotta go run some errands eh cankers i found a painting of you in a gallery yesterday ha ha ha i'll post later thanks for the attempt to fit this subject into my ignorant brain |
a chord...i'm not a trained musician and i can't explain properly but it's a group of notes played at the same time that sound good together and all the notes you hear at the same time make up what is called a chord.
the chord changes or sequence is how you get from one to another, usually in a scale but sometimes not in which case it will sound more dissonant. |
chords are sets of 3-5 notes that all together resonate in one specific note. (barre chords/power chords, employ just the "bottom" and the "top" notes in a chord, and are very easy to use which is why most punk bands employ just barre chords.)
you can have 5 notes that when played together form a C, or a C# (sharp) most rock music has three to four chords as the main basis for the song. let's say a song starts in G, the guitarist strums the G chord 4 times, then he switches to a C chord. your ears can tell the difference, and the "change" is how he gets to that new chord. real simple songs just go from chord to chord, a la ramones, and the most basic rock songs employ TWO chords only. trhink of some of the more basic misfits tunes. more complex songs have a "bridge" between chords, a sequence of notes that gets you to the new chord, creating a nice emotional change in the listener. a great bridge can serve as the HOOK in a song or it can lead into the chorus hook. it sounds more complex than it is, but it is just terminology help me out people! |
it's not complicated at all, i just don't know how to explain it.
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Chord - 3+ notes.
Chord change - moving from one set of notes to another. The notes have different relationships to each other, depending on their frequency. Certain frequencies are considered 'dissonant', others 'consonant'. Some chords have consonant relationships with others; some have dissonant relationships with each other. Obviously, Wiki will come to the rescue |
Hey musical people, can someone explain to me what exactly an octave is?
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does it rly have to be at least 3 notes?
i do this out of laziness: e|-x B|-x G|-x D|-x A|-3 E|-1 instead of this: e|-x B|-x G|-x D|-3 A|-3 E|-1 Quote:
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Powerchords aren't technically proper chords.
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Octave - sing Doh reh me fa so la te doh. The two 'doh's have a ratio of 1/2. That's an octave. |
fuck technicalities.
i do what i want. |
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The first isn't a 'real' chord but can have a chordal/ modal/ melodic relationship to the rest of the song - in that instance, you'd have the major tritone if the bass were playing a B (the seventh note of the scale of F) or the B string was fretted at 2, which is A, the third note necessary for a 5th chord (F5) The second is not really a chord in and of itself either, as the F on the D string is an octave of the F on the E string (that is, there's two of the same note). This isn't a hard and fast rule, but a generally accepted convention of chord construction. |
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This is good, and right. Except when people make shit music, which is the majority of people. But not you. So, uh... well done. |
pythagoras, that magical genius of greece, figured out that if you take a lute's string, for instance, and pluck it, and it resonates at a C for instance, if you cut the string in half, it also resonates at a C but at a higher pitch. if you double the length of that string, it is a C but at a lower pitch.
the "octave" is the space betwee those pitches, and is composed of 8 (octo) notes. do -re-mi-fah-so-lah-ti- and back to DOH it is a physical result of how nature is constructed, and when pythagoras found this out he went apeshit thinking the entire universe was composed of music, the music of the spheres. it appears to be an underlying order of nature. a note at 400 hertx doubled, is 800 hertz, and an octave higher. One at 200 hertz is an octave lower. |
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