[atlantaprog] Re: Dream Theater song writing Contest
- From: "Greg Stafford" <webmaster@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
- To: <atlantaprog@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Sat, 16 Aug 2003 21:46:47 -0400
Good point and I learned something. This mailing list is not only
entertaining, but educational as well and a good reason to stay a
subscriber.
Thanks Jeff.
Greg Stafford
The Prog Palace - Progressive Rock Radio
http://theprogpalace.com
-----Original Message-----
From: atlantaprog-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
[mailto:atlantaprog-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of Jeff Blanks
Sent: Saturday, August 16, 2003 9:26 PM
To: atlantaprog@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: [atlantaprog] Re: Dream Theater song writing Contest
>Hal I think the idea here is to have a format of a song never heard and
>allow bands to interpret it in their own unique way. I don't believe
>they sit down and say hey let's do 5/6, 6/6,
TECH NOTE: The second digit in a time signature is ALWAYS a power of
two.
>I agree though that if you sat down and said hmmm let's write our songs
>and choose time signatures before deciding the music you'd loose all
>heart of the music.
Only if you understand that no one decision will guarantee good
music--that
is, that once you've decided that something would be *kewl*, that's no
excuse to throw just anything in there. Would you blame a 19th-Century
composer for deciding, "Hey, I think I'll write a waltz"? After all,
that's a decision to use a particular meter, right?
I don't think there's any set way of deciding just how to start writing
a
piece of music. You could even start with an overarching form, which is
(to an extent) what I do sometimes: "OK, I want the intro to these big
long chords, then I want a series of episodes that have such-and-such a
sound going through some other sound to yet another sound, and I want
all
that leading up to a big chord dying down into a 12-string guitar solo
passage which would lead into four vocal stanzas..." And so on.
(BTW, I don't like the word "feel", though I know I have to use it in
order
to be conversant; it's just way overdone. *Everything* has a feel; it's
only a matter of whether you like the feel or not. "It's got no feel"
is
largely an attempt to attach a moral dimension to "I don't like it.")
>...would Pink Floyd's Comfortably Numb sound as good with a
>faster guitar shred instead of the style in which it was written? Would
>it have as much soul?
That question was answered a long time ago. We *know* that shredding
sometimes isn't the best thing. In fact, by now we know it *much too
well*.
- References:
- [atlantaprog] Re: Dream Theater song writing Contest
- From: Jeff Blanks
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- » [atlantaprog] Re: Dream Theater song writing Contest
- » [atlantaprog] Re: Dream Theater song writing Contest
- » [atlantaprog] Re: Dream Theater song writing Contest
- » [atlantaprog] Re: Dream Theater song writing Contest
- » [atlantaprog] Re: Dream Theater song writing Contest
- » [atlantaprog] Re: Dream Theater song writing Contest
- » [atlantaprog] Re: Dream Theater song writing Contest
- » [atlantaprog] Re: Dream Theater song writing Contest
- [atlantaprog] Re: Dream Theater song writing Contest
- From: Jeff Blanks