วันพฤหัสบดีที่ 9 กรกฎาคม พ.ศ. 2552

Arranging Verses and Choruses

I remembered there are a couple other ways to distinguish verses and choruses. That’s with arranging. Sometimes the chorus is a little faster or has added instruments or is louder or all of the above. I’ve heard people change the groove between sections too but I don’t feel it’s as effective. I think if the new groove is based on the original groove then that works and I’ve done that a lot but a completely new groove often sounds like it should be a separate song.

It’s probably a good idea to listen to your favorite composers and hear what they’re doing concerning all of the points in this thread. I’m good at analysis so I get my hands on scores. That’s the main way how I learned Indonesian gamelan music.

I’ll do something like get a Mariah Carey song book and write out the melodic rhythms of the tunes I like and analyze starting positions, rhythm schemes such as aaab, aaba, and I’ll just put the notes in that tune’s chorus’ starting note such as the first note of the scale or the fifth or whatever.

Here is what an old one looks like in my notebook. About every four lines is a new song. Bridges and transitions such as prechoruses are NOT included. The first four lines are Mariah’s tune Sweetheart, the next four are When You Believe, then Always Be My Baby, One Sweet Day, Dreamlover, Emotions, then U2’s Sunday Bloody Sunday which takes up six lines, On New Years Day, the last four lines are their tune In The Name Of Love.

William Russo, in his book Composing Music, recommends writing new melodies to your favorite melodic rhythms.

http://i253.photobucket.com/albums/hh53/gongchime/MariahU2Marley.jpg

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