แสดงบทความที่มีป้ายกำกับ avant-garde แสดงบทความทั้งหมด
แสดงบทความที่มีป้ายกำกับ avant-garde แสดงบทความทั้งหมด

วันพฤหัสบดีที่ 9 กรกฎาคม พ.ศ. 2552

Precompositional Considerations

What is the secret that makes people keep reading 300 pages of a book. We've all seen letters, words and sentences before. We've all read stories. We should be bored with it by now. The fact of the matter is that we REALLY ARE BORED WITH IT BY NOW.

You have to be a borderline genius to get someone to read 300 pages of a novel. What keeps people turning pages? An interesting story isn't enough. It's your method of presenting the story in such a way that nothing jumps into the reader’s consciousness about the mechanics that makes the reader start thinking about anything else except the story which also better be good.

The same thing is true of songwriting. If only one thing in your song makes people start thinking it's strange or just bland that's when they'll stop listening. If only even one section doesn't transition well into the next thing then we start thinking about that instead of the good feeling the song is (was) producing.

In India they have a word for the feeling that music produces. The word they use is rasa which means taste. You never want to break rasa. But it's very easy to break.
If you don’t want to break rasa then the question isn’t so much what are you going to put into each section of music. The question becomes how are you going to put it in?

People have too many choices when faced with a blank page. To overcome the paralyzing nature of too many choices, composers learn to define the limits that their composition will fall within, such as how fast should it be, how many beats per measure will there be? What key will the piece of music be in? How long will it last? What chord should it start with? Surprisingly, composers sometimes even limit themselves to a few notes and a basic rhythm. I’ll now be talking about an important group of limitations.

Instrumentation
If you listen to a standard artist, the instrumentation they use is usually the same on almost every song. Keyboards, bass, drums, guitar, vocals. That doesn't change usually except they might add another instrumental player such as a harmonica but that occurs very rarely. There's usually a standard instrumentation for things.

Form
If you walk into a music store in America, it's clearly monocultural. About the only instruments to be found are guitars, basses, keyboards, and drum kits, with classical and jazz instruments thrown in for good measure. Walk into a music store in South Asia and you've got sitars, dutars, setars, esrajs, rebabs, shawms, etc... etc... etc... along with guitars and keyboards.

There seems to be some disparity between what many young songwriters from the west SAY they want and what they’ll actually put their money down for. They SAY they want to be totally unique and different and yet they buy the same instruments as everyone else and listen to the same music as all their friends. The next sentence may not apply to you but it probably applies to 99% of the people who might be interested in buying your music. It's VERY difficult to get a person to accept anything which is not what they expect, hence the difficulty of selling dutars in North America.

If you yourself or most of your neighbors at least, do not like anything out of the ordinary, how can you expect your listeners to go for what some aspiring composers are calling “writing from the heart?” This usually means a lack of knowledge of or lack of willingness to be constrained by accepted forms.
Don't let it escape your attention that it's possible to write from the heart within the form until you're established. On that day there will be people to buy your tunes that break the rules because enough people who matter, already know and trust you. Even then, it will only get sold if you broke the rules for a good reason, hence their trust.

When young songwriters hear someone talking about forms, they often say that the best music breaks the rules all the time. I don't believe the best music breaks the rules all the time. I consider experimental avant garde music to be nearly complete psychosis precisely because it doesn’t follow any traditional rules.

When the Beatles broke the rules, they had a very good reason for doing that. A phrase was shortened or lengthened because the lyrics demanded it not because of any animosity towards the normal sections built of eight or sixteen measures.

I often think about those people who don't want to constrain themselves to traditional forms. It's like saying I'll play football, basketball or soccer but I'm going to reach the goal by running outside of the boundaries, and then expect to be rewarded for that at the end and not be penalized. It's probably not in the realm of possibility.

Another metaphor is if you're painting, do you paint on the wall next to the canvas? It's about context. Only if you're an avant garde artist and the house owner knows you're going to do that and likes your work or you just want to piss him off and don’t really need the money.

Newbies, many of whom seem to like rock, heavy metal or punk listen to their favorite bands and hear them as icons of rebelliousness. Then they think to themselves, “How could my favorite icon of rebelliousness be following any rules, forms or formulas?” But naturally the newbies haven't analyzed their favorite bands and even if they had, they wouldn't know what to listen for.
Yes, in fact your favorite icon of rebelliousness, whether they play thrash metal, punk or rap, is using intros, verses, choruses, and bridges pretty much the same way everyone else is. They're not just doing their own thing as many newbies seem to think.

If they were doing that in the beginning, their manager or producer inserted the cold calculated reasoning that it takes to succeed in the biz. Then the guys in the band probably said, “Oh, is that all? We can still make music we like and have it mostly fit inside the basic guidelines.” It's not so difficult once getting past the emotional resistance to it.

Some might say that I'd be a good example of someone who writes only for themselves. I like World Music and am into stuff like microtonal tunings, 17/8 rhythms and all night songs played for the gods not for people on instruments like gopichands, seed pod and goat hoof rattles. My Garden of Contemplation CD has no chords per se from beginning to end. There's no guitar, bass, drum kit or keyboard. So, how did someone like me get my music forwarded and into music libraries waiting to be picked up by TV or film music buyers?

The people who might say I write only to please myself would be wrong. I don't inflict my interest in microtonal tunings on my listeners many of whom surely wouldn't like that. It's too far outside their expectations. Also the rhythms are kept to what people would expect, only breaking their expectations where they expect to have it be broken. SERIOUSLY. And I reign in world music's proclivities toward inordinate length and make my compositions conform to traditional popular song forms. Most of my stuff is instrumental but SONGwriting terminology is still useful. I write only 4 measure intros and get to the chorus fast which means no double verses before the first chorus.

All of this stuff helps people forgive the fact that my music has no chords and it's played on bamboo xylophones, three and four reed shawms, bowed spike fiddles and double headed hand drums no one has ever heard of. I love this stuff but I try to be realistic about what might go over well with the average person. In order to do that, it's important to at least try to really REALLY know what that is.
So, what is the popular song form and why is the popular song form so popular? The basic song forms goes: Intro Verse Chorus Verse Chorus Bridge Chorus Out. This doesn't tax people too much. They don’t have to work too hard to "get it".

A tune seven minutes long can go on the album but it will never make it to radio unless you're Pink Floyd etc... Radio format is about 3.5 minutes. Not much longer or shorter. Initially, shoot for around 100 measures of music at a moderate tempo and you'll be in the ball park for the airwaves. Of course not all popular songs need to be aimed at radio. There are lots of great tunes longer than 6 minutes.

If your pieces have choruses in the B section here's a list of possible forms to put them in which are in the pop format ballpark so that A's =Verses, B's =Choruses, C's =Bridges, D's=make C's another section proper and the D is the bridge, T's=Transitions and R's=a rise to the chorus.
ABABCAB. This is good if you've got sections longer than 8 bars or a slow tempo. It will prevent you from going over 3.5 minutes.

ABABTCAB. transition before the bridge. There may not even be any melody in the transition.

ABTABCAB. Another good one for a slow tempo or longer sections.

ABTABTCAB The transition is repeated before the Bridge.

AABAABCAAB Double verses are too long for unknowns to sell easily most likely.

ARBTARBCARB This could work. Sounds perfectly postmodern.

ABBABBCABB Double choruses to lengthen a short melody.

AABAABTCAAB. Not much point in putting a transition before the bridge except such as where the band drops out 4 bars early while the improviser solos before the start of the solo section as in jazz.

ARBARBTCARB. Rise to the chorus with Transition before the Bridge.

ABBTABBCABB. No transition the second time. Double chorus.

ARBTARBTCARB. Contemporary practice often has the rise to the chorus and a transition somewhere.

AABTAABCAAB. If repeating the transition every time makes the song too long leave it out the second time. There's a bridge anyway. Damn double verses again though. Bane of the unsigned!

ABBTABBTCABB. Double chorus. Transition after the chorus.

AABTAABTCAAB Double verses again.
ABCDABCDABCD It doesn't end on the chorus. Good for smooth jazz or real Latin music.

AARBAARBCAARB Rise to the chorus is very common in the postmodern era of popular songwriting. Those double verses plus the rise will kill you though. The exec's aren’t gonna wait that long. Next!
AARBAARBTCAARB. Double verse and rise. Do you want to sell this song or not?

ARBBARBBCARBB Rise to a double chorus.

AARBTAARBTCAARB. Double verse AND a rise before the chorus. Forget it unless you're the Beatles or Elvis.

AARBTAARBCAARB. Ditto

AABBAABBCAABB. Double verses and choruses. NEVER try more! Otherwise we'll stamp "Rank Amateur" on your forehead permanently.

AABBTAABBTCAABB Double trouble with transitions.

AARBBTAARBBTAARBB. Are you Marilyn Monroe or Princess Di reincarnated? If not, then don't try it.

Sections
Normally, sections are either eight or sixteen measures in length. For variety’s sake here is a theoretical chart of how the sections could all be different lengths on your album.

8 8 8
8 8 10
8 8 16
8 10 8
16 8 8
16 8 10
10 8 8
4 8 8
8 16 10
8 8 6
8 6 8
16 8 6
6 8 8
8 16 6
16 16 16
16 16 10
8 8 14
8 14 8
14 8 8
14 8 10
14 8 8
8 16 16
8 16 14
16 16 14
16 14 16
14 8 6
14 16 16
8 16 6
etc…

The three basic sections of a tune, the verse, chorus and bridge, can all be eight or all be sixteen measures but you can make them shorter or longer usually in groups of even numbers so sections ten measures long and six measures long also occur. Odd numbers are also possible but you have to have a good reason for doing that.

Most of the time, there are two phrases in each verse section and two phrases in each chorus section. And possibly in the bridge section as well. However, you CAN use more, less and even no phrases depending. The intro could just have accompaniment and no melody at all. The same is true of the bridge. The intro doesn’t need to be terribly melodic. In my case, I often create my intros from material in the bridge. For the bridge to be self sufficient, it doesn’t need to have a melody but then the accompaniment would have to be very interesting and you might have to shorten it so that it doesn’t get boring for the listener.

As far as lyrics are concerned, the verse basically keeps the same melody each time it comes around but with different words. The chorus basically keeps both the same words and the same melody each time it plays.

Phrase Lengths

If you give weight to favor the most common phrase lengths such as “four bars with four bars” and “eight bars with eight bars” occurring the most frequently. That way you wouldn’t constantly be getting music coming out of the system which is barely in the ball park of expectation.

phrases phrase lengths,musical phrases

phrase,phrase lengths,musical phrases

You also need to know that the consequent phrase within a section often reaches a greater height, has a wider leap, and/or has a greater dynamic.

You can also contrast melodic rhythms between sections or phrases: long held notes on the chorus and shorter note values for the verse.

World Music Tunings and Western Compatibility

Western Compatibility:

The microtonal inflections used in Persian and Indian music aren't necessarily incompatible with western harmony. Right now, the case is that many musicians in Persia improvise in 24 or 48 equal on microtone capable instruments over 12 equal harmonies played on western instruments like the guitar and piano.

Expanded Tonal Palette:

Some people who are more heavily involved in the modern avant-garde microtonal movement are saying that 24 and 48 equal just highlight the limitations of 12 equal and many are calling for an expanded palette such as that based on 31 equal which more or less includes the usually preferred “just” intonations of western and Persian scales without overburdening the performer or composer with divisions that are too large and unweildy like 104 divisions of the octave for example! However, instruments with moveable frets, no frets, sliding mechanisms or easily inflected wind instruments like bassoon have many advantages in that they're not locked into anything really and can be asked to play whatever the composer wants or made to actualize whatever the player wants.

Minor keys and chords handle dissonances well, so scale options like Afshari/Esfahan which go C D Eb F G A1/2b Bb will easily work in C aeolian or C dorian with careful attention to the chords whose fifths and roots have the sixth "A" in them

It's other mode starting on the Bb results in a dominant scale that has a 1/2 tone flat 7th. The dominant chord handles dissonances better than anything, even allowing for sharp and flat fifths so this is very doable with consciousness given to chords that have the b7th as their root or fifth.

Suznak C D E1/2b F G Ab B is basically a "harmonic" minor scale with a slightly raised minor third. This is probably a very useful scale over classical western harmonies in a non-modal minor "key" while watching out for the b3rd in the chords.

Rast is basically the same scale as Afshari except it also has a 1/2 flat second. Not really a problem in a minor key. Attention being payed to the chords as stated previously.

Another scale is Hijaz which is the same as the dominant mode of Afshari except with an added nonmicrotonally flat second.

A possibility allowing for "weird" scales is to limit the accompaniment to the notes from the scale that are not microtonal. This would not be a chordal accompaniment per se but provide harmonious elements. This is an aspect of the kind of modified harmonic theory we are in need of today.

The dominant scale of Afshari that goes C D E F G A B1/2b would work well over an accompaniment built on the Chinese form of the pentatonic scale C D F G A since it doesn't have any kind of "B", microtonal or otherwise.

We could also adopt the Chinese concept of using notes outside of the pentatonic scale, which occur in the melody, as passing tones or neighbor tones.

The regular form of Afshari that goes C D Eb F G A1/2b Bb would work well over the more American form of the pentatonic scale C Eb F G Bb.

Hijaz would work over a pentatonic made of C E F G Bb, Suznak over C D F G Ab or C D F G B, Afshari/ Esfahan would also work over C D F G B among others.

There is an important connection between timbre and tuning. An instrument that has the prominent overtones that correspond to the microtonally flat intervals of a "weird" tuning doesn't sound particularly out of tune anymore. This has important implications for composers, synthesists and instrument builders. For practicality, tunings up to 41 equal divisions of the octave are about as many divisions that can be made, heard and played reasonably.

It has been suggested that tactile frets be added to the fingerboards of violins and cellos so performers unfamiliar with the tunings could approximate them on western style instruments. Another suggestion is to have a wavy fingerboard that will approximate different tunings by high and low crests on the fingerboard.

Some "weird" tunings are more consonant than others by western standards. The less consonant ones can be made more consonant by choosing the correct instrumental timbre to play it. The sitar has the jiwari bridge that creates the buzzing which brings out more prominently many of the upper partials. I suspect this allows them to play 1/8 or 1/2 flat intervals which don't sound so weird to us in that context. Maybe a classical flute might be particularly inappropriate for unconventional tunings because of its almost pure sine wave.

Lately I've been thinking about why the gamelans have instrument pairs tuned about a 1/4 step apart and how the Setar is tuned to C and C1/4 sharp.

In Persian music, it's often the case that the scales have tones which are only 1/4 flat instead of real quarter tones/1/2 flat intervals except in Turkey. This does not produce the visual symmetry as I said before. They must be sacrificing the perfect visual symmetry because some other element of the music is affecting it or is more important. I was pondering this when I came to the insight that if there is a B1/2 #, its tone might easily be confused with C or C1/2b. The same with F1/2b and E or E1/2 sharp. Diatonic scales probably favor less flattedness or sharpedness to maintain the distinctions between notes. Gamelan music is pentatonic without half-steps so the paired notes can be seriously sharp or flat even when played simultaneously without losing their identity to another scale degree.

Another related phenomenon is the binaural beats of gamelan and Persian music. Why do two systems of music in non-western tunings use simultaneously sounding 1/4 steps? Is there a connection to the tuning? Probably.