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Trance & Classical
I definately notice a connection here. Im a piano major at Las Vegas Acedemy, and while all of my peers are stupid about EDM, they seem to enjoy it for the most part. (Im talking DJ Sammy - Heaven bullshit) On the classical forums in gamingforce, a large amount of posters there seem to like it as well. With many of the big trance names out there, you cant help but notice the influence of Baroque and Impressionistic styles within their music. As a producer, or just as an avid listener, has any of you ever had classical training? If you have, do you incorporate what you know from that into your own music? I would like to start a list of songs that you guys feel have some classical essence within it. (PLEASE NO ADAGIO FOR STRINGS!!!)
stylistically, they couldn't be any more different. both are harmony based however and the only connection is on a technical level. just b/c they both aren't pop doesn't mean we need to find similarities between them
Re: Trance & Classical
I agree with you bout the connection.
most producers were trained in classical music.
a lot of older trance uses the same type of melodies/scales as some classical music. a good example is most tracks from gouryella
Re: Re: Trance & Classical
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| Originally posted by boi85 I agree with you bout the connection. most producers were trained in classical music. |
Re: Trance & Classical
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| Originally posted by DJ Roco I would like to start a list of songs that you guys feel have some classical essence within it. |
Re: Re: Re: Trance & Classical
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| Originally posted by Mr.Mystery Trance producers classically trained? Yeah, right... |
uh, yeah. way to add substance to the thread, nou.
...
bet you didn't see that surprise smiley coming, did you?
Re: Re: Re: Trance & Classical
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| Originally posted by Mr.Mystery Trance producers classically trained? Yeah, right... |
Re: Re: Re: Re: Trance & Classical
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| Originally posted by SYSTEM-J You'd probably be surprised by how many EDM producers are classically trained. I can think of a few notable trance guys. |
Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Trance & Classical
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| Originally posted by Mr.Mystery "A few" is hardly the same thing as "most", now is it. |
Absolutely.
I'd go so far as to say that trance is the 21st century equivalent of classical. If those crazy guys back then had midi, who knows what kind of crazy shit they would come up with!
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| Originally posted by DJ Shibby Absolutely. I'd go so far as to say that trance is the 21st century equivalent of classical. If those crazy guys back then had midi, who knows what kind of crazy shit they would come up with! |
Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Trance & Classical
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| Originally posted by SYSTEM-J No, but I was just clarifying that there are some. |
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| Originally posted by DJ Shibby Absolutely. I'd go so far as to say that trance is the 21st century equivalent of classical. If those crazy guys back then had midi, who knows what kind of crazy shit they would come up with! |
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| Originally posted by Nou Nik I hate you |
ok most maybe hard to quantify.
from Armin to BT to Sasha to James Holden.
many artists worthy of mention maybe more the case. 
to me the link is obvious.
that is all.
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| Originally posted by Mr.Mystery Oh please. Just because some artist use strings in their breakdowns doesn't mean the two genres have anything in common. There's just too many differences in the structures alone. Besides, most trance tunes are made just to make people dance which was hardly the intention of classical. |
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| Originally posted by DJ Shibby Why would we do the same thing that's been done, hundreds of years before? Forward thinking, technology, and progress, my boy! progress! |
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| Originally posted by Mr.Mystery "My boy", if you actually read what I said you'll notice I didn't say anything about progression. Simply put - you cannot compare trance with classical since they don't really have anything in common. ...or do I still need to dumb it down for you? |
I think there is a connection.
Maybe not a strong one, but I struggle to think of any other genres (other than ambient) that share the same focus on melody, specifically aimed at creating an emotion. Trance is very good at this because it has power behind it too, ambient very, very rarely has.
In any case, I certainly started to appreciate classical music a hell of a lot more after getting into trance, the reason being I can relate to it far better now. Listening to the various intricacies, the structure and emphasis on harmony as well as observing the various emotions it evokes.
That�s why for me at least, I can see a connection.
Of course it�s not airtight, but then it�s pretty obvious it wasn�t going to be.
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| Originally posted by DJ Shibby Wow, what a wretched disposition you have! Mercy please, spare me your MrMysteryDegrading sense of sudden and baseless defensiveness! Obviously you should read my original post, in which I said that trance is the 21st century equivalent of classical. Or do I need to dumb it down for you and draw comparisons, such as emphasis on melody, or the fact that trance is mostly for dancing to, and classical was mostly a theatrical outing, the length of both art forms, or the nature of both trance and classical having all elements composed mostly by a single person? Be careful in the future about being a nasty shit when you don't even know what you're trying to start an argument about! |
Another thing is that "classical" is such an immensely broad term for music that spans hundreds of years and many instruments, styles and structures. Seeing as classical is the most widely reaching and versatile music, and is composed by people who set down many of the rules and conventions you expect in music, there will be influences to be found in any genre.
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| Originally posted by SYSTEM-J Another thing is that "classical" is such an immensely broad term for music that spans hundreds of years and many instruments, styles and structures. Seeing as classical is the most widely reaching and versatile music, and is composed by people who set down many of the rules and conventions you expect in music, there will be influences to be found in any genre. |
Another thing that's wrong with the idea of "trance is classical for the 21st Century" is that classical hasn't died out at all. It's still being made, especially in the form of film scores. And just to nail the point home, we've seen plenty of electronic producers work on film scores as far back as Vangelis on Blade Runner, but more relevantly Orbital, BT and Juno Reactor. Then there are the likes of Hybrid and Rob Dougan. That's modern classical- mixing in traditional classical with cutting edge modern music. It leaves trance looking in a sorry fucking state when it comes to the title, doesn't it?
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