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cybernetica
Captain Insano

Registered: Oct 2004
Location: Cologne, Germany
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ow. there are a lot of genres to trance, each of them with a lot of different approaches. I understand you want to grasp the theory of the structure for trance, but that will be hard.
There is a general idea to trance/EDM however, thats a little different to other genres. It is the idea of building up and building down, these ups and downs are making it suitable for a dance floor.
So if you want something to start with, here is a basic trance track structure. theartfulducker probably gave the best hint already, you should analyze professional tracks how they are built up, but you said you need a starting point so here goes.
You start with the basic beat, a DJ friendly start of your track. Then you add more and more elements, bass, synthlines, all one by one. When you have reached the first climax, lets say at 2-3 minutes, the track breaks down to a calm moments and you introduce your melody. The melody gets more and more intense and layered, you are building up again. The climax is where your beat starts again, joined by the main melody, lets say at 4-5 minutes. Finally, your track is building down again, you take out your elements one by one just like you built it up in the beginning.
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Cybernetika albums (free DL): Atropos (2009) | Nanospheric (2008) | Neural Network Expansion (2007) | Promo #1 (2006) | Paralysis (2005)
homepage: http://www.cybernetika.de
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May-14-2008 02:57
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Axer
Suspended User

Registered: Mar 2008
Location: blasting the funk out yo speaker!
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| quote: | [i][b]
You start with the basic beat, a DJ friendly start of your track. Then you add more and more elements, bass, synthlines, all one by one. When you have reached the first climax, lets say at 2-3 minutes, the track breaks down to a calm moments and you introduce your melody. The melody gets more and more intense and layered, you are building up again. The climax is where your beat starts again, joined by the main melody, lets say at 4-5 minutes. Finally, your track is building down again, you take out your elements one by one just like you built it up in the beginning. |
Totally!
Add effects to your layers and test run it as many times as you need to make it sounds good to yourself 
___________________
| quote: | Originally posted by Frenchie
My pussy is cold, please light my fire. |
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May-14-2008 03:06
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ASFSE
Supreme tranceaddict

Registered: Aug 2005
Location: the bay
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May-14-2008 06:46
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kitphillips
is actually a guy.
Registered: May 2006
Location: Sydney, Australia
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| quote: | Originally posted by Subtle
There are really NO rules here.
It all depens on what kind of trance track you are going to make, here are three Trance tracks, with main part breakdowns colored yellow, you`ll notice the timing and length of the break is different on all of them.
Be creative, do what feels natural for you. |
Yeah, and heaps of tracks have two breakdowns too which isn't evident from this. Its really a matter of experimenting a lot, you don't want all your tracks to have the same structure, it'll be boring.
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New Mix: March 2010 Promo
Soundcloud|Facebook
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May-14-2008 11:49
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Lucidity
Twilight Vanquisher

Registered: Jan 2008
Location: Philadelphia
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May-14-2008 20:58
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dragontrance
Junior tranceaddict
Registered: May 2008
Location:
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Thanks for the link to that thread! Pho-mo and the others gave me what I was looking for, thanks very much.
To the people who feel that following a structure is somehow "formulaic," I would just like to say one small thing.
ALL MUSIC IS FORMULAIC TO ONE DEGREE OR ANOTHER.
The true artistry comes not so much from innovation, but from exercising your creativity and artistry within the bounds of the form you are working in. You have to know what the rules are before you can go breaking them and innovating.
This is true of classical music, this is true of rock, country, hip-hop, even Balinese Cymbal Music has a form and a structure.
There is a very common term to describe music that is purely freeform and without any identifying structure: Jamming.
Nobody wants to hear you jam. People want songs. Discrete, organized units that are readily understandable and familiar.
The form and structure, especially in generalized form, is useful to teach a complete newcomer (like me, a classical musician) about the general style called Trance. I disagree strongly with the person who said "just listen to a bunch of tracks and try to copy that."
If I give you a list of ten classical piano sonatas, told you to listen to them and try to copy that, I haven't given you any real information. I've just shown you that I don't have a clue how to answer your question.
Would YOU be able to produce a sonata by just listening to dozens, hundreds, or even thousands of them? I have a four-year degree in Music Composition, and I wouldn't be able to do it like that! I would, at minimum, need to see a written copy of the scores to properly analyze them to a level where I could produce my own Sonata.
Someone said that classical music is so complex that it wasn't analogous to producing trance tracks. I disagree. The complexity of classical music is greatly simplified by the form. The less complex a piece of music, the more thorough the structure MUST be!
If you don't know that a Sonata is made of an Exposition section in the Tonic, Development section in the Dominant, and Recapitulation in the tonic, and this is what distinguishes the Classical Sonata form, then no amount of listening will teach you that.
So, again, I give my thanks and much respect for the *suggestions* about what a Trance track *might* consist of. At least now I have a very good place to start.
I do have to ask one question, though. And I will post a new thread with that.
Thanks again!
Dragon
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May-14-2008 21:44
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