 |
|
|
|
 |
cryophonik
Boom shanka

Registered: Jan 2008
Location: Elk Grove, CA USA
|
|
|
Re: Need help with counterpoint
| quote: | Originally posted by AnalogArchangel
I've tried searching for help on such topics and I've had no success, it seems to be a lost technique perhaps...
Any do's or don'ts with counterpoint? rules?
|
There are a ton of do's/don'ts/rules in counterpoint and googling something like "musical counterpoint" or "tonal counterpoint" should bring up many primers. It's a subject that usually requires a semester or more to cover, so don't expect to learn it in one thread. But, I will give you a few things to think about when you're delving into counterpoint. Most importantly, is motion - not just rate of movement, but direction. One voice typically moves at a given note division while another stays put, but they can alternate. Read about speciation (the rate at which the cantus firmus moves against the counterpoint). Think about direction of movement - parallel vs opposite/contrary motion vs oblique motion (one voice stays put while the other voice moves). Think about intervals - moving in intervals of thirds and sixths are generally fine, moving in intervals of perfect fifths or fourths, not good. Think about harmonic relationships, consonance and dissonance (lots of rules to consider).
Basically, do some research, try to take it somewhere, then come back with more specific questions. Your example melody above is very basic and, therefore, very open to a wide variety of contrapuntal interpretation.
___________________
cryophonik.com | facebook | soundcloud
Sonar Platinum | Ableton Live 9 | Logic Pro X | Access Virus TI2 Keyboard | Kurzweil PC3X | Nord Lead 4R | NI Maschine
|
|
Jan-16-2014 05:11
|
|
|
 |
 |
|
 |
 |
AnalogArchangel
tranceaddict in training
Registered: Jan 2014
Location: Williams Lake, Canada
|
|
|
| quote: | Originally posted by cryophonik
Think about intervals - moving in intervals of thirds and sixths are generally fine, moving in intervals of perfect fifths or fourths, not good. Think about harmonic relationships, consonance and dissonance (lots of rules to consider).
|
I totally know what you mean and thanks I have lots to think about now, sorta like I was doing before but maybe I haven't pushed myself to further my suggestion of ideas to myself.
| quote: | Originally posted by Looney4Clooney
The problem is that counter point has very specific types which are great exercises but for most modern music, you have maybe 2 voices and learning counterpoint won't do much . |
I produce Goa Trance, something that counterpoint and harmony is heavily used in, many, many layers, so yes I do need counterpoint & harmony. 
|
|
Jan-17-2014 16:29
|
|
|
 |
 |
Looney4Clooney
Supreme tranceaddict

Registered: Apr 2010
Location:
|
|
|
never heard a psy trance track with actual melodies intertwined. Layers don't say anything. I can sight read orchestral scores and reduce it in real time playing it on a piano because even tho there are 20 or so lines of music, the most complex music rarely exceeds 4 lines of music or points of intertest. and sound fx, well those counterpoint books written centuries ago, they kinda don't touch on that.
And the way counter point is taught just won't do anything for you. You would be better served listening to music.
And it is also like every theoretical idea a framework that works for a particular style of music. Modal jazz, say guys like monk well, i mean parallel unresolved chords and all that stuff, counterpoint would be a waste just like harmony because you just won't go far enough to make it something that will help instead of a hindrance to creativity which all theory tends to do when you start learning.
I just think for your goal, it isn't worth the time. It is interesting but i just don't think it is what will help you the most.
here , listen from 3:30.
At a certain point , you will hear 2 melodies that well, counterpoint I suppose but not something you learn in a book. It is learnt from listening to music, playing instruments and developing an ear.
Even tho there are 6 musical layers doing different things, there really only is 2 actual things that would be considered melodic lines playing off each other. TO be honest, any more than that is just too much for dance. You should have 2 focal points of interest. Anymore and it defeats the purpose of a dance track.
___________________
"This is why Superman works alone." GC
old stuff from days gone by (2001-2004)
Mad For Brad's gay little contest
Last edited by Looney4Clooney on Jan-18-2014 at 19:48
|
|
Jan-18-2014 19:35
|
|
|
 |
 |
AnalogArchangel
tranceaddict in training
Registered: Jan 2014
Location: Williams Lake, Canada
|
|
|
I absolutely agree, and coming from a guitar playing background makes things a little difficult for me.
As for Psy-Trance, Psy doesn't use melodies at all and if so, very rarely, it's all mechanical psychedelic sounds these days, what I'm referring to is the tight organic filter sweeped melodies of the 90's from Goa before it evolved into this Psytrance crap.
Here is a perfect example of a VERY intelligent use of counterpoint listen from 6:00 on, there is at least 3 melodies & pads going on and intertwining with eachother in perfect harmony.
|
|
Jan-19-2014 18:41
|
|
|
 |
 |
Looney4Clooney
Supreme tranceaddict

Registered: Apr 2010
Location:
|
|
|
Jan-23-2014 01:24
|
|
|
 |
 |
Notle
Senior tranceaddict
Registered: Dec 2008
Location: Helsinki
|
|
|
Jan-23-2014 18:42
|
|
|
 |
All times are GMT. The time now is 13:10.
Forum Rules:
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not edit your posts
|
HTML code is ON
vB code is ON
[IMG] code is ON
|
|
|
|
|
|
Contact Us - return to tranceaddict
Powered by: Trance Music & vBulletin Forums
Copyright ©2000-2026, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Privacy Statement / DMCA
|