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Re: High Frequency Content in Popular Music
| quote: | Originally posted by Beatflux
Ever since I have read the "Hit Theory" chapter in the book "Mixing with Your Mind" the idea that there is a hit formula has really interested me. In the book Paul mentions there's at least 7 factors that all popular music has in common from music that ranges from Beethoven's 5th all the way to The Archies - Sugar Sugar.
In virtually every popular song, and I do mean popular and not "in the same vein as a popular song", predictable changes in high frequency content will propel the song.
In a typical Verse-Chorus-Verse-Chorus-Bridge-Chorus format the verse will have a lower amount of energy while the chorus has more. In this typical pop structure the change in high frequencies make it easy to hear a structural change. If there isn't a shift in high frequencies the song will sound flat and lifeless.
Dance music can be different because energy doesn't "gear shift" as dramatically, but ramps up, then breaks down, then ramps up again. There are dance tunes that are structured similarly to a Verse-Chorus popular song, and those can have "gear shifts" rather than "ramps."
High frequency content is built up, and is only reduced so that it can be raise again for dramatic effect or to end a song. |
This is true but honestly the popular song formula you've touched is more than just high frequency shifts, but still just as simple in essence - in AE school we had to take a song writing class, and when broken down in terms of intellectualizing music, there's a few basic component themes that present in popular songs such contrast (diversity vs repetition) spread of frquency (notes) vs similarity, length of sections etc
It's actually quite freaky how you can break down popular songs in to basic formulaic elements.
Dance music just has a slightly different formula but essentially the concepts are the same; too much diversity and we loose the ability to relate, too much similarity and we get bored, too much hi freq we get fatigue, not enough and we don't pay attention. These also follow on various focus scales; down to the a one bar loop, or the whole main verse (part after the main drop with trance for instance).
I grant that it's more diverse with EDM than with most pop, but still it's really quite staggering when you look at music in terms of these elements.
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