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I'm a perfectionist so I went back and cleaned up my example. Hopefully you can hear what I'm trying to do with it. It's really hard to put it down into words so I'm not even gonna try. I tried to go back and forth between on-beat and syncopation with both basses.
The other interesting thing although you'd have to check out my sequencer to see it, is that the basses are setup in 6 bar phrases, not 4. Not sure how that happened, but the 4 bar phrasing didn't fit at all and sounded weird. Needed the extra two bars on the root. The definition of syncopation might hold some clue...
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For other uses of the same name, see Syncopation (disambiguation).
In music, syncopation includes a variety of rhythms which are in some way unexpected in that they deviate from the strict succession of regularly spaced strong and weak beats in a meter (pulse). These include a stress on a normally unstressed beat or a rest where one would normally be stressed. "If a part of the measure that is usually unstressed is accented, the rhythm is considered to be syncopated."[1]
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Also also, someone said that it's more of a "Techno beat."
Interesting...this might explain why "Oompa loompa" is associated with trance eh? Those genre specific identifiers are funny things.
http://www.mediafire.com/?yewyoyd0dmi
Last edited by theterran on Mar-27-2010 at 06:12
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