johnoeth Posted September 26, 2009 Author Posted September 26, 2009 Hi there, Would a new one like me be welcome here?Thanks so much in deed. I like rock. Any one wants to share with me, joins now. :thumbsup::thumbsup::thumbsup: I lul'd. Speaking of f hole. I play guitar, and I hear G string constantly. Quote
YC26 Posted September 26, 2009 Posted September 26, 2009 "Violist."cracks me up every time. :P this is true...his habit of turning every word into an adverb is as retarded as his music. I think we are soul mates. Quote
Gardener Posted September 26, 2009 Posted September 26, 2009 "Violist."cracks me up every time. :P Sir Tristram, violer d'amores, tends to agree. Quote
Lord Skye Posted September 26, 2009 Posted September 26, 2009 The old guitarist joke goes "I twisted my G string and busted my nut while fingering A minor... what do I do?" Quote
Qmwne235 Posted September 26, 2009 Posted September 26, 2009 Sir Tristram, violer d'amores Hey, that's my literary reference! Quote
jcharney Posted September 29, 2009 Posted September 29, 2009 where's all the technological funnies? electronic music components have particularly cute names Buchla, Moog, MIDI, Korg, etc. Quote
HeckelphoneNYC Posted September 29, 2009 Posted September 29, 2009 polytonal? 2 keys at once... I think that's the right spelling, but if I'm wrong please correct me:blush: Quote
Tokkemon Posted September 29, 2009 Posted September 29, 2009 2 keys at once... I think that's the right spelling, but if I'm wrong please correct me:blush: He was obviously questioning how it was funny. Quote
Morivou Posted September 29, 2009 Posted September 29, 2009 He was obviously questioning how it was funny. right. ;) Quote
Morivou Posted September 29, 2009 Posted September 29, 2009 2 keys at once... I think that's the right spelling, but if I'm wrong please correct me:blush: Oh... and 2 NOTES? That's harmony! The basis of all music... But, it's more that there is more than one tonal center being used at once... like a C Major and D Major chord sounding together. Stravinsky's famous for it. Quote
johnoeth Posted September 30, 2009 Author Posted September 30, 2009 Oh... and 2 NOTES? That's harmony! The basis of all music...But, it's more that there is more than one tonal center being used at once... like a C Major and D Major chord sounding together. Stravinsky's famous for it. He obviously said two keys. Quote
Morivou Posted September 30, 2009 Posted September 30, 2009 He obviously said two keys. oh... bahahaha. WOW. I am so Piano-centric it's insulting. Sorry, Heckel. I retract my statement. Quote
HeckelphoneNYC Posted September 30, 2009 Posted September 30, 2009 oh... bahahaha. WOW. I am so Piano-centric it's insulting. Sorry, Heckel. I retract my statement. lol. Whatever Quote
Nirvana69 Posted September 30, 2009 Posted September 30, 2009 Oh... and 2 NOTES? That's harmony! The basis of all music...But, it's more that there is more than one tonal center being used at once... like a C Major and D Major chord sounding together. Stravinsky's famous for it. Well, to be technical, his most popular work is almost definitely Rite of Spring and the most famous (and most common) key juxtapositions by far are those of a tritone and semitone apart. The famous maiden chord is an A Minor underneath an Eb dominant 7th (if I recall correctly). Quote
Tokkemon Posted September 30, 2009 Posted September 30, 2009 Yes indeed. Every note of the octonic scale. How cruncy! Quote
Gardener Posted September 30, 2009 Posted September 30, 2009 How can a 7-tone chord be every note of an octatonic scale? Quote
ThomasJ Posted September 30, 2009 Posted September 30, 2009 Oh... and 2 NOTES? That's harmony! A rather important aspect of lots of music... There, all fixed for you :) Quote
Morivou Posted September 30, 2009 Posted September 30, 2009 There, all fixed for you :) nu uh... that's for modern music... Music started out monophonic... then when two notes were played together, that's what started everything. The experimentation wouldn't have started until they could figure out how to make it more complex. At least that's a paraphrase from Shoenberg. :) Quote
johnoeth Posted September 30, 2009 Author Posted September 30, 2009 hemiola, gigue (especially when pronounced gig-ooo Quote
Gardener Posted October 1, 2009 Posted October 1, 2009 nu uh... that's for modern music... Music started out monophonic... then when two notes were played together, that's what started everything. The experimentation wouldn't have started until they could figure out how to make it more complex. At least that's a paraphrase from Shoenberg. :) Well, but there is quite a lot of contemporary music that has no harmonies. (Leaving aside the fact that the term harmony is highly ambivalent in the first place, since it's not clearly distinct from other acoustical properties.) Quote
HeckelphoneNYC Posted October 1, 2009 Posted October 1, 2009 Ha! I was in the middle of class and I lolled Wait... so when your teacher said dischord you laughed, or you were online during class? Please explain, Skye :P Quote
Morivou Posted October 1, 2009 Posted October 1, 2009 Well, but there is quite a lot of contemporary music that has no harmonies. (Leaving aside the fact that the term harmony is highly ambivalent in the first place, since it's not clearly distinct from other acoustical properties.) Right... When I said the basis of all music, I meant the basis for which music was created... Like numbers came before algebra, but now some algebra is a whole different concept with letters standing for numbers... You can have A + B = C - F etc... Which has nothing to do with numbers, but it does. That's how I feel music is. It all started with just notes... And it became something COMPLETELY different. Quote
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