sooshiant Posted May 14, 2013 Posted May 14, 2013 Hi I have a question and I needto know the answer . it will be appreciated if you could tell me about. In somesong specially classics. We have violins play together and they repeat andrepeat a short melody till end of song. What is the name of technique or whatis this short melody name. In rock band we have something like riffs. “Smoke on thewater” is one of best example I need to know about it in classic songs.thanks for your considerations. Best regards Touradj Quote
Guest Kibbletime Posted May 14, 2013 Posted May 14, 2013 ostinato. music on which the technique is based can be called a passacaglia or chaconne depending on the role of the ostinato and other things. if other parts copy the same figure at a different beat or pace and each part plays repetitively it's called a canon. 1 Quote
Ken320 Posted May 16, 2013 Posted May 16, 2013 Actually I've never noticed this technique in classical music, although there is something called a Coda, which is a sort of short recap, or punctuation at the end. But for jazz and pop music, these riffs as you call them are sometimes called a vamp, or just repeat and fade, if this is the case. One example that comes to mind is "King of Pain" by the Police. 1 Quote
DanJTitchener Posted May 18, 2013 Posted May 18, 2013 You could think of it like as a motif, such as the "and-two-and-one" rhythmic motif from Beethoven's 5th. 1 Quote
sooshiant Posted May 22, 2013 Author Posted May 22, 2013 ostinato is what i was looking for. thanks Quote
Ken320 Posted May 22, 2013 Posted May 22, 2013 OK. Yes, ostinato is a repeated phrase, but in classical music - music produced from 1750 to 1830, not ALL orchestral music - it is usually a line that supports a more primary melody. It is not the melody itself. There are exceptions of course. Not quite as banal as Smoke on the water (apologies to Deep Purple fans). If you have an example from classical music, please share it. Listen to the violins in the background here playing an ostinato pattern against the melody Quote
sooshiant Posted May 26, 2013 Author Posted May 26, 2013 my exmples was in pop music because i didnt know what the name is in classic. Ravel's Boléro. is a good exmple look at wiki here. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ostinato thanks Quote
Guest Kibbletime Posted May 26, 2013 Posted May 26, 2013 nothing about the term ostinato suggests it shouldn't be the melody itself. on a trivial level perhaps, where the phrase lasts no more than two beats and where the rhythm primarily forms the basis as in your example, can your conclusion be applicable. a passacaglia uses as support what a chaconne uses as melody. the opposite may be true; opinions differ among theorists. ostinato being the generic name for ground/lead/subject of the respective genre that uses a repeated figure. for examples look up the genres. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_9S1wTuRdgw&feature=player_detailpage#t=448shere the ostinato switches voice at practically every restatement. inner to bass to melody. 1 Quote
Ken320 Posted May 26, 2013 Posted May 26, 2013 I think made a generalization and an opinion, not a conclusion.Your examples are correct. But consider the usefulness of such a broad definition that encompasses any sort of repetition of any length with any and all musical elements. Add to that phrases like "may or may not have" and Wiki's definition loses precision. I have always thought of ostinati as predominantly rhythmic, usually obvious and not synonymous with every type of "repetition." Probably the way I was taught.Similarly, If an Eskimo asks you what the weather is like outside, and you say wet, he might look at you funny and say, Yes, but what kind of wet? Same with repetition. 1 Quote
Guest Kibbletime Posted May 26, 2013 Posted May 26, 2013 i think you're thinking of something else instead of the riff. i always thought of ostinato as a repeating chunk of tune which is pretty obvious and specific. the famous riff in question struck me as the chunk. like your example it's tied to a rhythmic motif only longer. not so much of a stretch from your interpretation is it? wiki's definition essentially means a loop. i think that's pretty specific as well. Quote
sooshiant Posted May 28, 2013 Author Posted May 28, 2013 Exactly I am composing a song as a workshop needs a shortrhythmic melody that keep a rhythm pattern along the song. ok? And I want toknow about it more. I think ostinato is a good explanation. Why the riff is notmy aim ? Because riff is repeatable melody that the song is known by . Somethinglike “smoke on the water” . But I think ostinato is a repeatable motif thatonly helps to rhythm. One of great characteristics of ostinato may be varietyalong the song. You can make many variety of a short melody and apply it to yoursong. Sorry I am not English native so I have many mistakes in my writing andspeaking. I am trying to tell what I am thinking. If I am not in a right wayplease tell me. Thanks for your consideration Quote
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.