Andalusian Cadence - Cinematic & Emotional tricks
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- Опубліковано 5 сер 2024
- #bassline #cinematicmusic #chords
Everybody's favorite bass line can do more than we expect. Great for blues and rock, with a little twist it can take us to epic cinematic progressions.
00:00 intro
00:24 basics
02:05 Spanish & North African roots
03:24 with the Blues Scale
04:15 Normal twists
06:06 Cinematic twists
07:27 conclusions
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Awesome exploratory tutorial. Well done!
Wow you've got me thinking about a lot more than I ever initially realized with the Andalusian Cadence
I was trying to make a song with this bassline more interesting so I searched UA-cam and found this. Oh my, what a great lesson - thank you for making this.
Really, thank you for this video, especially how you describe changing the function of bass notes in a progression.
It's a powerful idea ... start with an interesting sequence of bass line notes and then experiment with changing their function, which allows the chords themselves to be changed up, keeping the bass line.
Wow the results are fantastic. I almost haven't been able to stop thinking about this process since watching your video! It must be used all over - I bet I've been shown this idea before through the years but I was probably talking and not paying attention.
What I find so great about this video is not so much "what" you're playing, but rather getting a glimpse into your thinking process of how to experiment. The joy of just "seeing what happens" really comes across!
I'm Andaluisian, great video!
the musical phrase you introduce and keep calling rock, to me it screams Hit the Road, Jack!
fully. and so many others!
Great video!
cannot believe it. The first viewer here. Do i get a prize ,... LOL 13aug22 08:04
What theory principles are you using to make the chord replacement decisions? Just any chord with the bass not in it?
Can't edit, *note* not *not*
@@chiefprojectionist517 i get what you're asking. in a word, yes. but of course it's to taste as well. i'm "justifying" the replacement chords with a variety of "explanations," but when it comes down to it, well voiced chords can drift across a mix of modes and scales.
I was going to pass on this video (because IMHO you do too many videos - I go away for a mini-break, come back and I'm already playing catch-up!) But the word 'Andalusian' caught my attention. While I can't claim to understand all of the theory (and it's even worse going to Wikipedia to look up the topic), your style of delivery encourages me to go and play around. So, a few thoughts:
- The last note of the descending bassline, a chromatic shift down, is (I think) out of place, if you consider the minor key, and that's probably what generates the interest / Spanish feel - and moving on from that, I reckon this is what makes interesting music so - the subtle shifts away from what is expected. Of course, do it too much and it's either a mess, or deliberately Avant-Garde.
- I played around and got this progression (using root of C): Cm - G/Bb - Amaj7 sus2 then drop 7th to 6th - G7. I think the variations produce cinematic / film noire / avant-garde effects. Good for composing!
Thank You But, we are not able to see the exact notes, and chords you are teaching!
You need to have a transposing mirror above the keyboard, showing your notes...
I'm sure you've seen Many other's using it to teach.
Noted. since then i've added the keyboard view. please check out some of my other videos!