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-   -   How do you describe types of music? (http://cellar.org/showthread.php?t=15188)

DanaC 08-27-2007 06:05 AM

I generally describe music badly.

Flint 08-27-2007 09:24 PM

WWFS?
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by ubergloat
...I keep thinking what Flint will say...

Flint would say "Reggae is backwards" ...
Quote:

Originally Posted by jumbojim
...highlights the upstroke...instead of the down...

My "Reggae" imitation is to play the bass drum where I think the snare should go. And to NOT accent "one" ... (the one drop) ...

And yes, the snare is more like a timbale. I'm not going to crank my heads (more than usual), but everything becomes a RIMshot.

elSicomoro 08-27-2007 10:17 PM

I think all music should be compared in terms to Black Sabbath.

Classical: This is similar to Black Sabbath in that it can be operatic and intense, but doesn't involve loud distorted guitar.

Jazz: Black Sabbath's drummer drums in a jazz style, but jazz isn't as gloomy or apocalyptic as Sabbath.

Etc.

Ibby 08-28-2007 07:27 AM

Ouch.

I'm wearing a Skynyrd shirt today. On the back, it says "support southern rock".

Some chinese girl asked me today what southern rock was. I was at a loss. I tried to explain in terms of allman brothers, skynyrd, etc - drew a blank. described blues influence, musicianship, lots of guitars... drew a blank.

How would you describe southern rock?

SteveDallas 08-28-2007 09:00 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by DanaC (Post 378882)
I generally describe music badly.

Yeah, me too!!

I ought to be able to give a better answer considering that I got a BA in music history and went to grad school for a couple years in music history.

But the bottom line is, music is made up of patterns--different kinds of patterns depending on the kind of music, but still patterns. People who write music put the patterns together in particular ways. If they're hacks, then they're generally copying what other people have done. If they're good, they'll take existing patterns and add something new and different of their own or, in some cases, create completely new patterns.

So if you listen to enough music by a particular person, you get used to those patterns. And even though you may not be able to sit down and diagram it, you think, "Oh, that sounds like the Beatles" or "that sounds like Mozart." It all fits together--what's different depends on what you're comparing. If you're comparing Louis Armstrong and Mozart, it's enough to hear the different instruments. If you're comparing Mozart and Haydn, or Armstrong and Duke Ellington, that's different--they may be using exactly the same instruments and you have to consider other factors like the use of harmony, rhythm, etc.

It's extremely difficult to answer in general, without reference to specific pieces of music.

elSicomoro 08-28-2007 10:18 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Ibram (Post 379220)
How would you describe southern rock?

Equal parts rock, country, blues, alcohol and pot. :)

Perry Winkle 08-28-2007 07:39 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by sycamore (Post 379294)
Equal parts rock, country, blues, alcohol and pot. :)

Don't forget a healthy dose of "the needle and the spoon and a trip to moon."

Drax 08-29-2007 12:54 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Spexxvet
How do you describe types of music?

I don't. I just listen to what I like.

kerosene 08-29-2007 09:58 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Undertoad (Post 378413)
If the beat is 2-4 but not lazy, enforced at 120 beats per minute plus or minus 5, and incredibly rigid and heavily reinforced, it's disco.

Could the same be said about ska? Perhaps it is the "incredibly rigid and heavily reinforced" part that negates ska from that distinction. I always think of ska as a fast version of reggae (even though, technically, I believe it came before reggae in Jamaica.)

Undertoad 08-29-2007 12:49 PM

Ya, disco starts with a bass beat, right ON the beat. (See f's discussion of syncopation.) And it's funny, you know, before sequencers were used to put things firmly on the beat with unnatural precision, disco attempted to do that through careful recording. The result was that people felt it was too simple.

Ben Smith 11-24-2007 08:43 PM

Can anyone tell me who the artist or artists are in a video clip?
 
Hello all! I have been trying to find out who the band is that plays the background music in a video clip from a leadership video series I once attended. I tried the company fiirst, but they had no records and the trail went cold. I am not even sure how to describe the style or Genre of music it is. But it is great music and I would very much like to find out who they are. I can email the clip to anyone who is interested in helping me out here.
Thanks in advance!
Ben Smith:D

Clodfobble 11-24-2007 09:31 PM

99.9% of the time that sort of music is purchased as part of a set of royalty-free music clips. A "leadership video series" will almost never have the money to license unique songs (and if they had, you can bet they'd keep a record of that kind of investment.) You can find hours and hours of generic feel-good background music, just do a search for "royalty free music."

Cloud 11-24-2007 11:33 PM

I'm with Drax. I don't think it matters how you describe or label music, as long as you enjoy it. Like people.

ZenGum 11-25-2007 01:20 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Ibram (Post 379220)
Some chinese girl asked me today what southern rock was. I was at a loss. I tried to explain in terms of allman brothers, skynyrd, etc - drew a blank. described blues influence, musicianship, lots of guitars... drew a blank.

How would you describe southern rock?

"Come back to my place and I'll play some examples for you "

Duhhhhhh!

:welcome:
Welcome Ben Smith!
I wouldn't have a clue, but good luck.

Sundae 11-25-2007 11:22 AM

When I'm now asked what music I like (less so recently, no-one has tried to chat me up) I say Middle of the Road. I'm tired of my paramours making fun of the music I like so I might as well get it out of the way at the beginning. It's music-snobbery in my opinion. I'd never chat someone up and then start belittling their taste in literature!


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