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Snipergoat View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Topic: Writing Music
    Posted: December 05 2007 at 16:20
Everytime I sit down to write something on guitar I can never come up with anything. I just sit down and mess around and what comes out sounds more random and pointless than the improv section in Moonchild.

I know quite abit of theory but it doesn't seem to help me very much, I just can't think of anything. The few times I have come up with something Ive thought "Ive heard this before"... and it turns out to be a song Ive been listening to recently in a different key or something like that.

Anyway, for people on here who write their own stuff, have you got any tips? How do you go about writing something when you're out of ideas? How do you go about coming up with a riff or chord progression?
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 05 2007 at 16:38
chord progressions should be relatively easy once you've reached a certain level of theory although I suppose you never really plateau. either way listening to both jazz and rock-influenced things paired with continued dabbling with an instrument should eventually teach you how to link together any amount of conventionally disparate chords. it's up to you to find neato or appropriate progressions for your own music because only you know what it sounds like ;)
 
writing melodies is what I have trouble with. either I'm on fire and an improv session turns into songwriting midway through or I can't elicit the simplest pleasing tune from my keyboard under any circumstances whatsoever. maybe it means I have much more to learn (as I'm self-taught this will always be the case) but I partially put it down to the Pratchett-esque theory of cosmic ideas hitting attuned minds - if a melody appears out of nowhere and grafts itself to something you're jamming then it's fated and sunbeam voodoo. so don't take credit, just be thankful ;)
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 05 2007 at 16:53

another thing; if you have even the slightest semblance of a singing voice then going "la-la-la" - even in a quasi-random way (no-one can be entirely random no matter hard they try!) while you improvise - can help you uncover harmonies and odd quirks which work wonderfully together and just generally help you establish your own sound. (I get the feeling that most modern rock bands don't stop to do this and by being all-riffs-all-the-time they sacrifice their own personal musical patterns for the conventional) Even by making mistakes you can glom on to patterns you could use deliberately later on - the simple sixthing of a chord you'd have played straight if your hands weren't so tired could be the key to a composition...

(or a cringe inducing atonal skronk bomb)
 
don't forget that with a guitar or a synthesizer you can alter the sound of your instrument which can help more than you'd think. Likewise, if you're singing along to provoke harmony, try strangling your voice or being amelodic or anything else you're flexible enough to carry off.
 
naturally I'm only mentioning what works for me. maybe you're in search of something far more formal and proven in which case I can't help at all - everything I've discovered might only work for me precisely because I'm not formally trained ;P
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Snipergoat View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 05 2007 at 18:01
Well I certainly won't be doing any singing , ahaha :D


Another thing im not sure about is what notes to use in a riff, like what ones create tension and resolve etc

Anytime I have written a riff ive literally made it one note at a time trying to piece together something that doesnt sound awful.


Edited by Snipergoat - December 05 2007 at 18:06
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 06 2007 at 09:13
Originally posted by Snipergoat Snipergoat wrote:

Everytime I sit down to write something on guitar I can never come up with anything. I just sit down and mess around and what comes out sounds more random and pointless than the improv section in Moonchild.

i'm the same way...and we're not alone: guitarist pat metheny in an interview said basically the same thing you just did.
got a keyboard ?
keyboards are / have been the default tool for composition for several hundred years.
sit at a piano / keyboard and start "noodling"


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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 06 2007 at 09:49
Yeah, there's a piano downstairs. Has afew keys out of tune though :(
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 06 2007 at 10:04
Yeah, I usually get all productive when I have a ready poem/lyrics in front of me. I just start singing them as they would go, and all that practise on jazz progressions really help making a whole song pretty soon. Personally my biggest problem is writing the melody since it's rather hard to play the melody while you stram chords with your guitar. Occasionally it works though, most my songs are guitar solos as with no band that's what they have to be.

Anyway, when you talk about riffs, and how to play them, wel, it depends on what kind of music you're going for. When I make rock it tends to turn into funk-ish always, I play full chords on 3-4 strings and yet make fast changes with just 2 whereas those quick bipadudaa are of course only one note at a time. Several notes give depth, and only using powerchords will be utterly boring as it's basically just rythm then. I like to play around with the guitar.

Well then you might want to consider the structure of the song first. Try and make one that's easy first, like A-A-B-A-B-B... or make it jazz and just play AABA repeatedly. Now make a melodic intro for the song to play before A. Then it's more than easy to play the A as C-Am-Dm-G7 twice and then the second time play the G7 longer. In B just change the rythm or the accents, and for the last B, do a nice modulation ;), and you've got yourself a perfectly common pop song. Most prog are just variations of that.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 06 2007 at 11:08
Originally posted by Passionist Passionist wrote:

Anyway, when you talk about riffs, and how to play them, wel, it depends on what kind of music you're going for.


I suppose the sound im going for is kinda psychedelic / space rock, im not really sure how to create something in that style though... apart from using a ton of delay LOL


Edited by Snipergoat - December 06 2007 at 11:09
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 07 2007 at 03:08
You've given yourself away with the phrase "more random and pointless than the improv section in Moonchild".
 
That section is, IMHO, one of the most remarkable pieces in Rock music - it's not at all pointless, and far from random.
 
Understand how that works as a piece of music that truly communicates, and you may just crack your writer's block.
 
**Plugs own review of ITCOTCK, in which I discuss this piece in some depth** Big%20smile


Edited by Certif1ed - December 07 2007 at 03:08
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 07 2007 at 03:29
Some songs take me three minutes, Some take three months, Just depends on the inspiration.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 07 2007 at 11:58
i usually just sit down at a piano or keyboard and clear my head and just let my  hands do all the work. like stevie ray vaughan said before that he started messing up when he started thinking about it, that's how i am. i know it's not an approach that works for everyone, but you never know, it could work for you since you know a bit of theory, which is always helpful. of course, i rarely end up writing anything that is a "song" in the terms of "verse chorus..." unless i'm with my band and we sit around and jam and then form the best parts of the jam into a song.
and i also  object to the comment about moonchild being random and pointless. Wink
i think it's one of the best songs ever.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 08 2007 at 13:40
I assume you guys all have a metronome on when your writing stuff?


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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 09 2007 at 14:40
Originally posted by Snipergoat Snipergoat wrote:

I assume you guys all have a metronome on when your writing stuff?




i don't, i just keep time (when i want time to be kept) with my head
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 11 2007 at 17:50
I tap my foot I guess, I've never had a metronome and I don't think I ever even needed one. It gets the music kind of, how to put it, forced. At least it doesn't sound normal if you try to fit it in some beats or lines or so to speak. I dunno. Just play, that helps usually :)
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 11 2007 at 17:58
I don't use a metronome either, I just kind know the timings when I feel like keeping track. It's weird.

I remember the first song I wrote was in 21/16 and this was years ago before I was even into prog or knew what a time signature was. I showed it to my friend one day and he was like "Dude! This makes no sense! You're song is in 21/16!!!"

I was like "Huh?" Then I realized a lot of my songs just happened to fall into weird timings. I made songs as jokes and stuff and noticed they were in 5/4, 11/8, 19/16, etc. I guess my mind just works oddly Tongue
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 11 2007 at 18:09
It's kinda funny, no-one that I know uses a metronome exceot my girlfriend, she plays classical piano. I tried to teach her to play jazz, and wrote down some chords and told her to play them. She was going for the metronome, asked what the tempo was and how she should play them. I told her, however she wants to, the most important is that the chords play in the back, and even that isn't important. So she played them as whole notes. And I told her to play something on them to make it sound like music but she had no clue. I've actually seen quite a few splendid players being tought by jazz musicians, mostly to compose and to improvise. I can't believe how hard it can be to those who only know the notes in front of them :)
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 12 2007 at 09:29
Ok, I take back what I said about Moonchild :P

Im just listening to it and I turned the volume way up so I don't forget it's on!
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 12 2007 at 17:26
Originally posted by Snipergoat Snipergoat wrote:

I suppose the sound im going for is kinda psychedelic / space rock, im not really sure how to create something in that style though... apart from using a ton of delay LOL


Delay is good! Star

As a fellow space rock musician, here's what I suggest for coming up with material.  Set some basic parameters (meter, mode, tonal center, etc.), mark them in a notebook or something and then jam on them-- free improv (a la "Moonchild"), rhythmic riffing, soloing, with/without delay/effects/metronome, whatever-- anything goes.  Be sure to record this jamming though, even if it's just with one of those little microcassette recorders; sound quality doesn't matter much, as long as you can listen back to what you played...  Harvest stuff you like from the jams, and then cobble it together as you see fit. 


Edited by nightlamp - December 12 2007 at 17:28
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 12 2007 at 18:57
Originally posted by nightlamp nightlamp wrote:

Originally posted by Snipergoat Snipergoat wrote:

I suppose the sound im going for is kinda psychedelic / space rock, im not really sure how to create something in that style though... apart from using a ton of delay LOL


Delay is good! Star

As a fellow space rock musician, here's what I suggest for coming up with material.  Set some basic parameters (meter, mode, tonal center, etc.), mark them in a notebook or something and then jam on them-- free improv (a la "Moonchild"), rhythmic riffing, soloing, with/without delay/effects/metronome, whatever-- anything goes.  Be sure to record this jamming though, even if it's just with one of those little microcassette recorders; sound quality doesn't matter much, as long as you can listen back to what you played...  Harvest stuff you like from the jams, and then cobble it together as you see fit. 


Sounds good, Ill definitely give it a try Smile
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 12 2007 at 19:15
^^^
I do lots of spacey/acidey stuff.
 
the best way is to come up with a riff, come up with millions of variations of it. play the riff and change it up as you see fit, and then go into somthing random and completly different on the spot, oh and crazy effects are always a bonus.
 
you might also try using alternate tunings it increses origianality and creativity when you have writers block, I wrote my latest space rock number in DAEADF
who hiccuped endlessly trying to giggle but wound up with a sob
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