Music Composition is a comprehensive series of videos where i explain how specifically can you compose music. Most of the techniques are rule-based, although in some videos i depart from them and talk about composition in general.
Music presented in this episode was directly and heavily inspired by Arvo Pärt - Spiegel im Spiegel , what translates to "Mirror in the Mirror". The music itself is 100% patterned, something that is the easiest to compose in rule-based music (but not easy in general). Early episodes of this series will be about getting familiar with the simplest rules you can design.
Arvo Pärt - Spiegel im Spiegel :
https://youtu.be/aS7qmtQLSyY
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Relevant Hashtags:
#ArvoPärt , #RuleBasedMusic , #HowToComposeMusic
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZnVuYzz_Xnw
Music Composition is a comprehensive series of videos where i explain how specifically can you compose music. Most of the techniques are rule-based, although in some videos i depart from them and talk about composition in general.
The core idea was inspired by Arvo Pärt - Solfeggio. This rule-based music has very few patterns and throughout the analysis it shows it's harder to construct than patterned rule-based music as i said in previous episodes. I also managed to create this opus with a self-imposed Beethoven challenge!
Arvo Pärt - Solfeggio
https://youtu.be/iiziAD8VUd0
Like this video, subscribe to me and turn the notification bell on, so you don't miss out on any future video from me!
My music merch on RedBubble POD : https://rdbl.co/2WQvjB9
Relevant Hashtags:
#ArvoPärt , #RuleBasedMusic , #HowToComposeMusic
EDIT : Huge apologies everyone, my marking of intervals in this video was slightly misleading. When i said "fifth interval" , i meant "the interval with name Perfect fifth", same goes for everything i mentioned like "7th interval" is "the interval with name either minor seventh or major seventh", in case of c major scale it would be major seventh. The guide of "moving up 4 spaces" when counting 5th and same for all other intervals like +6 spaces when its 7th is also slightly misleading. It applies only to C Major Scale.
Here is a full explanation of how intervals work and how are they marked. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Interval_(music)
In the context of all 12 notes, "perfect fifth" interval doesn't mean you go up by 4 spaces but by 7. Be aware! Thank you and apologies.
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PbFK_WPo_Qk