Computer Music

> Step by step

2. Creating neutral chords that fit with almost any key

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F# 1 This track is in the key of major, but at this stage, it doesn’t matter whether it’s major or minor – what’s important to F#. us is the root note of We’ve got a preset from Cableguys’ Curve 2 CM. Let’s lay a F# long note down – we know that’ll work melodicall­y with our track. 2 From here, we can program more notes, or dial in another oscillator tone. Either way, let’s make this second note fit in an octave (12 semitones) above the original, then add a third note an

F# octave below. These three notes are in unison. F#, 3 As all the notes of our pad are the pad stays in key with the track. Next, let’s try a few oscillator or note combinatio­ns, and see how some fit and some clash. We rest on +7 semitones C#. – that’s a This note interval is also known as a fifth. 4 This fifth almost always sounds good, whether you’re in a major key or a minor key. Try changing all the notes currently on the piano roll, moving them up together by different numbers of steps, but still keeping each pair separated by a fifth. Not everything will work, but when it

F# does, it’ll work for both the (the root)

C# and the (the fifth). 5 We can prove this by changing our track to G major. Now any G notes work with the track, as do D notes (fifths). You can build more chords by removing the root and adding another fifth onto an existing fifth note. Let’s change the G major backing track for a G minor one – everything stays in shape. 6 Another neutral note option is the fourth – that’s five semitones up from

F#, the root note. In our original this is B; in the G track, it’s C. This works partly because moving five semitones up from the root is the same as moving seven semitones down from it. Fifths and fourths will play nice no matter what key you’re in.

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