I love this video for making a mockery of the classical four chord progression that has been around for a very long time. Its so simple but effective, good analysis.
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Amal Sahay
Posted on 2014-11-10 22:01:34 -0500.
Even outside of foreground/background I like the way this uses flow to actually obscure the music - the transitions are so smooth! Just another way to use flow, akin to the subversions we talked about with Guernica at the start of the class.
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Ivan Wang
Posted on 2014-11-11 19:06:13 -0500.
I agree with Amal in that the flow and transitions were quite smooth and tied the songs together very well. In addition, the song makes use of momentum very well: keeping the same rhythm and same four chords helps maintain audience expectations, while the different pitches of songs add novelty to make it interesting.
I love this video for making a mockery of the classical four chord progression that has been around for a very long time. Its so simple but effective, good analysis.
Even outside of foreground/background I like the way this uses flow to actually obscure the music - the transitions are so smooth! Just another way to use flow, akin to the subversions we talked about with Guernica at the start of the class.
I agree with Amal in that the flow and transitions were quite smooth and tied the songs together very well. In addition, the song makes use of momentum very well: keeping the same rhythm and same four chords helps maintain audience expectations, while the different pitches of songs add novelty to make it interesting.
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