Enigmata wrote:Hey everyone. This is my first serious topic post on bandmix. I've been composing various genres of music over the course of 10 years. I'm 19 as of now. I started composing songs in the hard rock/heavy metal genre first. I've since been dwelling in a large variety of electronic dance music genres, and I've even worked with ambient music. At this time, I'm working with my heavy metal project again, and I've stumbled across a problem. Like most people who start composing on rock/metal instruments, I can't get out of using the typical key signatures of those instruments. When people think of heavy metal, E and D are constantly occurring key signatures. I've bought a seven-stringed guitar so I can change to B, or tune a half-step down to A#. I still think these are sounds that have been heard before.
I'm looking to take heavy metal to the next level of emotion. I think a lot of the aggressive sound that trademarks the genre is made in production. Alternative key signatures can be used effectively in a way that would express new feelings, other than the overwhelmingly dark ones that most bands express. That drives a lot of people away from the genre. So, my question is; can anyone give me advice on breaking my habit, and/or give me a list of the key signatures and modes, and the way each one uniquely stimulates certain emotions?
Thanks before hand. Hope I get some good answers.
One Approach is to examine your subject/theme. If you want to emote over somebody's death, you'd try to slip in some minors and flats in there... But if you want to celebrate somebodies death, then Both minors and Majors (Less flats.) But Key is only part of it... You can't describe a woman's silky thighs with a texture on the instrument that screams Lizard Scales... Like wise, meter/tempos... If you are chasing down a rabbit, you don't keep the meter and tempo like Moonlight Sonata... or Iron Man.