Music, asked by charanlal1973, 11 months ago

Find a few sounds having tempo

Answers

Answered by Anonymous
2

Answer:

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Answered by riteshinamdar1102
2

Answer:

Explanation:

erhaps it's a hangover from the drum machines of the '80s, perhaps it's the influence of dance music and sampled loops, or perhaps it's just laziness, but many people still baulk at the idea of incorporating tempo changes into their sequences. This is a shame, because it's very easy to do in most MIDI + Audio sequencers, and it can be enormously effective.

There are situations where tempo changes can be considered fundamental to a piece of music. Instructions to change tempo are commonplace in classical music, while a lot of progressive rock songs jump around between different tempos and time signatures, and radical speeding up or slowing down is sometimes used as a gimmick in novelty records (think 'Star Trekkin'). In this article, though, I'm going to concentrate primarily on the more subtle ways in which tempo changes can be used to add a certain something to sequence-based pop or rock songs.

As well as the small-scale tempo and dynamic variations I've already mentioned, many live performances exhibit tempo variations on a larger scale, as long as the band isn't playing to a click track. It's quite common, for instance, for a band to take the chorus of a song several bpm faster than the verse, and it's equally natural to drop the tempo a little when going into a quieter part of the song. These are tempo changes that the casual listener won't ever notice, but they have a real effect in making a chorus seem more urgent, or conversely, creating the impression that the band is holding some power in reserve. What's more, it's relatively easy to replicate these effects in a MIDI sequence, and reproducing or even exaggerating them can help to restore some of the 'feel' that's lost by using hard-quantised beats and a limited palette of samples.

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