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ASCAP & AI
by John Lawrence Schick - 06/26/26 05:46 PM
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Riot Fest
by Gary E. Andrews - 06/21/26 10:51 PM
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Joined: Sep 2011
Posts: 696 Likes: 1
Top 500 Poster
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Top 500 Poster
Joined: Sep 2011
Posts: 696 Likes: 1 |
If you are in C, the dominant seventh is G7.
But, a common device for a bridge is to modulate to C7, which is the dominant of F, so modulate the bridge to F from there, and to get back to C, use a G7, or Dm7 - G7 to cadence back to C. In harmony, a "cadence" progression is one the establishes a key, which is the dominant, or the supertonic followed by the dominant. So, if you were in C and played C7 ( the V of F ) or Gm7 - C7 ( ii - V of F ) you'd be modulating to the key of F, and the cadence chords cause the ear to anticipate the key change. A good example of this was done by Willie Nelson on his classic song, "Crazy".
That being said, I don't write songs based on "chords", which is a bottom up approach. I, or I try to use a top down approach, i.e., I write a melody, and the melody, if it is a good one, articulates the harmony. However, sometimes, if I'm stumped for a bridge melody, which is a new melody, in truth, sometimes relying on devices can help you get there. So, build up a repetoire of devices and a good way to do that to study how others have done it, so learning a bunch of hit songs of the past is a good thing to do and will help you write better songs. No, I'm not implying infringing, remember, chords are like water, they are a physical resource that no one owns, which is why they can't be copyrighted.
Last edited by pathardy; 01/23/12 10:44 PM.
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