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Pinch A Rhythm To get Writing Music
Quicker!!
What you should
get from this technique:
After learning this
technique, you should be able to take a song of your choice (or a
combination of songs) and by simply copying the rhythm, create an
original piece of music of your own. I know this sounds a bit like
cheating, and TECHNICALLY it is, but if you read through the exercises
and try it out, you’ll see that it’s a very good way of quickly and
easily coming up with something you can use, and when you add different
notes to an old rhythm, it genuinely does become original.
The Technique:
If you can HEAR a piece of
music then you can WRITE a piece of music. This is one of my favourite
techniques, and it’s SO easy to incorporate that you should have a lot
of fun with this, even if you just experiment with it for a bit.
Basically, this is what you do:
- Take a piece of music you are
already familiar with, and that you like, and write down the rhythm of
it WITHOUT COPYING THE NOTES!
- Add your own notes to the rhythm
- Add harmony, embellishments, and
backing to the piece you’ve just written.
That’s it.
Isolating The Rhythm:
The first thing we need to
do is isolate the rhythm you want to copy. Listen to any piece of music
that you like, and decide on the rhythm section you want to copy.
The easiest way to copy
it, is to either clap or tap it out, or use the “ta-fi-ti-fi” method I
explained earlier.
Once you have isolated the
rhythm, either write it down on your manuscript paper, or record it as
a sequence of taps or claps, but with no melody or harmonic structure
whatsoever. Here is an example:
This example, (below) is
taken from the intro of Mozart’s “Eine Kleine Nachtmusic”. A VERY well
know piece of music, but I BET that had you just listened to the tune
that I created from it, without knowing what I was up to, you wouldn’t
have been able to guess that I’d copied the rhythm. I’ve changed the
individual notes and chords so much that it’s become totally
unrecognisable as the previous tune. Here is the Mozart version:

And here is what I did
with it. You’ll notice that the top line rhythm is EXACTLY the same,
but the notes are completely different:

So if you look at the top
line in the example above, it’s an identical rhythm to the Mozart
piece. What I’ve done there is add some bass notes, (as a harmony,
which we shall be working on later), change the key, and hey presto, we
have a brand new piece of original music!
Just from that simple
example, I’m sure you can see how easy that was to do, and also how
effective it is.
Let’s look at another
example. This is the intro section to the Red Hot Chilli Peppers song
“Don’t Forget Me”. It’s an awesome song, yet the whole thing is built
on a simple rhythm like so:

We shall be going through
this song in greater detail later, but for now, I just want you to
think of the rhythm.
Now I’m going to use
exactly the same technique, but instead of creating some new chords or
melody, I’m going to create a new bass line instead. Now that I’ve got
the rhythm, I simply created a basic bass line using the same rhythmic
structure, again just changing the notes I’m playing.

I could just as easily
have used this rhythm for a bass line, a melody line, a chord
progression, or a vocal line, lead breaks, pretty much anything you
like.
One of the great things
about this technique, is that it doesn’t have to be limited to just one
rhythm from one piece of music either. Let’s say for example you heard
a couple of pieces of music you liked, and thought the rhythm’s gelled
well together.
You can by all means take
the rhythm’s of several sections, from several songs, and incorporate
them into yours, adding individual bars from as many songs as you like,
until you have what you want. Practicing this technique will make you
realise that it’s EASY to create rhythms to bass (like the pun?) your
music on.
What we’ve covered:
- How to take a piece of music and
isolate the rhythm
- How to take multiple pieces of music
and combine the rhythms within various bars to make your own
combination
- Adding your own melody and harmony
to already well known rhythms
Exercises:
- Find five pieces of music you like,
isolate the rhythms and either write them down or clap them out onto
your recording equipment.
- See if any of them make a good
combination (rhythmically only) and combine them if they do.
- Add your own notes to the rhythms to
create something new.
- Create a simple bass line using one
of the above rhythms.
More
Songwriting Books!
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contact me
on my e-mail at:
simon@how-to-write-music.com
Copyright Simon Smith 2007. All rights
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