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- čas přidán 18. 08. 2024
- Time Consuming Ep #69 is a cry for help.
There are some songs I can't understand, and I think it's time for you to help me out.
I've been nice to you, now it's your turn.
'First Steps' original song:
• First Steps
"Porcelain Heart' original song:
• Opeth - Porcelain Hear...
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Intro by Sharon Renold (@sharonrenold on Instagram) and myself
Intro music by Shwesmo (@shwesmo on Instagram)
#musicanalysis #opeth #coryhenry
Glad I wasn't the only one wondering about that Opeth solo 😁
hahahahah exactly
I am sure you have heard that you are in a Swedish metal history documentary in the section about Meshuggah. Made me happy!
What’s the name of the documentary?
@@SK-og2xn hård rock på export
Such a great documentary
@@martinjohansson203 yeah. It was too short!
@@jensmedgaffeln yup, hope there will be more seasons. They "missed" alot of good bands
Porcelain Heart is most certainly a mind boggler, I love it.
it's very simple. It's just 6/7
@@jaakezzz_G you mean 6 over 7?
@Nave Amitay I haven't listened to "The Further Side" in a long time. Thanks for the reminder in your profile picture!
@@maggus_1 No problem! It's a very solid release
@@jaakezzz_G and btw, 112/130 is almost close to 6/7
The solo of Porcelain Heart is based on the triplet subdivision but played in different grouping. If you listen to the song with a triplet subdivided click at 130 without accent it works for both the riff and the drum solo.
3:50 The drumming was quite amusing hehe I replayed it like 5 times
hahahahaha
As for the freakout solo in "Porcelain heart" we just did maybe 20-30 takes. I lost the sense timing and rhythm (too complicated) since Axe is playing all over the place, and couldn't foresee when the part should end. Somehow Axe perfectly understood the "beat" and nailed it a number of times, but it wasn't crazy enough until we got what's on the album. It was basically standing ovations in the mixing room once we got that down. Fucking tricky shit, not studio trickery!
- Mikael Akerfeldt
Very interesting. What interview was this from?
That was my first thought as well: a happy accident in the studio.
@@finkle131 i dont think its an accident. As he said the drummer perfectly understood the beat and nailed it a number of times. The beat is simple actually if you are an experienced rhythm player. It’s just 6/7. What was an accident is the rest of the band staying on time during the section.
Oh! Where can I find that interview?
@@YogevGabay I did some googling and it appears that quote is from a post on Ultimate Metal forum by Mikeal (see post 115 on the forum). Posting the link doesn't seem to work in the comments here, but google the following including the quotation marks and it shows up.
"As for the freakout solo in "Porcelain heart" we just did maybe"
Watershed is my favoriteOpeth album too. A lot of people seem to disregard it as generic and not as innovative as the previous ones but it's very diverse (with the folky, the proggy and the metal stuff in perfect dosages) and I personally love pretty much every track (except for "Porcelain Heart" which I'm not really fond of, but haven't heard in a good while and might give another chance later). Great video btw!
Man it's literally in my top 10 albums, easy.
No idea how people can not like it !
In the Cory Henry song, the keyboard hits you refer to in this video sound very strongly to me as though they are happening on the & of 2 (in a 2-bar or 8-count phrase)
Agreed.....until I tried to listen to the full song. I'm gonna stick to my drumkit and Meshuggah!
Of the three options you guessed for First Steps, I solidly hear option 2. The key to the puzzle is…the keyboard! It’s on the “and” of beat three. The bass line should feel kinda smooth and sassy. Might help after a bit imagining a snare on two and four to really solidify the whole groove.
La Di Da: ahh yes, the old funk “out of context guitar syncopation intro”. The key to this puzzle is the snare, it’s definitely not on the downbeat! It’s on the “a” of beat one and beat three. The kick is firmly on beat one and beat three throughout. The bass line is a little fancy, plays both with and against the kick. Also the bridge at 2:48 has the backup chorus vocals right on beat one, that should help seal the deal!
And finally I think you’re right with the Opeth track!
Yeah i think he got the opeth one too. 6/7 tempo with subdivision modulations
I agree about option 2, that's where I heard it. Just later in the song when that stops repeating for a bit it's hard to track
Andrew my man !!
It's amazing how I can count both LaDiDa and First Steps in like 5 gazillion ways and they all make sense hahahah
Hope you're well my friend !
@@YogevGabay Yoooogev! Thanks man, I’m hanging in there, been hoping you’ve been okay
@@mhledm Yup all good here ! Hope you're well
First Steps strongly sounds like the keyboard hits on the & of 1 and the bassline on the E of 2. I can't really provide a solid rationale for why - that just feels right based on the accented notes in the drum comping, what I typically hear in how keyboard players delay the chords when they comp this type of fusiony material - but it's what immediately stood out to me and still feels the most right.
In "Porcelain Heart", I'm pretty sure Axe did the same thing as Portnoy did on the ending of "Finally Free"; he simply listened to the click while not following it and playing totally freely while still keeping tabs on when to end.
Mate, your cardboard drumming was awesome!
HAHAHAH YESSSSSS
Yogev ma man! In the first song by Cory I hear the one on the 4th note of the bass line, the keys are playing the “and” of beat 3, that’s how it sounds to me :)
Melechhhhhhhhhh
As you said Porcelain Heart is in triplet based subdivision. What I think happens during the solo is the grouping of the triplets changes into groups of 4 triplets (3 groups per bar) and uses the accent as the main pulse. This does not really work out with the ratio of 112:130 however, so I am a little confused. The new grouping makes sense and when I tap along in triplets and change to accent every 4th triplet note, it starts making a lot of sense. When I tap this main pulse into the metronome I get 112 bpm, but the ratio still doesn't make sense to me.
6/7
To me the Cory Henry song clearly sounds like the chords fall on beat 2, not 4. It's true that it could be interpreted in a million ways but I feel that with that interpretation you get the most "idiomatic" groove.
That works for me if you're counting in 8. Synth bass only comes in on the 2nd half of the bar which is prob why he couldn't find the '1'. Oh - just noticed Patrick's comment below lol
Chord stabs are on the "2&"
The bassline of first steps starts on the 2nd 16th of the 2 bar of the 2 bar phrase. The chord during the theme is in the second bar on the 2nd eigth note of beat 4. And the synth theme starts on the one! Or at least to me it sound like that and makes sence. Greetings from austria😉🤘🏻
Yeah for that section in Porcelain heart, Axe is playing in a 6/8 polyrhythm, while the rest of the band plays the same 4/4. If you count 6 beats in the same span of 4 beats in the original 130 bpm, it rounds out nicely.
Oh my god the drum solo, I had completely forgotten that one! It's pretty much my favourite part of the song! I think the explanation is that he simply plays on another internal beat (which is why it makes a bit sense in 112bpm), while still keeping track of where he is in the original beat. It sounds complicated, but it's really just a matter of strong orientation in the original beat, kind of when playing polymetrically over a different time signature.
Thats exactly right. 6/7
Yeah, that sounds like metric modulation.
TELL ME HOOWWWWW
@@YogevGabay have you tried modulating triplets to 16th notes? Basically playing 3 groups of 4 instead of 4 groups of 3 for a 12 note spacing. That’s what it sounds like to me at least.
@@YogevGabay how do you play it? You focus really really hard on the metric your instrument follows. Separate click tracks is a nice way to perform it.
It was great to have you at Freak Guitar Camp!
It was EPIC being there !
Watershed אלבום מעולה!!!
עניין אותי מה כבר יכל לסבך אותך עם אופת', מעניין מאוד.
אישית האלבומים still life וdamnation בין האהובים עלי אי פעם
אין על הלהקה הזאת
to me, the first one is pure feels, super jazz interpretation levels. the solo... i think the solo from opeth is the drummer being a drummer. best to follow the guitars on that one.
That means you CAN figure out Marrow... and that is IS incoming... mmmmm...
HAHAHAHAHAHAH OH NOOOOOOOO
You're right.
I'll do a "songs I can't count" part 2 hahahaah
oh man I'm so glad the drum solo from porcelain heart got you too! makes me feel much less stupid. he moves the feel around so much it's so weird to count
First Steps is definitely adding or taking away some 8ths because I'm getting the keys on the and of either 3 or 4 (I was counting 7) and then it starts to be on the down.
if your idea of the bpm change is correct, a possibility would be to consider at first sixteenth triplets at 130bpm. Each will have a 780bpm tempo. Then you play them in groups of 7, and that would give you the 112 bpm feel. It sounds like metric modulation to me.
That’s the way I see it, too. It’s like a poly-tempo syncing up after 7 beats of one and 6 beats of another.
1. For me, the piano hits on the Cory Henry one feel natural when played on the 'and of 3'.
2. The Opeth one: maybe some sort of "free floating", rhythmic-ish pyramid thing? It does makes sense (to my ears) that he changes subdivisions before the crash accents, hence the rushing feel.
Pretty sure it’s a 6/7 tempo with subdivision modulations.
@@jaakezzz_G: I agree! It does sound like a 6-7 and even 8(?) subdivision mod.
I KNOW this wasn't intentional, but the Opeth example is at 130. 130 ÷ 5 x 4 = 112. So he's taking 4 5ths of a whole note, then making that the new quarter note. Wild.
I think I may know what is happening in the Opeth drum solo. Since the song is in 4/4, and is played in a triplet feel, it's basically a 12/8 time signature. For the whole song the drums play the groove as 4 groups of 3 triplets. I believe what is happening in the solo, is that the drummer starts playing it as 3 groups of 4 triplets. I may be totally wrong, but I think it might just be a different feel.
Yeah, I also wrote a similar comment and my guess is the same. Then I saw your comment. I am very inclined to believe this particular theory.
Yep.
when i improvise playing drums i play along doom metal and change the feel. THIS sounds just like that. change of feel to spice things up
5:45 - Ooohhh I have an idea (maybe) as to what's going on with this supposed random tempo that works.
They take the 12 total notes (or 4/4 in triplets) per bar, and they change where the downbeat/click is! It's hard to explain how I see/hear it haha...
I visualise it like so:
- || 1 . . | 2 . . | 3 . . | 4 . . || is the original grouping of down beats in the 12/8 (numbers mark downbeat, dot marks quaver)
- For the solo, they then turn it into this
- || 1 . . . | 2 . . . | 3 . . . ||
-It's the same quantity of notes, yet different accents, so it's kinda like a metric modulation?
Who agrees/disagrees? I thought I'd share how I saw some method in the madness haha - Though I would have never thought that a new tempo was thrown into that drum solo! Crazy catch Yogev! Love your content as always!
Thanks Daniel !
And I was thinking the same, but I checked it a few times and I think I ruled that method out! I'll check again hahaha
@@YogevGabay The solo might not even be to click! He probs modulated sliiiightly out with no click to guide him, so they 'lost sense of rhythm', yet while also holding a 3/4 in a different tempo 🤣 Crazy good musicians!
I think there is a time concordance between the 9 bars at 130 and the 112bpm you found. I think you're right, they just decided to find a tempo that wuld end up matching in duration and shoved it in. Completely off beat.
That shift to 112 is a pretty slick trick; I'm stealing that for a future song for sure!
hahahahahaha dibs for playing on it!
First steps is 15/16 (2nd last note of the moog bass is the 1)
IE the 2nd accent that yogev highlights, except that is the 4, not the 1
The 15/16 feels like it cuts the 3short
Regarding Porcelain Heart, Joe Crabtree a drummer here on CZcams transcribed the solo many years ago. I never read it though, but the “teaser” for it is still up on his channel :)
I've seeennnnnnn. Maybe I'll try to get a copy
@@YogevGabay by the way, I saw a few seconds of you on Swedish national television a few days ago lol. From a show on the swedish metal scene.
@@Si-Al-Ti Any chance you can get a hold of that video ? I wanna see it
@@YogevGabay Hey, I just uploaded the clip to my channel, download it if you want to have continued access to it, as I don't know if it will stay public. I only included the Meshuggah part of the program used google to translate the Swedish subtitles :)
bumping this in case you missed it
To me, on the first song , I feel it like an anacrusic melody with the beat one is clearly the 4th note (it's longer also). Once the keyboard is in, it makes it even more clear to me. On the Opeth song I think the drummer is just embellishing the guitar melody, soloing freely on each measure and changing the subdivision/tempo but always matching with the important beats of the melody/
That opeth drum bit sounds fucking great. They did all sorts of silly stuff on that album, like when they detuned that guitar while it was playing at the end of Burden
I simply LOVE that solo
For the 2nd song, I think they’re still in the original tempo and subdivision but the drummer feels it as 3 groups of 4 rather than the 4 groups of 3. Giving it a slower 3/4 feel. But then plays 4/4 over the top of that. So some kind of polymeter for the drum solo ‘tempo’ when nothing has really changed. Then the drummer just plays around with it doing other subdivisions because why not.
I think in First Step the emphasis is made towards the third note of the group. It's a very stylish clash of ways of thinking/listening to it from part of the musicians involved, for sure.
In Axe's solo, I think I once heard Mikael say that Axe was recording the drums to the song and suddenly just went full solo mode after that beatswitch and actually landed the trick, but being a drummer, and having heard and played the part a couple dozen times (you played the solo really well, too!! ^^) I think ultimately it's about that thing that drummers can do. A little bit of improvised magic which makes no apparent sense if you try to break it down afterwards.
I love your channel btw :B :B :B !!!!!
If they did use superimposed tempos on the Opeth track, it may be a nod to Frank Zappa who superimposed solos from different tracks in different tempos on a number of occasions.
Have you heard the new Jinjer album? The title song (Wallflower) is one of the weirdest songs I’ve heard recently in terms of time signatures. It doesn’t seem to ever stick to a single time signature for more than a bar or two, yet somehow the band manages to stay together and keep track of it.
At first listen, I would say it sticks to 5/4 most of the time, but the eighth notes are partitioned into different patterns all the way through (the bass part in the intro, for instance, alternates between 3+3+4 and 3+2+3+2), and instances of 6/4 replace the 5/4 here and there (the first instance being around the 0:45 mark). Very interesting song all the way through, I would indeed enjoy Yogev taking some time to explain it all the way through!
Nope I didn't yet !
Will do asap !
Wahoo! You're back!
Listening a bit to Cory Henry and his composition style, it looks like those electric piano chords might be on the 2,5. So that would make the first beat the 7th circle on your drawing.
My explanation for porcelain heart is "unleash the kraken"
HAHAHAHAHHA
Porcelain Heart: he Vinnie Colaiuta’d that shit. Metric-modulation.
To me Porcelain Heart sounds like he’s
modulated the triplets into 16th notes. This would explain why the slower click lines up (not sure what the math would be to figure out the new implied tempo).
Maybe in porcelain heart it becomes 7/8 with half tempo? there's also some consistency with the snare alternating with the hat. That might also make no sense, but maybe there's something there?
With First Steps, I hear the one falling on the second-to-last note of the bassline. Keyboards hit the And between 2 and 3.
The La Di Da groove goes like this:
||1 - - da 2 - - - 3 - - da 4 - - -||
The 'da' is the snare. The bass guitar is often coming in on the last 16th note of the bar before it - which I have always called a 'push'. It's a very cool groove, but it doesn't throw me like, say, Stengah does.
Anyway I only had a quick listen, so my apologies if I am wrong.
Yo, do you know the band Sleepytime Gorilla Museum? There is a cool break in the song "1997 (tonight we're gonna party like it's)" and some other songs have cool poly-stuff...
I've heard about them from people in the comments here, I'll check it out !
I think you will have a fun time with Reasons by Pain of Salvation.
Or maybe Restless Boy with its quintuplets and septuplets ;)
@@milimaximus1624 Panther has some gems when it comes to rhythm. But reason is interesting to me because it feels like a freestyle more than a structured song.
MIND BLOWING!!!! LOVE it!!
After the first few beats in the opeth try tapping the drag triplet. So modulate to the drag triplet. It also explains why the solo is played in 3.
Interesting. 112/130 = 0.86.
130*2/3 = 86.6.
Your math here is irrelevant. 86 is a percentage not a tempo. 112 is 86% of 130. The song has nothing to do with 86 bpm. Unfortunately 86% isn’t an even fraction, so 112 must not be the intended subconscious value.
The reason it’s played in 3s is because it’s sixtuplets over seventuplets. 6/7 =~ 0.86
Wow my friend your cinematography had some improvemnt! 🤘🤘
Well thank you ! And yeah, if you look at my older videos, DAYUM they were weirdddddd
I think the problem is rather trying to classify all songs in the rhythmic system we have. Especially the latter song just seems like an improvised fill part to purposely confuse the listener, probably there is no deeper logic where everything makes sense.
He might just be following the same *beats per second* as the rest of the band (6.5bps), but playing them as 3 sets of 16th notes instead of 4 sets of triplets:
1 2 3 1 2 3 1 2 3 1 2 3 (band)
1 2 3 4 1 2 3 4 1 2 3 4 (Axe)
During the second half at least you can hear plenty of hits regularly line up. I think adding to the confusion is that he's possibly speeding slightly up and down for effect, and also the first half is just extra chaotic Set your metronome to 390bpm, and see if it lines up with both 130bpm x 3 (triplets) and 97,5bpm x 4 (16th notes)?
The last but one note of the First Steps bass riff sounds like beat 1 to me, with the keys chiming on two and a half. I'm not competent, but mention this purely to add to the diversity of opinion :)
For Porcelain Heart, I'm stuck between two specific explanations (it might be a combination of both)
When poking at it, it immediately felt like 7/6 to me. The math, if I am doing it right, comes out as 111.428 bpm, but the end of the section doesn't really line up with that.
the whole section is ultimately 36/32 beats, 115.5bpm, but that also doesn't feel 100% right.
I think he uses the 7/6 polymeter and then slightly changes in the last measure so that it can meet the rest of the band for beat 1 of the new section.
It sure is an interesting drum solo though.
I hear something close to second one. thank you for the explanation
I think you can just represent 112/130 as a fraction, which is also decimal form .861. Now considering his math might be a beat or two off of the real bpm, we can look at what is nearby. 7 against 8 polyrhythm would be .875, and seems like it'd be easier to internalize since you would be drumming your 7 against a 4/4 (8/8) pattern. However another person was saying 6 against 7 which in decimal form is .857, and it seems a possibility though I don't know how the drummer centers himself in hearing 7 over 8/8 and then playing 6 against it all.
Well we can certainly agree on this, this IS a freaking amazing solo !
Another very confusing riff imo is the section that starts at around 6:02 in Never Seen/Future Shock by BTBAM. I just can't figure out what's going on here lol
Having worked with too many jazz musicians I think it is safe to assume that they don't know themselves...
hahahah BUURRNNNN
I feel (and played) porcelain heart as a free floating drums that does respect the total measure time but plays freely over that period, respecting the main beats.
So it's not meant to be measured in a conventional way, it is meant to create chaos and dissonance in a specific period of time
Its easier to play than to understand.
The understanding is simply 6/7
It sounds to me like the keys hit on the AND of Three on the 'First Steps' song
Brooooo when you played the cardboard drums 😂
Even playing that was difficult hahahahaha that solo is fire
"teaching guitarists about polyrhythms" had me laughing tears
I hear the bass line in first steps starting on the e of 1 and the chords on the + of 3
I have literally no idea what Dillinger Escape Plan's "Dissociation" closing track is doing for meter, it feels like there's a stutter or glitch moment that sneaks inbetween measures...
Would definitely love yogev's take on some Dillinger stuff
For "First Steps" I hear the keyboard lick starting on the "e" of 2, so the top note of the lick is beat 3. (1-and-2da-da-da-DAH da-da Da Da ) This puts the chords on the and of 1. Seems, though, that he's pretty loose with the time on this tune. The lick appears to start on the downbeat occasionally.
Opeth sounds to me like the drummer is simply freestyling over the vamp.
I think both of these songs have the same thing to them, which is that they were probably performed without a metronome (or at least without regard to one).
Human error can be frustrating to encounter when you’re trying to objectively analyze a song, but it can also be enlightening to know that these musicians managed to do something great while breaking one of the most fundamental rules.
I still believe that the tools do/will exist to be able to perfectly analyze what’s going on in both of these songs, however I don’t think the answer is ever going to fully satisfy us the same way that most of your other videos do.
P.S. I think the Cory Henry tune is felt starting on the ‘e’ of 3, aka the 1 is on the second to last note of the bass line.
I may be ignorant, but ... the Opeth song sounds like drummer decoupled from the rest of the group and is in "free time" ...
For me, the cory henry one is most definitely a 2 beat pickup, so the longest sounding bass note is the one (like you stated in your third example), making the chord hits land on the 2
the other one…. 🤷♂️
After more careful review I am counting 31/36, which makes a LOT of sense. As soon as you proved 112 to be an accommodating tempo I knew it was going to be a polymetric hypermeter. 6/7 makes the most sense, but doesn't fit perfectly, leaving some room to wonder what is going on. I suppose a 42 beat section would have been too long, counting as over 10 bars of the original tempo, so they went for the next common multiple in descending order (30/35), but 30/35 is a very "odd" feeling conclusion at again 10 bars of 3/4 or ending somewhere other than 1 in the 4/4. BUT... 35 is super duper close to 36, which is a very nice multiple of 4. So let's just add 1 on both sides: 31/36. Now just freestyle drums in a 6/7 feel for 9 bars of 4/4. GGEZ
For the 1st song, I feel like it's definitely the 1st option. But it also feels like there's some kind of an extra note in there somewhere. Like a measure of 17/16 (4/4 + a 16th note) or something. And for the Opeth one, I'm sensing a bit of a tempo change. (watched more of the video) Yup, it seems that you came to the same conclusion.
Check out the solo on 'Dam That River' by Alice In Chains, that's a tricky one too!
Have you heard the outro of the "King's X" song "We Were Born To Be Loved" ? I have no clue how they count the breaks
try 111.42857 instead of 112 and it might line up better at the end. I think the drummer was instinctively playing 6/7 without knowing. It's not that crazy really but pretty awesome.
I have a few questions about this. Are you saying he’s playing 6 over each 7 eighth notes? Thus creating a polymeter effect? Or is he playing 6 and 7 both over 8 eighth notes? I noticed that a 7 against 8 polyrhythm would put the tempo of the 7 at 113.7. Could that be another possibility?
@@SelfPropelledDestinyactually yes. And that might even explain the “speeding up at the end” portion even better.
@@SelfPropelledDestiny if you actually count the whole thing it's actually 31/36 ... damn
I also feel like the drum solo is played 'freely'', still hitting some important beats to match the background, I don't find it that weird. Reminds me a lot of trading 4ths pr 8ths in jazz, where you in the comp mostly follow along in the universal bpm, and the drummer can go in and and out of tempo but still end up on the beat in the end.
Pretty sure it’s just a 6/7 rhythm. The tempo is 6/7 the backing beat.
@@jaakezzz_G what do you mean? Do you mean that the 130bpm pulse is split into septuplets and then metrically modulated by treating 6 of them as the new beat? I find that really unlikely, 130bpm septuplets are the equivalent of 16ths at 227.5bmp. Nobody can make and hear complicated rhythms at that tempo
Exactly my thoughts !
@@beanzthumbz “nobody”? Pretty sure that’s just you! My brain does it by force all the time and I often have to tell it not to to stay “in time”.
@@beanzthumbz you have it correct though. 6 for every 7. Very simple.
the song that completely breaks my brain is nightingale by haken. i can't for the life of me figure out what's going on in the final 90 seconds of the song. @YogevGabay can you do a video about it? :D
Will check it out !!!
1st song: first 3 notes of the bass keys are anticipatory and land on the downbeat on the 4th note BUT the downbeat is beat 3 and not 1. And when the first chords come in they land on the and of 1. And the song just goes on this way into the end. The drums give it away. However, there's really no matter of fact as to where the 1 is or what time signature any song is. But if you wanted to notate it for others to play, that's by far the easiest interpretation to sight read. 2nd song... no idea.... sounds like an open solo that just resolves to land on the 1 at the end of the section...
I want to think mikael just asked martin to play “whatever you feel” and he did this
In the Cory Henry song, it feels to me like the keyboards are on the upbeat of 1. So all instruments rest on the downbeat.
Maikael Akerfeldt isn't a big music theory nerd. He writes all the songs for Opeth. It was most probably a happy accident. Or he may have intended for a slower guitar riff to play at that section but just looped the guitars instead
HE COMMENTED ON THE VIDEO
On the Opeth drum solo maybe it's best to ignore the rest of the band and see how much the drum beats deviate off the 2nd or 3rd beat to calculate if he's playing for example quintuplets, septuplets or other tuplet variations over the triplet or 4/4 groove. It sounds to me (and I'm quite possibly wrong) that he's increasing and decreasing the tuplet values in waves. I don't have any education in this so I'm just using my ears and some kind of "amateur logics".
Dude, ears and 'amateur logic' is what I'm basing this channel on.
The opeth one certainly feels like it has a relationship to the A tempo. Perhaps the A tempo and the solo tempo both be modulations from a third unheard tempo? Or perhaps there's just some ridiculous tuplet polymeter going on.
Your cardboard drums sound way better than mine.
Practice makes perfect dude
Not entirely sure but isn't the opeth one modulated? If you count sextuplets on top of the riff, then modulate it to 16th notes from there, then that's the feel axe is playing in the solo?
Yea! The background music is Flummoxed from the camp!
YYYEEESSSSSSSSSS
I hear the keyboard hits as being the and of four. But I'd have to listen to the whole song since you said that it changes 🤷
The 112 was what I heard as well but I thought that it was closer to being some kind of polyrhythm in relation to the original 130 (no idea what it is but it had the feel of grabbing the 3 in a 4/3 or equivalent) I would try putting those two click tracks next to each other and see if anything pops out from that
I think you can just represent 112/130 as a fraction, which is also decimal form .861. Now considering his math might be a beat or two off of the real bpm, we can look at what is nearby. 7 against 8 polyrhythm would be .875, and seems like it'd be easier to internalize since you would be drumming your 7 against a 4/4 (8/8) pattern. However another person was saying 6 against 7 which in decimal form is .857, and it seems a possibility though I don't know how the drummer centers himself in hearing 7 over 8/8 and then playing 6 against it all.
@@SelfPropelledDestiny awesome analysis!
Oh nice angle, I like that thought process.
Are those Azul and Mage Knight I spy in the background? :O
HAHAHAH wow nice catch!!!
It is Azul, but it's Western Legends beneath it hahahaha
idk man I feel like the solo on porcelain heart sounds better and more fitting on the 130 bpm. maybe it's just me. I think he's doing some 4:5 polyrhythm or something like that. the 112 didnt sound like it's sitting on it.
Out of all the songs Ive heard so far, I have to stay the one that has confused me most is from Final Fantasy 13-2, its called eternal fight and has such a weird stilted feel to it
It’s in 7…the Corey Henry thing. Listen to the stomped hihat. Also, the Lowest synth note is the 1. The pick up is after the 6.
I counted it that way a few times, but occasionally it seems there is an extra beat in some measures. Are you able to count the whole song in 7 and it works out?
iIn 7? you sure? If so, I messed up BADD hahaha
@@YogevGabay Nope. My bad. I am sorry. It is in common time…although time is relative. It’s a 2 bar phrase. Pick up is after the 3 of the 2nd bar (i.e. 1,2,3,4, 1,2,3)E&A,4 &A|1 & (2,3,4,1,2,3)E&A,4 &A|1 & (parentheses being silent of course). Although he flubs the 2nd phrase, and overall it is kind of loose. Thank you for your awesome videos Yogev!
How does one communicate musical terms with a qwerty keyboard? I dunno.
That tent is familiar...and the background music :)
HAHAHAHA I wonder where from ??
Could it be that opeth porcelain heart does metric modulation since the tempo changes?
On the topic of beat 1 ambiguity in regular songs, I am curious whether you think He's The Greatest Dancer by Sister Sledge starts on beat one or beat 3. I always thought it started on beat three, but a lot of people I know seem to count it differently. I wonder if it has anything to do with Will Smith🧐
sometimes rhythm doesn't have to be divided into units and closely analyzed, it can be free flowing and beyond calculation. just my guess.
can you please do a review of any thing that dillinger escape plan does. or a band called the locust. youd be my hero
I think the Opeth one is just very intense metric modulation?
Probably ?!
Can you try to analyse Craw's "Bodies for strontium 90" songs, like "Is it safe" ?
That's a rather confusing drum solo alright. If we assume your observation is right (130 vs. 112 bpm), then that corresponds with a ratio of 7 to 6 if my math is rigth. In other words, 6 subdivisions at 112 bpm last the same length as 7 subdivisions at 130 bpm. So it's some sort of 7 against 6 voodoo as far as I can tell.
If you assume I'm right, you're braver than I am !
I'm still not convinced in any direction, I'd REAAALLY want to meet the guy and ask.
I feel the chords in first steps as being on the and of 1
העם דורש פרק על טיפקס ו/או להקת שפתיים!
אפשר גם משפחת אלייב ו/או השמחות!
אללה טיפקס!
אני יכול לדבר שעה על "אנשים מגולגלים בתוך נייר עיתון" חחחח
@@YogevGabay למשפחת אלייב יש כמה שירים במקצבים בוכריים היסטוריים
לשמחות יש קטע אינסטרומנטלי בשם קוקול טומין עם קטע תופים כיפי ביותר
IA's camp song Flummoxed playing in the back ground. I love it. It was great to see you at the Freak Guitar Camp Yogev. It would be great to hear your thoughts on the madness of it all.
For the songs. I don't have any specific suggestions, that's not my jam, it's yours. =) I am however going to stretch my philosphical legs a bit.
Just like I asked you at the camp, somewhat philosophically. I am a bit of the opinion (unschooled in music, as I am) that meters, subdivision and pulse need to be communicated clearly to listeners for there to be a "correct answer".
There are other competing pulses and meters that might also describe a section possibly correct, right? Although they might complicate things. As long as they fit within a count, right. Right?
In this same school of thought, Before being able to observe the solar system more deeply and clearly Ptolemy (Ptolemaeus), in Greece, about 100, 200 years after 0, or AD; formulated mathematical descriptions of the solar system as a geocentric system, i.e everything rotating around the earth. We now know that It is simply much much more complicated, and some errors arise here and there.
But it was the best he could do with the "information communicated". To my knowledge later scholars have built upon this description as an exercise, to fully describe the rotations of the solar system bodies as a working mathematical, geocentric, system. Those descriptions actually work but are hideously complex, though. =)
Later, when observations continued by Copernicus, Galileo and Kepler, they used the geocentric view as a basis to make predictions, so in some fashion, it was correct. Out of this rose an even more correct and more importantly, simpler description. Hence the heliocentric view became the dominant one.
So while there might be a factually correct answer, as intended by the artist. BUT, and this is my point, if that idea is not communicated, then it is anyone's best guess and that might be just it. To be ambiguous and open to interpretation. To take some artistic license and maybe be a little random.
Long winded thought on just accepting the not knowing. Not everything needs a factual answer and not everything can be factually answered; yet. Too many times people pull their hair to quantify or quantize stuff that might not be quantifiable or quantizable.
But I still need you to continue describing stuff that I can't myself figure out.
Be good! Peace!
Oh yes! The camp was indeed amazing.
So as for communicating beats clearly, I don't necessarily think it should be spoon fed to the listener, and also, there might be cases where the answer may be a bit fluid. I just like to know what the though process was behind it.
Even if its: I just felt it man.
And yes, I agree with "Not everything needs a factual answer and not everything can be factually answered", and I'm not trying to force my way of thinking on this solo, or any of the music I discuss here, I 'm just curious to understand the mindset behind it. And if I can learn something in the process, that's even better !
@@YogevGabay I hear you.
To be frank, in hindsight, really, I don't actually know if what I wrote made much sense. Guess I just felt the need to write something that felt profound: (**Takes puff** Woah, that's deep maaan.).
All's well that ends well. Be good. Peace!