Rhythmic Parallax in Car Bomb's "Blackened Battery" - SMT 2020 Paper Presentation

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  • čas přidán 15. 11. 2020
  • Not my normal type of video. Paper for the Society of Music Theory (Virtual) Annual Meeting 2020.
    Full transcription, paper script, and examples can be found here:
    www.academia.edu/44373261/Rhy...
  • Hudba

Komentáře • 203

  • @quantum_beeb
    @quantum_beeb Před rokem +49

    Car bomb is the most brutal band I’ve ever seen live. At age 32, it had me jumping off bars and swinging like I was 17

    • @sertaysakizoglu5553
      @sertaysakizoglu5553 Před 7 měsíci

      Car Bomb was the last band I've witnesseed before the onset of the pandemic.
      and oh boi, these rapid time signature changes tickled my brain so hard, I was left with tears

    • @cowabungabonzai
      @cowabungabonzai Před 2 měsíci

      I’m 38 and I just saw them for the first time. Couldn’t turn my neck the best day from head banging so hard haha

  • @Tyler-zs3ry
    @Tyler-zs3ry Před 3 lety +106

    Another incredible video. It feels good to see metal get this kind of respect; it doesn't happen nearly often enough.

  • @nocakewalk
    @nocakewalk Před 3 lety +148

    I just realized you're combining all your roles of listener, transcriber, composer, performer, academic, and video creator to bring us this incredible video. The level of detail in your analysis is just intensely satisfying :D.
    Thanks!

  • @jasonland2528
    @jasonland2528 Před 2 lety +21

    Ive always said Car Bomb is one of those bands that, on first listen, makes you go "Wtf?". Then once you start to grasp what they are actually doing, you go "WHAT THE F!!"

    • @xyster1111
      @xyster1111 Před 2 měsíci

      I ABSOLUTELY ADORE THEM.....❤❤😍😍

  • @TheVenusProjectInfo
    @TheVenusProjectInfo Před 2 lety +36

    In an interview Elliot said that Greg will write the music with midi drums and then send it to him as audio only; which Elliot interprets it however he wants. He said they often disagree with what's happening within their own songs but learn to play it all together live before recording. Mike also said once the music is written he just listens to it and interprets it how he wants and sings over it.

    • @metalmusictheory5401
      @metalmusictheory5401  Před 2 lety +8

      Oh that's super interesting, I haven't seen that interview! I've talked to them a little and will talk to them a lot more when I get deeper into my dissertation work!

  • @ThePwned201
    @ThePwned201 Před 3 lety +43

    I can only imagine the amount of time spent transcribing

  • @DarkItachi1
    @DarkItachi1 Před 3 lety +72

    this is Akward Metal Rick Beato to me now
    DONT @ ME

  • @michalwlosik3544
    @michalwlosik3544 Před 3 lety +59

    It's amazing how a layperson can assume Car Bomb is a Meshuggah ripoff while the whole rhythmic modulation fun / perceived fluid tempos make it like a completely different universe. Funnily enough, at the same time, I somehow tend to recommend the band as "more catchy" Meshuggah

    • @TheSquareOnes
      @TheSquareOnes Před 3 lety +10

      When Centralia came out I tried to push it on anyone who would listen as "like Meshuggah and Dillinger Escape Plan had a baby," they really do stand alone until the rest of the world catches up though.

    • @miserirken
      @miserirken Před 2 lety +2

      @@TheSquareOnes "like Meshuggah and Dillinger Escape Plan had a baby" i used to do the same lmao. These days Car Bomb is, well, Car Bomb. But in the Centralia/ w^w^^w^w era i really went into the Meshuggah/DEP comparison in a try to introduce my friends into this band.

    • @envirovore
      @envirovore Před 2 měsíci +1

      I often describe CarBomb to those unfamiliar with them but familiar with Meshuggah as "writing better Meshuggah songs than Meshuggah does."
      Very under-rated band IMO.

    • @krackkorn6324
      @krackkorn6324 Před měsícem

      @@envirovore I wouldn't go that far, don't get me wrong Car Bomb is great but they don't have anything like Catch 33

  • @danielhutton3858
    @danielhutton3858 Před 3 lety +40

    As you lead in to an example saying how "the average listener might hear...." I think every time how I'm not an average listener.
    Then you break it all down and I realize just how fantastically average I am.
    It makes me appreciate the music so much more.
    Your work baffles me and fascinates me at the same time. What a blast!

    • @metalmusictheory5401
      @metalmusictheory5401  Před 3 lety +2

      Haha even after spending months transcribing this stuff and playing it and writing this I find myself hearing that way most of the time too! And thanks!

  • @carsonpace4000
    @carsonpace4000 Před 3 lety +33

    Dude, you’re a goddam genius lmao.

  • @isaackmojica8302
    @isaackmojica8302 Před 3 lety +11

    This right here is the greatest Channel about metal composition!!!

  • @met-shuggah3845
    @met-shuggah3845 Před 3 lety +5

    Absolutely phenomenal in-depth analysis of this band's innovative style. This really pieced together a lot of my fragmented thoughts about this band. When I transcribe Car Bomb songs, it's always been a struggle deciding whether or not to actually notate when the metric mods or PPT mods aren't mathematically exact (the expressive exaggeration discussed in the video). Watching this analysis made me realize that if I want to create a fully in-depth transcription of any Car Bomb song, I should include exaggeration cues, and maybe even specify what the average perceived tactus for a given section is, in the often-occurring situation where Car Bomb sheet music is more visually pleasing/readable when the meter isn't necessarily dictated by the commonly felt tactus. Thanks for your hard work.

  • @4Pssf2w
    @4Pssf2w Před 3 lety +3

    Fukkin' a, brother, S+ tier research. My man lookin' sharp as hell too.

  • @Luemm3l
    @Luemm3l Před 3 lety +6

    Calder is somewhat the Neil de Grasse Tyson of Music... his shirt in this video just kinda confirmed that to me.

  • @Samplelord
    @Samplelord Před 3 lety +6

    And I thought I knew my music theory....
    I feel like a caveman watching a video on quantum physics.
    Amazing content.

  • @oakie__doke
    @oakie__doke Před 3 lety +1

    You are so awesome for transcribing this and doing this. Seriously well done, I hope the band gets to watch this.

  • @KingdomKali
    @KingdomKali Před 3 lety +4

    This is amazing. It shows that while someone trying to learn their music, will have their own way of doing it, likely broken down into digestible parts, then pieced together.... It's way different than the band itself understands, writes, hears and plays the music. Which is levels above what most of us can understand. These guys ARE JUST at a higher level than what can be seen, even by folks who love the music. We who love Car Bomb know WELL that they're incredibly high-level, but this just shows they're even more skilled and tactful than we thought.
    You are awesome, man. Not kidding, wherever you're getting your musical education, you've gleamed everything you can from it. And I have no doubt you're gonna get even better. Can't imagine what level you'll be at in just 6 months. Rhythmic Parallax, I love it. I wish I was skilled enough to coin such a term.
    *Boyfriend of the account holder commenting*

  • @michalwlosik3544
    @michalwlosik3544 Před 3 lety +5

    I've just discovered your channel and am so glad you decided to talk about Car Bomb. Great stuff, man!

  • @FreepowerUG
    @FreepowerUG Před 3 lety +6

    Super sick - your visual and audio aids really help explain these complex ideas. Constantly referencing the primary material (the music itself!) is a great way of keeping the focus tight. Excellent stuff! 👌

  • @iau
    @iau Před 3 lety +11

    Here's my humble summary based on my understanding of the video:
    The rhythm is so complex, it may not yield the same tempo feel to different listeners:
    1. Listener: The band exploits genre conventions (cymbal hits and backbeats) to infer certain tempos, however they may be just keeping the same tempo while doing almost unpercievably longer and shorter bars (changing time signatures) or modulations (tuplets). To the "casual" listener, it sounds like the track slows down and speeds up with a wonky feel.
    2. Composer: This is where all these ideas are originally mapped out. The tempo, time signature changes, and rhythmic structure are conceived to take advantage of these effects.
    3. Performer: Once the track is very very rehearsed, the band forgoes a click track entirely and performs it based purely on the feel it creates. This includes the studio version and live shows.
    4. Transcriber: Since every performance is slightly different, it's no use trying to get a digitally exact tempo count. One must balance between exactness, readability, and what the band may have originally intended.
    Thank you for taking the time to study this and present it so well. This stuff is way more interesting that I would have thought!

    • @metalmusictheory5401
      @metalmusictheory5401  Před 3 lety +1

      Couldn't have said it better myself! Thanks for such attentive watching, and I'm glad you enjoyed!

  • @jobvanderdoelen6512
    @jobvanderdoelen6512 Před 3 lety +4

    I love the effort man. I cant imagine how long and difficult this entire project was. Your passion for Car Bomb's musical intricacy is truly beautiful. That said:
    Car Bomb is soo fucking sickk dude pfffffffffff

  • @zacharysmith4508
    @zacharysmith4508 Před rokem

    I just really love the idea of this channel, it makes me so happy any time something gets suggested to me.

  • @hongyuan9912
    @hongyuan9912 Před 3 lety

    Mindblowing! Love the way you analyze this so much!!!

  • @StagnantObserver
    @StagnantObserver Před 3 lety +2

    This puts into words (very descriptive and well thought out words) an idea I've had about rhythm and how it can sound different depending on when you start "paying attention" to a certain section of a song. Brilliant video.

  • @msn3033
    @msn3033 Před 3 lety +6

    this is awesome dude. I'll share this channel around, you'll get popular fast with your work

  • @snarkycat9563
    @snarkycat9563 Před 3 lety +1

    wow!! i've been a fan of Car Bomb's music for a while. so good to see someone giving such a wonderfully in-depth analysis and so precisely deconstructing what it is that seems to make their compositions so compelling. I love your focus on elevating regard towards the listener's unique experience of rhythmic tactus and how it interfaces with other perspectives at every angle like this.

  • @nwinches
    @nwinches Před 3 lety +2

    Thank you for introducing me to my new favorite band. This song and this video are both amazing.

  • @erlkonig6375
    @erlkonig6375 Před 3 lety +3

    wow! what an amazing video. it is really exciting to be witness to boundaries of music being pushed farther.

  • @WebsterA
    @WebsterA Před rokem

    This is not only great content but is a great challenge to follow. Not because of the delivery but because it is so complicated and yet so well explained, it is inherently taxing lol.
    Thanks man!!

  • @medulasa1
    @medulasa1 Před 3 lety +1

    Absolutely brilliant analysis - using Hasty's theory absolutely applies to Car Bomb more than most. The whole composing-to-pulse rather than to tactus is a pretty genius take

  • @claycorso137
    @claycorso137 Před 3 lety

    This is amazing! Been listening to this song on repeat since it came out.

  • @scriberox1996
    @scriberox1996 Před 3 lety

    Dressed real sharp man. Can't wait for your channel to blow up.

  • @asymmetree2748
    @asymmetree2748 Před 3 lety +1

    Dude. This is so awesome and needs more attention. Finally someone to analyze stuff like CarBomb. Maybe you could take on Panzerballett too some time. They play around with science-level rhythmic stuff all the time, especially in their older albums.

  • @mx676
    @mx676 Před 3 lety +1

    I love this channel so much! Keep it up!

  • @Irishpineapple97
    @Irishpineapple97 Před rokem

    This was an incredible analysis. Lots of food for thought. Thank you!

  • @lupe_g2
    @lupe_g2 Před 3 lety +1

    Great work homie! Looking forward to your future videos.

  • @matthewpowell2527
    @matthewpowell2527 Před 3 lety

    I'm shocked at how much I understood from this.
    Very good job at explaining this man.

  • @masterchain3335
    @masterchain3335 Před 3 lety

    Really well organized and thought-provoking analysis!

  • @jean-christophearsenault2104

    Very well said, it's pretty clear for how complicated the subject is.

  • @treehann
    @treehann Před 7 měsíci

    awesome essay, I've only had time to skim it so far but it's for one of my favorite songs right now so I'm definitely coming back to digest the whole thing. I bet this was fun to make!

  • @JINXURS
    @JINXURS Před 3 lety

    Truly amazing work! Very interesting to watch.

  • @Heinrick192
    @Heinrick192 Před 3 lety

    Wow, and I thought as a "listener" I had a pretty good understanding of the techniques used by the "composer". Great work! I'll try to keep this perspective in my own writing and listening.

  • @jackbeattie3886
    @jackbeattie3886 Před 3 lety +2

    Super interesting and concise. cheers my dude. looking forward to more, and will certainly be referring to this in the future!

  • @joaoldmedeiros
    @joaoldmedeiros Před rokem

    what a great video! thoroughly enjoyed this work, as someone who encounters all 4 perspectives regularly ❤

  • @derekknight5156
    @derekknight5156 Před 3 lety

    Dude you are a freak of nature genius in the best way

  • @williampryor9742
    @williampryor9742 Před 3 lety

    dude this is incredible, charting new territory in music theory

  • @_odaxelagnia
    @_odaxelagnia Před 3 lety

    Yooooooo
    I'm not a musician by any stretch and i've understand probably 20% of things you describing but my mind is still got blown to pieces!
    I've listen to Car Bomb for around 10 years now but never thought their music is SO FUCKING COMPLICATED
    Don't know if i can call this a "study" but it was very interesting to watch and listen, thank you for your work!

  • @paulfrohlich6473
    @paulfrohlich6473 Před 10 měsíci

    @19:25 I want the band to include this sentence sampled into their next album!
    great job, dude!

  • @GenericInternetter
    @GenericInternetter Před 2 lety

    This was truly excellent. I actually learned a lot from this.

  • @OskarSylwester
    @OskarSylwester Před 2 lety

    Excellent collection of information, key concepts

  • @KAOTSOUKI
    @KAOTSOUKI Před 2 lety

    Hey professor, Earth's in the center.
    Loved though the scratch the surface reference.

  • @21innocentbystander
    @21innocentbystander Před 2 lety

    This is amazing. Hope you nailed your thesis (you obviously did).

  • @Sjrm126
    @Sjrm126 Před 3 lety +1

    Such an inciteful video. Thank you so much.

  • @TylerMusgrave9
    @TylerMusgrave9 Před rokem

    When one must ask "Tempo, yes, but for whom?" you know that music is some seriously crazy stuff.

  • @xyster1111
    @xyster1111 Před 2 měsíci

    They make me grin uncontrollably.....They are sooooo good..❤❤

  • @user-jv5ft2yj6n
    @user-jv5ft2yj6n Před rokem

    Dude you've surpassed Neeley! Outstanding break apart

  • @d.a.t.4699
    @d.a.t.4699 Před 3 lety +1

    these are amazing man. you should consider starting an online course for beginners intermediates and beyond. i would sign up for sure. peace!

  • @drewsmithbass
    @drewsmithbass Před 3 lety +1

    This is the kind of content the world needs more of. Big fat sub and bell from me xxx

  • @Treggify
    @Treggify Před 3 lety

    Truly amazing.

  • @luispardi1506
    @luispardi1506 Před 3 lety +1

    You got a new fan man.

  • @DavidsFlute
    @DavidsFlute Před 3 lety +2

    Awesome work!

  • @DenisisTimeless
    @DenisisTimeless Před rokem

    AMAZING VIDEO!

  • @heyshwa5102
    @heyshwa5102 Před 2 lety

    You're a straight up adjunct professor! Bravo sir. I'm still working on getting that square peg in the round hole, I'll get it eventually...

  • @JasstoJazz420
    @JasstoJazz420 Před 3 lety

    This is insane lol....You are awesome for making these videos. Thank you.

  • @fdei
    @fdei Před 3 lety

    This is so sick homie

  • @TheApostleofRock
    @TheApostleofRock Před 3 lety +4

    Damn dude. I had to listen to the slowed version of the 5,4 crash accents several times to even hear it, and even then i could barely tell at speed. I'm supposed to be a drummer XD

    • @AnonYMooseBoG
      @AnonYMooseBoG Před 2 lety

      As a drummer who can play along to Porcupine Tree for a full set, it would take me months, if not years, to figure out how to play a Car Bomb set. Elliot is just something special.

  • @HeyZeus096
    @HeyZeus096 Před 3 lety +6

    I have a 2 year degree in music recording, included a lot of theory, and I play in a prog band; just enough to understand what you're saying in this video.
    This is really fucking cool and I really appreciate the effort you put in to transcribe and describe this!

  • @benjamingage7823
    @benjamingage7823 Před 3 lety

    just brilliant

  • @dylanj635
    @dylanj635 Před rokem +2

    I really hope you're familiar with Gavin Harrison's music and body of instructional material. He literally wrote the book "Rhythmic Illusions". He is a master of displacements and odd meters, while also being one of the most creative musicians I have ever listened to. I would highly recommend two albums he did with 05ric, 'drop' and 'circles', where you can hear in context many of the concepts he put forward in the books 'Rhythmic illusions' and 'Rhythmic Perspectives'.

    • @metalmusictheory5401
      @metalmusictheory5401  Před rokem +1

      Yeah someone put me onto those books a little after I did this paper, really interesting stuff! They're part of the larger article project based on this I'm (slowly) working on!

    • @dylanj635
      @dylanj635 Před rokem

      @@metalmusictheory5401 That's awesome, I figured you would have heard of that stuff already. Do you post or publish these papers online anywhere? I'd love to check them out sometime.

    • @metalmusictheory5401
      @metalmusictheory5401  Před rokem +1

      @@dylanj635 my website www.calderhannan.com has everything listed with links to everything that's available online (and anything that isn't open access send me an email and I'll send it to you)

    • @dylanj635
      @dylanj635 Před rokem

      @@metalmusictheory5401 Excellent, thank you!

  • @virtueisdead
    @virtueisdead Před 3 lety

    fascinating essay.

  • @dexterdrifus3522
    @dexterdrifus3522 Před 3 lety

    Omg i love your channel

  • @derekvaughn2038
    @derekvaughn2038 Před 2 lety

    Really nice work man.

  • @marcchristiansen4075
    @marcchristiansen4075 Před 3 lety +1

    Car Bomb also does this in Hypnotic Worm!

  • @JTTTTT850
    @JTTTTT850 Před 3 lety +1

    I started tapping my foot to the tempo and i was like damn he’s right lol

  • @HeavyMetalMonkey
    @HeavyMetalMonkey Před 3 lety

    I'm only here because I love Car Bomb. I literally have no idea what is happening here lol. But I certainly can appreciate the work.

  • @OysterWallace
    @OysterWallace Před rokem

    Fantastic

  • @drumkidstu
    @drumkidstu Před 3 lety +5

    It's funny I tend to lean towards larger hyper-metrical and groove cycles of their music. I hear the riff at 5:10 as much more of a slow 4/4. Rather than thinking of it as 4+5, each bar of 9/16 acts as a quarter note. I would also argue that you could notate the 5/8 and 7/8 bars in the chorus as simply a bar of 6/4 and the groove becomes way more apparent even with all the push and pull. I think a lot of people get hung up on the in your face modulations of their music, which of course are super fun to catch, but often miss that a lot of their music often has a simpler groove underneath often in just 2/4, 4/4, or 6/4. The push and pull and lack of click track in their music throws people for a loop so they notate it as a something/16 rather than accounting for that they might just be pulling or pushing a fairly normal meter. This comes from the whole make simple complex concept of Meshuggah's music. Killin video by the way. It's cool to see people starting to take note of how badass this music really is. Interested to hear your thoughts on this.

    • @metalmusictheory5401
      @metalmusictheory5401  Před 3 lety +3

      Thanks! And for sure, I think a huge part of why their music (and Meshuggah's music) slaps so hard is because these larger background structures are there if you listen for them. There's a cool article about Meshuggah that describes how roughly speaking at their shows you have the "moshers" in the pit, who are hearing these simpler hypermetric structures, and the "counters" in the balcony, who are keeping track of all the patterns and everything (mtosmt.org/issues/mto.18.24.3/mto.18.24.3.lucas.html). The way of hearing that you're describing-the more zoomed-out approach-is definitely another perspective, another layer of this rhythmic parallax thing where you can understand these rhythms in a bunch of different ways that seem different. I guess one of the things I'm trying to do with this is show how, if you're hearing "pushing and pulling" in the tempo at that level, that can actually be accomplished by a couple different things: changes to the length of meters, tempo modulations, actual off-the-grid push and pull, etc. Have you played any of their stuff? I'd be interested to hear how this translates into drumming (I'm guessing from your username you play drums); I've played this song on guitar, but my drum chops are nowhere near good enough to pull off any of what Elliot does. But I wonder if maybe drummers tend to hear those larger structures, because you have to articulate them (with cymbals and fills, etc), more than guitarists. And then maybe singers hear the most zoomed out of everyone, because they don't have to worry so much about the micro level.

    • @drumkidstu
      @drumkidstu Před 3 lety +3

      @@metalmusictheory5401 This is awesome, thank you for the response too! It's actually interesting I play bass in a band heavily influenced by Car Bomb and Meshuggah, and my drumming is mostly jazz drumming in various ensembles. My metal drumming is fairly lacking. Car bomb employs and performs rhythm very similarly to how the Miles Davis quintet plays rhythm on their album Four and more. You would probably enjoy this album quite a lot as the drummer Tony Williams plays really similarly to how Elliot Hoffman plays albeit in a totally different style of music. Lots of push and pull and illusion. I think it's why I like Car Bomb so much. When I play bass I tend to focus while learning the figures, but once that is accomplished, it's all about feeling the largest possible division, that way I don't overthink the part. Tomas Haake of Meshuggah talks about this style of playing in this awesome interview. He thinks of their music in terms of 8, 16, 32, and 64 bars. talksczcams.com/video/ba2X4r12lv4/video.html

    • @drumkidstu
      @drumkidstu Před 3 lety +2

      @@metalmusictheory5401
      Here are two great interviews with Car Bomb's drummer too. You are honestly the first channel on youtube who is doing this stuff properly. A lot of people try to analyze this kind of music, but the fail as they aren't properly trained. The theory of Rhythmic Parallax makes total sense.
      czcams.com/video/dVh978qmnD8/video.html
      czcams.com/video/UWFbT_tFz1M/video.html

    • @metalmusictheory5401
      @metalmusictheory5401  Před 3 lety +2

      @@drumkidstu Nice! Yeah I play jazz guitar (and I love Tony Williams). The difference I see is that in almost all jazz (with the exception of a few tunes like "Joshua" and more recent stuff that have weird forms) and almost all of Meshuggah's music (with the exception of a few scattered examples like the chorus from "Demon's Name"), that background 4/4 metric / hypermetric structure never actually gets violated (if you haven't, check out my video on Meshuggah, which goes into a lot more detail about this, including about Meshuggah always saying their music is in 4/4). So in jazz and Meshuggah (and plenty of other metal), these background structures don't ever actually change (it will always be exactly 32, or 64, or 128 beats before another chorus starts or a riff repeats), even if it seems like they do for a little at a time. The difference with Car Bomb's music (and plenty of other metal) is that these background structures aren't rigid; no matter how you slice it, the chorus of "Blackened Battery" (and most sections of the song) doesn't last for an exact multiple of 4 (or 8 or 16) beats (and that's before even talking about how the tempo changes and all the wild stuff I go into in the video). So Meshuggah and jazz (to generalize a lot) play off against these rigid background hypermetric structures ("hiding" the meter, skipping around barlines, etc), while Car Bomb actually warps these background structures. Which doesn't mean it's not a good way to think about it when playing if you're flexible with your counting, just that there's a significant difference in what Meshuggah are doing and what Car Bomb are doing. Sorry for the long reply, hopefully at least some of it was intelligible...

    • @drumkidstu
      @drumkidstu Před 3 lety +2

      @@metalmusictheory5401 it's perfectly intelligible. You are quite right about this. Car Bomb rarely fits their music into traditional phrase lengths. About the only portions of their music that do that I can think of off the top of my head are the opening riff on Scattered Sprites and the ending breakdown of secrets within, which also happen to be 2 of their more "straight ahead songs." Generally when I first start listening to a new song by them I immediately tend to gravitate to the parallaxes they create rhythmically. It's only after extensive listening that I can think of it in long terms of like 2/4, 4, 6/4,7 etc, or some offed up back beat 😂😂😂 and mind you that's only in certain parts. In a lot of ways their music reminds me of early 2000s autechre and Squarepusher records, where the music is literally random and has very little form at all and quite often can be grooved to and interpreted in several ways. I know Greg and Elliot really like this stuff so I am sure it's why I can hear it in their music.

  • @t3hgir
    @t3hgir Před 3 lety +1

    great stuff.

  • @OHBJJ9634
    @OHBJJ9634 Před 3 lety +1

    Thank you for getting me into a new band. These guys are fucking wicked

  • @chromaticswing9199
    @chromaticswing9199 Před 3 lety

    You are doing God's work mate. Cheers! ^_^

  • @spurvlek
    @spurvlek Před 3 lety

    Wow, more videos like this!

  • @kingfriday555
    @kingfriday555 Před 2 lety

    the question now is, do others copy how how car bomb leans into how their songs are perceived by the audience or not. I ,for one, believe this is the soul reason car bomb strikes a perfect balance between its technicality and its ability to be enjoyed by your average listener.

  • @walterworrall
    @walterworrall Před 3 lety +1

    Some classic reggae right here!

  • @0x44Monad
    @0x44Monad Před rokem

    You are amazing

  • @jakemangracie9247
    @jakemangracie9247 Před rokem

    Your awesome keep up the good videos

  • @yesfan157
    @yesfan157 Před 3 lety +1

    Strong.

  • @MZFKLoose
    @MZFKLoose Před 3 lety +1

    (2) I want you to defend this dissertation in front of the scientific community!

  • @nanthilrodriguez
    @nanthilrodriguez Před 3 lety +3

    In other words, "D-D-D-DJENT-DUH-DJENT"?

  • @Maldito011316
    @Maldito011316 Před 2 lety +1

    I encountered rhythm parallax when transcribing Meshuggah songs. Like when from the guitar riff repeats, when it had an additional fill, how it relates to the 4/4 beat.
    "Should I transcribe this part in this time signature or this one?"

    • @metalmusictheory5401
      @metalmusictheory5401  Před 2 lety +2

      Yeah as I'm trying to turn this into an article I'm thinking about making it bigger to talk about "metric parallax"-what you hear in Meshuggah, a lot of other bands, where the question is "what is the meter?" or "where is the downbeat?"-as opposed to "rhythmic parallax," where the question is "what even is the beat/tempo?"

  • @peterd5843
    @peterd5843 Před 3 lety

    great video

  • @frigidlegumes
    @frigidlegumes Před 2 lety

    This is a fascinating analysis of a song, which I, despite being an avid fan of the band, until this point thought of as a "Metallica joke" lol

  • @YourCaliBos
    @YourCaliBos Před 3 lety +1

    Congrats on 1000 subs, I was 981 this am . I was wondering if you play any baritones 27-28 scale guitars
    Cheers from Michigan

    • @metalmusictheory5401
      @metalmusictheory5401  Před 3 lety +2

      Thanks! I don't, that will be my next guitar purchase when I have some money lol! I know that's what Greg plays.

  • @david_ii11
    @david_ii11 Před 2 lety +1

    I was worried this video would be muddled or confusing but it's amazingly clear. I want to listen to songs like "Wabi-Sabi" by Tricot and see if I can apply these ideas. This reminds me of something the guitarist of Tricot said when asked in an interview about math rock: 'I would rather say that our music is “jumbled rock”.' That could reflect the view of the listener or the performer. I think this theory could also apply to Eastern Europen folk music, which could be described with odd time signatures, or as having patterns of long and short beats. Could this also apply to David Bennett's CZcams video "Songs with Confusing Intros" or is that stretching it too far?

    • @metalmusictheory5401
      @metalmusictheory5401  Před 2 lety +1

      Definitely! And yeah his video is based (consciously or not) on that metric fakeout idea from Justin London that I cite in this, definitely the same type of thing where the band hears one thing but it's unlikely the audience hears the same way (until the drums come in)

  • @SamuelBlackMetalRider
    @SamuelBlackMetalRider Před 3 lety +1

    First time listening to Car Bomb: sounds like Grunge musicians being DRUNK trying to play metal...

    • @chaotemagick3
      @chaotemagick3 Před 3 lety +1

      That interpretation means you aren't learned enough to understand car bomb lol

  • @KinkyZeebra
    @KinkyZeebra Před 2 lety

    instant sub

  • @NicolasPL_
    @NicolasPL_ Před 3 lety +2

    Let's goooo

  • @boulz666
    @boulz666 Před 3 lety

    I love your shirt.

  • @JoshJessup
    @JoshJessup Před 2 lety

    This is fucking awesome

  • @jmpsthrufyre
    @jmpsthrufyre Před 3 lety

    Speaking of Illusions I thought I had dust on my screen but I guess it was your shirt? Just kidding loved analysis

  • @neonblack211
    @neonblack211 Před 6 měsíci

    "Head banging creates meter"