PostmanCHILE Posted August 10, 2013 Share Posted August 10, 2013 (edited) This is a song I'm working on, but I was stuck and do not know how to finish it, if add some more, repeat something, rearrange them or some other modification. I'm Using Reason 5 with a refill of Commodore 64 sounds. https://soundcloud.com/marco_mella/happy-ending-demo-incompleto Edited August 10, 2013 by PostmanCHILE Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Paul Levasseur Posted August 13, 2013 Share Posted August 13, 2013 (edited) Ok, so let's look at your music here. You have the G F# Fnatural E bassline section as an introduction. It's roughly a G chord, D65 chord, G42, C6 progression that happens 4 times. That's your introduction. Lets label this A Then you have. C, D, G6, Eminor, C, D, C64, G. A nice catchy melody as well. Lets label this B Then we have A again with a melody. Let's label this A' So you have A B A' What can you do? There are a lot of options but let's kind of keep it simple here. What are you going for and what sort of a sound do you want? Any ideas? Do you want the tune to loop like in a videogame? Or do you want a definitive end? My first suggestion is to do something like bring back B. You can repeat it verbatim or better yet, why not make it slightly different? So A (Intruduction)B A' (A with melody) B (write this) If I was to write a second B section or a B' I'd use the chords C, D, G6, Eminor, C, D, C64, Em for a deceptive ending right on the downbeat. Then I'd continue the E as a bassline for a measure or two. This is a transition that can go a number of ways. options 1) Transpose the opening part to the key of A instead of G and put a solo over top. Then you could go into B again and transition at the end back to G and loop the piece. 2) Go into a bridge (New contrasting section in E) Then from there you'd go back into B twice (Do some variations for fun) and then you could end the piece. 3) Use the bassline on E to walk down maybe with a riff to C and go back into B again. This is a great way to do an ending. 4) You could walk the bassline down to C and do a bridge in D major or D minor. So I'm suggesting something that is similar to a song form although I have plenty of other ideas as well. So far. A B A' This is what you have. A typical song would continue with B or B' followed by a bridge C, and then back to B and B would happen twice. so A B A' B C B B Or A B A' B A'' (solo in new key) C bridge B B Or A B A' B C Bsolo B' Just some ideas to get you thinking. Experiment and see what works. See what you like. I hope this is helpful. Edited August 13, 2013 by Paul Levasseur Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
PostmanCHILE Posted August 15, 2013 Author Share Posted August 15, 2013 Ok, so let's look at your music here.You have the G F# Fnatural E bassline section as an introduction. It's roughly a G chord, D65 chord, G42, C6 progression that happens 4 times. That's your introduction. Lets label this A Then you have. C, D, G6, Eminor, C, D, C64, G. A nice catchy melody as well. Lets label this B Then we have A again with a melody. Let's label this A' So you have A B A' What can you do? There are a lot of options but let's kind of keep it simple here. What are you going for and what sort of a sound do you want? Any ideas? Do you want the tune to loop like in a videogame? Or do you want a definitive end? My first suggestion is to do something like bring back B. You can repeat it verbatim or better yet, why not make it slightly different? So A (Intruduction)B A' (A with melody) B (write this) If I was to write a second B section or a B' I'd use the chords C, D, G6, Eminor, C, D, C64, Em for a deceptive ending right on the downbeat. Then I'd continue the E as a bassline for a measure or two. This is a transition that can go a number of ways. options 1) Transpose the opening part to the key of A instead of G and put a solo over top. Then you could go into B again and transition at the end back to G and loop the piece. 2) Go into a bridge (New contrasting section in E) Then from there you'd go back into B twice (Do some variations for fun) and then you could end the piece. 3) Use the bassline on E to walk down maybe with a riff to C and go back into B again. This is a great way to do an ending. 4) You could walk the bassline down to C and do a bridge in D major or D minor. So I'm suggesting something that is similar to a song form although I have plenty of other ideas as well. So far. A B A' This is what you have. A typical song would continue with B or B' followed by a bridge C, and then back to B and B would happen twice. so A B A' B C B B Or A B A' B A'' (solo in new key) C bridge B B Or A B A' B C Bsolo B' Just some ideas to get you thinking. Experiment and see what works. See what you like. I hope this is helpful. Thx for your suggestions. My idea with this song is to use it in the credits of a game, that's why its called "happy ending" Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Base Desire Posted August 15, 2013 Share Posted August 15, 2013 This is beautiful, and I think it would sound fantastic in credits of a game! Really pretty melodies in here. I think the other guy posted some good advice about bringing back B, but yeah, that was awesome man, would listen again! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Paul Levasseur Posted August 15, 2013 Share Posted August 15, 2013 Thx for your suggestions. My idea with this song is to use it in the credits of a game, that's why its called "happy ending" Awesome. Let me know if my input helps you get unstuck. I'm interested to hear the finished product! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.