What's a Chordioid?

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 18 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 920

  • @AleXCD74
    @AleXCD74 5 лет назад +2909

    I never understand about 70% of what's explained on these videos but I still watch them all.

    • @Bobbyjeo2
      @Bobbyjeo2 5 лет назад +67

      what a fucken 𝘮𝘰𝘰𝘥

    • @willwallz
      @willwallz 5 лет назад +134

      This was me when I started watching this channel, I have now advanced beyond the horizon and transcend all knowledge, having watched this channel since the beginning.

    • @kaansouth8789
      @kaansouth8789 5 лет назад +6

      @@willwallz Same for me :D

    • @EchoL0C0
      @EchoL0C0 5 лет назад +2

      Same here

    • @wilpos
      @wilpos 5 лет назад +1

      omg me

  • @Dappis
    @Dappis 5 лет назад +1104

    Chordioids a.k.a: When you just press keys and create a cool sound that's just too cool for the system

    • @OlliOtter
      @OlliOtter 3 года назад +31

      Very fitting pfp haha

    • @Fishnberg
      @Fishnberg 2 дня назад

      in other words, it sounds good in my ears so I use it

  • @insaneintherainmusic
    @insaneintherainmusic 5 лет назад +1769

    The Animal Crossing daily BGM is such a great example of stripping away elements from a piece until you're only left with the stuff that is truly effective! Never heard of a chordioid before... but I dig it. Sounds like a name for an Animal Crossing gyroid!

    • @cheesecakelasagna
      @cheesecakelasagna 5 лет назад +6

      Damn, I kinda want to dive into Animal Crossing now!

    • @Programme021
      @Programme021 4 года назад +17

      That's an interesting way of looking at music. "Stripping elements to only keep the most powerful"... kinda reminds of it's game-design counterpart "Design by subtraction", that was used in games like Ico or Shadow of the Colossus... That's inspiring !

    • @Gerbert67
      @Gerbert67 3 года назад

      omg its carlos :O

    • @Kirisaga
      @Kirisaga 2 года назад

      seeing a comment from insaneintherainmusic under an 8-bit music theory video is like witnessing a meeting of the minds

  • @Minecraftgnom
    @Minecraftgnom 5 лет назад +8536

    1:11
    "A chordioid, according to wikipedia..."
    Me, an intelectual:
    "A chordioid, achordioiding to wikipedia..."

  • @wege8409
    @wege8409 5 лет назад +1084

    Thank you for doing something like music theory minute but longer. It seems like a lot of people were wishing for it.

    • @duality4y
      @duality4y 5 лет назад +10

      I was!

    • @PKLevel99
      @PKLevel99 5 лет назад +8

      Brock Brown agree

    • @justingoers
      @justingoers 5 лет назад +6

      This is my favorite kind of content from this channel!

  • @TheAsvarduilProject
    @TheAsvarduilProject 5 лет назад +392

    _"Chord symbols are meant to be an abstract tool for analyzing music..."_
    ...Yeah, I'm glad you said that. In my own composition, I've developed a _very_ bad habit - I keep trying to compose from chord symbols/progressions, and it honestly doesn't make for good music, by which I mean it doesn't really work for me and/or I'm misapplying it. My older - and better - works, started from a bass line, embellished with a melody, and then filled out pragmatically with harmony. Done properly, it just sort of 'fits' and works.
    I've gotten too formal for my own good. Music theory 101: They [Music theory rules] are more like _guidelines..._

    • @ixsmt
      @ixsmt 5 лет назад +11

      Yes, it's better to have a base and to not get too specific because it limits your creativity. You have to find the right balance between structure and freedom

    • @OdinComposer
      @OdinComposer 5 лет назад +2

      I’ve been there before. The way through is to master chord symbols in my opinion. Have you studied part-writing?

    • @LesterBrunt
      @LesterBrunt 5 лет назад +20

      Schoenberg said to write your sketches with all voices at once without regard for meter or bar lines. Of course you can’t imagine 4-5 voices at once, Schoenberg claimed only a few might imagine more than 2 at the same time. But what he means is don’t write out 32 bars of melody and then write something around it. Write 4 notes of melody and then hear what the accompaniment does and write that down and move
      on.
      Another way is to not think in terms of chords but in terms of motifs and phrases. So lets say you have a bassline that jumps from A to E F and C. You can think of that as a motif that can be treated as a building block instead of it just being the roots of a chord progression.
      You can make a sequence out of it, A E F C ➡️ B F# G D ➡️ C# G# A E.
      You can invert the intervals,
      A D C# F#
      reverse them
      D F E A
      Augment the intervals
      A F Ab Eb
      reduce in a progression
      A E F C E F C F C C
      And when you have other motifs you can combine them and their variations giving you virtually unlimited creativity while keeping some internal consistency.

    • @CrowsBatsBees
      @CrowsBatsBees 5 лет назад +12

      Yes! A few friends and I have been exploring the partimento tradition/pedagogy lately. Now realizing there's a fundamental paradigmatic difference between modern pedagogy/theory/analysis and how the composers the western canon admires actually made music. a side effect of the modern curriculum/pedagogy (with "functional harmony" near its foundation!) is that we tend to think notes come from chords (thinking too vertically) when in fact it seems the early player/improvisor/composers were thinking/playing/learning horizontal (voices, melodies) first... the vertical (chords) were a result of the horizontal (melody, good voice-leading), not vice versa!

    • @derikdavis567
      @derikdavis567 4 года назад +2

      Learn voice leading.

  • @Kirk_Jimenez
    @Kirk_Jimenez 5 лет назад +3607

    Bill Wurtz vibes from the “let’s talk about chordioids!” fanfare lmao awesome

    • @vivy-nx
      @vivy-nx 5 лет назад +73

      also brian david gilbert in the text formatting

    • @freezeframeplease
      @freezeframeplease 5 лет назад +4

      ruclips.net/video/Mh5LY4Mz15o/видео.html

    • @brightonpauli3916
      @brightonpauli3916 5 лет назад +30

      Very Wurtzian, yes. Honestly, I want more.

    • @mfpuma_
      @mfpuma_ 5 лет назад +7

      was about to comment on that, it brings me joy to see a great youtuber acknowledging another great youtuber

    • @ctrlzme.6448
      @ctrlzme.6448 4 года назад +3

      I miss billy :(

  • @aerialjordan2683
    @aerialjordan2683 5 лет назад +77

    I am floored...
    I knew that I was severely limited in my understanding, but not appreciation of music, that this concept sounds so familiar but is completely beyond what I understand at all.
    Im a total novice, but the fact that this technical information is told with such passion and demonstration, speaks volumes to the crafting of this video.
    This is an instant subscription from me... this is all so fascinating...

  • @Nakagolas
    @Nakagolas 5 лет назад +257

    "Most disgusting polychords"
    IT'S CALLED SPICE

  • @zarodgaming1844
    @zarodgaming1844 5 лет назад +334

    "A G over C, which really gives a G over C sound" 0_0 ...
    "A fried chicken, which really gives a fried chicken flavor"
    it was way funnier in my head

    • @el2746
      @el2746 4 года назад +5

      dont worry, i understand what you mean xD

    • @ireadysucks3026
      @ireadysucks3026 3 года назад +22

      Ah yes, the floor is made of floor..

    • @milanstevic8424
      @milanstevic8424 3 года назад +3

      did you know that it tastes like chicken tho?

  • @emmbeesea
    @emmbeesea 5 лет назад +371

    This goes even _beyond_ jazz.
    Nani?!?!?
    Not going to lie, this is extremely interesting.

    • @johannalvarsson9299
      @johannalvarsson9299 5 лет назад +4

      this is because the theory of jazz-harmonics is actually fairly limited. it´s more a system to label groups of pitch-classes than an interpretation of their function in a given context. as an example: Why are major 7th chords "stable" tonics despite including a clearly dissonant intervall, the 7th? why is c-e-g-b-d usually a C79 and not a g-minor +11+14?

    • @Lagiacrusguy1
      @Lagiacrusguy1 5 лет назад +7

      this does not go beyond jazz, this goes beyond standard chord symbol theory, which is how most people process straight ahead jazz harmony. listen to some modern jazz and i’m sure u will find chordiods

    • @johannalvarsson9299
      @johannalvarsson9299 5 лет назад +1

      @@Lagiacrusguy1 i could notate it in basso continuo without any problems at all.

  • @FromGroundToMud
    @FromGroundToMud 5 лет назад +158

    1PM = gymnopedie wtf
    Snowy reminds me of the weird chords in Wonderful Christmastime

    • @djzion_
      @djzion_ 5 лет назад +11

      so many songs use that chord progression, it's so beautiful

    • @buttercupisevil
      @buttercupisevil 5 лет назад +1

      My favorite piece as well as favorite christmas song :D

  • @bf0189
    @bf0189 5 лет назад +61

    I find using experimental methods within a conventional framework works the best when exploring these ideas. Like how Mahler played with tonality a lot but used to spice things up not necessarily designing a composition around atonality like Schoenberg would later do. It’s a huge reason why video game music is appealing because you can use experimental ideas within a conventional form.
    Great video as always though!

  • @thecloudwyrm7966
    @thecloudwyrm7966 5 лет назад +272

    Me: "I've taken several years of music lessons, play 3 instruments, and regularly make my own music."
    Me, after watching this video: "I am but a child in a world of musical gods and deities"

    • @Harshhaze
      @Harshhaze 5 лет назад +28

      Me: "I've taken no music theory, I play 2 and a half instruments, I haven't even memorized notes and chords, and I've only changed music so I can play it on a guitar."
      Me after watching this video: "I've taken no music theory, I play 2 and a half instruments, I haven't even memorized notes and chords, and I've only changed music so I can play it on a guitar."

    • @slowcuber_aze
      @slowcuber_aze Год назад +1

      Live and learn

  • @HunterTheCat1812
    @HunterTheCat1812 5 лет назад +827

    So these 'chordiods' are what the cool cats are calling 'implied harmony' now?

    • @shingshongshamalama
      @shingshongshamalama 5 лет назад +66

      You mean Diminished Thirds right?
      Sorry, "augmented seconds".

    • @penguindrum264
      @penguindrum264 5 лет назад +55

      Implied harmony isn't the same exact thing. Sometimes adding the third and/or fifth ruins the piece. Thats like people who try to force functional harmony in early baroque music. It can sound good, but you're giving the music an entirely different emotion.

    • @thomasrosebrough9062
      @thomasrosebrough9062 5 лет назад +14

      I don't think thats the point of the video. "Implied Harmony" just removes notes that are already in resonance or other instruments to not over-lushify the chord. Chordiods are more about intentionally not commiting to a chord.

    • @Barde_Jaune
      @Barde_Jaune 5 лет назад

      @@thomasrosebrough9062 that's not what implied harmony is though. Ôo

  • @Lukz243
    @Lukz243 5 лет назад +85

    I felt Bill Wurtz vibes on "Let's talk about chordioid"
    but overall, that was a really neat and interesting concept
    and I hope you enjoy MAGfest West, 8-bit

  • @kiwikenobi
    @kiwikenobi 5 лет назад +37

    Please make more videos about the music from Undertale. There's so much going on in that soundtrack that I don't understand, but I want to understand it, and you understand how music works so well, and you're very good at explaining things and making them both educational and fun.

  • @Judeisbad
    @Judeisbad 5 лет назад +126

    *"Don't play the butter notes!"*

    • @segmentsAndCurves
      @segmentsAndCurves 3 года назад +2

      JaZz

    • @syweb2
      @syweb2 3 года назад

      Is this a quote?

    • @james_subosits
      @james_subosits 3 года назад +1

      @@syweb2 Yeah, Miles Davis. Although Herbie Hancock says that he probably misheard him and he more likely said "bottom notes" i.e. stay out of the bass player's way

  • @TTinari
    @TTinari 5 лет назад +16

    I’ve been writing a piece of music FILLED with chordioids, without knowing what they’re called or why I like them so much, then this video comes out. So serendipitous.

  • @sandwell27
    @sandwell27 5 лет назад +44

    Chordioids are my favourite kind of gyroid in animal crossing

  • @wavelength3856
    @wavelength3856 Год назад +4

    10:50 "It's a technique that's advanced not in its complexity, but in its precision." What an absolutely brilliant summary of why omitting notes from chords can be so incredibly effective and requires such care to do right.
    As I've watched a lot of your new videos, I've also delved back into your older stuff like this, and both are such a pleasure to watch - bravo!

  • @Dolei
    @Dolei 5 лет назад +62

    I love that despite knowing literally nothing about music theory i can somehow still follow along with this 😂

  • @sabetasama
    @sabetasama 5 лет назад +37

    I don't know why I'm here. I can't even read sheet music let alone music theory, but I love hearing about this stuff.

    • @unkykun
      @unkykun 5 лет назад +9

      It would be fun if you take piano lessons,
      "so, this is C?"
      "Yes, you see, the whites are the notes of the C scale, and if you want to do a C major you can play the E, which is the third, and the G, as the fifth, but it's a bit complicated for now so..."
      "And what if I drop the third, diminish the second, add the sixth but only in the second time in the arpeggio, while playing a melody implying the E and the E flat, using the fifth as a gap, do you think it's a modulation by using chordioid ?"
      "Ah, euhm, no, but, euhm, Hey see, if I play those two notes it's the begining of Für Elise ! Ah ah, euhm..."

  • @blenjamin
    @blenjamin 5 лет назад +42

    As a chord symbol addict, I appreciate this new toolset

  • @liquidypoo
    @liquidypoo 5 лет назад +97

    That feel when you hit 8:43 of the video and say "Nice" out loud to your computer monitor

  • @xtrashocking
    @xtrashocking 5 лет назад +197

    music man: *talks in music*
    me, someone who has no experience and music and doesn't know what's going on: yes

    • @cheesecakelasagna
      @cheesecakelasagna 5 лет назад +11

      Relatable, have a nice day.

    • @ctrlzme.6448
      @ctrlzme.6448 4 года назад +10

      Me: of course I understand everything. You’re talking about chemicals, right?

    • @GetBaked2421
      @GetBaked2421 4 года назад +1

      Yeah that basically sums it up lmao

  • @cesarherediaaguirre4419
    @cesarherediaaguirre4419 5 лет назад +25

    6:38 It could also come from the miyako-bushi japanese scale which also has notes from the phrygian mode.

  • @composercode
    @composercode 5 лет назад +14

    Interesting, well-edited, compelling, beautiful. And that’s just the man who produced it.

  • @hattrick271
    @hattrick271 5 лет назад +32

    Never noticed it before, but that second chord in Snowy (starts around 4:15) really invokes Chrono Trigger in my mind (probably intentionally). It's a very similar progression to Secret of the Forest, but it also reminds me of the crunchy chords in the Epoch theme.
    And that ties in really nicely to your video on Non-Functional Harmony (ruclips.net/video/5zGqN1ZOEJQ/видео.html). In many cases, chordioids seem like another way to apply non-functional harmony, but with a different "color" to the sound.
    The Norfair example is really interesting, but I actually hear a different chord, rooted on the E-flat and D-flat, instead of the D and C. It definitely fits your definition of a chordioid, but to my ears, it sounds like E-flat sus4 maj7 (omit5), and then the corresponding whole step down. The harmonic function (or lack thereof) doesn't really change, but I thought it was interesting how my ears hear it differently. Basing those chords on the half-step at the bottom makes it especially tough for my ears to decipher, which adds to the unsettling mood (which is perfect for the atmosphere of the game).
    Cool video. I've always loved how VG composers use non-traditional chords exactly like these. Thanks!

    • @orala2593
      @orala2593 10 месяцев назад

      It’s probably because Toby used the chronotrigger sound font on that song

  • @GetBaked2421
    @GetBaked2421 5 лет назад +19

    8-but Music Theory+Undertale? Yes, please!

  • @peterbentley2560
    @peterbentley2560 5 лет назад +8

    I really like this format of video, focusing on a topic in music and drawing from video games for examples

  • @InstrumentManiac
    @InstrumentManiac 5 лет назад +7

    This was really fun to watch! I've been finally starting to learn music theory after all these years and it's crazy how endless the possibilities are.
    You really break things down into very understandable bite sized pieces - looking forward to more!

    • @RED40HOURS
      @RED40HOURS Год назад

      Instrument Maniac??? :OOO

  • @justinmiller7398
    @justinmiller7398 5 лет назад +14

    As a non musical person, holy hell the technicalities in this video. Also as a non musical person, OH I LOVE THIS PAR OF THE SONG!

  • @trevan5035
    @trevan5035 5 лет назад +23

    OH MY GOODNESS THIS IS EXACTLY WHAT I NEEDED RIGHT NOW

  • @emmagelion7515
    @emmagelion7515 4 дня назад

    I used to understand nothing about classical harmony and never figured why my composition never sounded how I wanted. "Chordioids" really liberated me, just playing what sound good to me, Now I finally wrapped my head my head around harmony, I can use it to guide me when needed without being a slave to it.

  • @jayepride98
    @jayepride98 5 лет назад +15

    Have fun at MAGWest. :) Thanks as always for a fascinating and informative video!

  • @DaveGouda
    @DaveGouda 5 лет назад +62

    Alright...I gotta know what the trombonist and the camel clip is all about, and who they are.

    • @Teuthida
      @Teuthida 5 лет назад +9

      At first I thought it was from one of Camel's weirder concerts, but it's actually Stockhausen: ruclips.net/video/PcmxwOeVMDc/видео.html

  • @txikitofandango
    @txikitofandango 5 лет назад +49

    Chordiods redux: Take a dissonant scale degree and stick it in the bass.

    • @ObeseChess
      @ObeseChess 5 лет назад +1

      PAUL CHAMBERS HAS ENTERED THE CHAT

    • @KimStennabbCaesar
      @KimStennabbCaesar 4 года назад +2

      This is something I've heard a lot in old school drum & bass from the 90s.

  • @isthis3182
    @isthis3182 5 лет назад +2

    This was nice seeing you emphasize the importance of the sounds themselves, while still going into the analysis as expected.

  • @JasperRLZ
    @JasperRLZ 5 лет назад +125

    smh for not having Debussy, Ravel, or Bill Evans (!!!) as purple links

    • @MisterAppleEsq
      @MisterAppleEsq 5 лет назад +12

      Relevant xkcd: 1051.

    • @a_wild_Kirillian
      @a_wild_Kirillian 5 лет назад +4

      Cookies are cleaned maybe

    • @fueltek4362
      @fueltek4362 4 года назад +2

      this comment and replies would make zero sense to people without computer knowledge lmao

  • @kylestyyle987
    @kylestyyle987 5 лет назад +5

    I’ve always loved the Perplexing Pool theme - never realized it was so harmonically complex!

  • @johnfoster7762
    @johnfoster7762 5 лет назад +5

    Thanks for this video! When I was first starting out, I did a lot of this kind of thing because it sounded good to me, but as I learned more theory I came to think of it as "bad" because they weren't tertian chords, and I've been trying to rediscover it because now a lot of my stuff sounds kinda bland and boring. I always called it "scalar composition" (using intervals from the scale as a whole) as opposed to "chordal composition" based around a tertian progression where the current chord informs most of the notes I choose. Now a smart youtube person has legitimized the thing I like to do!

  • @nickymo3842
    @nickymo3842 4 года назад +1

    Thank you for including the example sheet! It's been so much fun to play around with. I always come to your channel in search of compositional ideas and inspiration for new projects, and your upbeat attitude and clean clear way of explaining things (with rock solid analysis) makes it so easy to digest and I always leave full of new ideas. Thank you so much 8-bit MT!

  • @jabelsjabels
    @jabelsjabels 5 лет назад +11

    oh dang I use these all the time on my 3-string cigar box guitar. Never knew they had a name!

  • @cionnar
    @cionnar 4 года назад

    This is the exact information I needed to make sense of chords and harmony. I've had this rigid way of thinking about it, where chords have their instrument, say, a piano for example, and chords go there, the bass and melody are separate and mostly do their own thing, while refering back to the chords occasionally. It never even occured to me that chords could be spilt across instruments. Realizing that chords don't need to be defined so rigidly in a piece and they can be 'embedded' into the composition cleared up a TON of my confusion regarding harmony. N I C E.

  • @benhuff1
    @benhuff1 5 лет назад +4

    The way I was taught about these type of chords is based on an interval found inside them. For example, the chord you mentioned in Metroid was a perfect fourth with a half step above the root. My professor organizes these chords first by the interval (perfect fourth) and then by placing a whole step or half step below or above each note. So Bb, C, F is a #1 chord as it has a whole step below the C. B, C, F is a #2 chord because it has a half step below the C. The numbers just keep going up until you have all 8 chords. The Metroid chord would be a #3 (half step above bottom note). There are a lot of interesting colors to get out of these chords, and they can also be based on other intervals, such as perfect 5ths, and major and minor thirds.

    • @pabloansonmusic
      @pabloansonmusic 2 года назад

      Hey! Your teacher's system is super useful. What's his name? Has he written anything else on chord symbols?

    • @benhuff1
      @benhuff1 2 года назад

      @@pabloansonmusic that was from pianist Armen Donelian. He has several books out on ear training, but as I just took class with him, I'm unsure what exactly each book covers.

    • @pabloansonmusic
      @pabloansonmusic 2 года назад

      @@benhuff1 Hey, thanks a lot. I didn't know about this pianist and he seems to be quite popular in the ear training circles. He even gave a seminar at my uni (MDW) :) Cool, thanks again!

  • @GFBFishscratch
    @GFBFishscratch 5 лет назад

    I Don't understand a word of the theory you talk about, but when you point out something neat and focus on it, its fantastic to listen to.

  • @Bruh-pl4zk
    @Bruh-pl4zk 5 лет назад +13

    This kind of stuff is why I think you should do another multi-part video like the botw one, but for undertale.

  • @scmiller
    @scmiller 3 года назад

    I love these videos because I understand just enough to be wowed but not enough that pausing and thinking is necessary.

  • @WangleLine
    @WangleLine 5 лет назад +42

    These videos are soooo good. Thanks for spreading all your music theory knowledge to us newbies :D

    • @atp8012
      @atp8012 5 лет назад

      hey glitch wizard haha

  • @julia-lo4jc
    @julia-lo4jc 5 лет назад +1

    just wanted to thank you because your videos helped me pass my AP music theory exam

  • @danafish11
    @danafish11 5 лет назад +4

    I'd love to see a whole video dedicated to the music in Undertale!

  • @TheNickLeez
    @TheNickLeez 5 лет назад +1

    Not only am I so glad you talked about chordioids because I love quartal Harmony and sometimes I NEED to write music without the third, but I’m so glad you talked about Undertale and a brief hint at The Who. Townshend’s playing style is full of this stuff!

  • @Rubberman202
    @Rubberman202 5 лет назад +4

    #FriskForSmash #FriskForSmash
    I really love watching your videos, even if I barely have any idea what you're talking about most of the time.

  • @LeviathaninWaves
    @LeviathaninWaves 5 лет назад +1

    If it weren't for this video I probably would have spent the rest of my life thinking it would be bad to omit the 3rd and 7th from a chord voicing. Thanks for sharing.

  • @drowned309
    @drowned309 5 лет назад +7

    I still don't know anything about music theory, but it sounds neat.

  • @lukamagicc
    @lukamagicc 3 года назад

    This man trying to redefine how we write music 5:45 and that's why I love this channel. Super forward thinking yet straight forward for someone with little to no background in theory

  • @Camkitsune
    @Camkitsune 5 лет назад +6

    5:25
    There actually _is_ a notation system that would work well here, though it wasn't designed with this function in mind.
    12-Tone notation can be used to indicate either the notes in the scale above the tonic or (more usefully IMO) the lattice of intervals above the root.
    If we go by more conventional Serialist notiation and assume the tonal center is C:
    0, 7, E/0,9,E/E,6,9/E,4,9 (E = 11; it's a hold-over from when they had to hand-write this stuff.
    If we use the method I prefer, and count the number of half-steps above the previous note:
    C-7-4/C-9-2/B-6-3/B-5-5
    While their notation methods are extremely helpful, I'm pretty sure it was held back by the fact that the music it was used to write is deeply unpleasant to the average person's tastes.
    EDIT: Cleared out a buch of extra spacing.

    • @Michail_Chatziasemidis
      @Michail_Chatziasemidis 2 года назад

      I, too, prefer using *integer notation* and *set theory* for such chordioid sets, although I prefer it somewhat different from your system; I count all the half-steps from the root: e.g. C-7-11, C-9-11, B-6-9, B-4-9 and so on and so forth, also avoiding E for 11, since it could be easily confused with the letter name of the note Mi.
      Question: How do you write italics in RUclips?

    • @Camkitsune
      @Camkitsune 2 года назад

      @@Michail_Chatziasemidis _Underscores_ instead of *astsrisks.*

  • @tsg_frank5829
    @tsg_frank5829 5 лет назад

    It's genuinely great to see such a specific concept such as Chordioids being brought up when it often isn't, it's true that there's the tendencies in harmony to add more and more on top of chords creating heavy handed chord progression, that could be much richer in sound if they dropped the pretense.

  • @a.cooper7019
    @a.cooper7019 4 года назад +3

    I’m a simple girl: I see the word “chordioid” and my brain immediately tells me it’s a portmanteau of chord and cardioid, both of which I happen to find intriguing

  • @Nagstersept109868
    @Nagstersept109868 4 года назад

    I think of this channel as the "Every Frame a Painting" of music design. I have started to notice alot more sound design choices and not just in video games.

  • @kitkatkiwikat413
    @kitkatkiwikat413 5 лет назад +7

    *"let's talk about chordioids!"*
    me, who literally just jumped up and shouted in a quiet room: *DID THEY JUST DO THE BILL WURTZ THING????*

  • @virtuousthing9070
    @virtuousthing9070 3 года назад

    I will definitely rewatch this video since it comes really handy, besides, you sound like you're smiling while talking and it just makes me happy

  • @kayanochino
    @kayanochino 5 лет назад +4

    The chordioid in 2:43 is a chord found in Ryukyu (Okinawa) traditional music. D should suit better than E.
    I will publish the harmony theory book about traditional Japanese music soon, so read it if you are interested....

    • @IuriSigma
      @IuriSigma 4 года назад +1

      Dude you're right. It's so fascinating to have discovered those scales this month, it changed my view on music entirely since it explains how I actually hear music. I've never identified myself with the western system. I too plan to launch something explaining japanese music theory in the future since I've come to understand a lot of it and I'll continue to explore it. Good luck on your book!

  • @Radien
    @Radien 5 лет назад +1

    One of my favorite things in music is to hear one sequence of notes repeated numerous times, as another series of notes revolves around it, molding it into different chords through context. (Very basic example: One Note Samba.)
    One of the techniques you described here sounds like an advanced version of that technique, using context to mold the harmony. I'm happy you called my attention to it. I may not be an advanced enough musician to analyze songs the way you do, but you can bet I'll be listening carefully for these things as I play through Undertale. :)

  • @someguy7582
    @someguy7582 5 лет назад +1033

    "Chordioid" sounds like something an incel would call a girl who's into music theory

    • @seabassthegamer6644
      @seabassthegamer6644 5 лет назад +59

      Sounds like an organ to me. The body sort of organ. Not the instrument sort of organ.

    • @skin_lizard
      @skin_lizard 5 лет назад +95

      Shut up, chordiot.

    • @black.baron_angel
      @black.baron_angel 5 лет назад +19

      Skin Lizard Oh my god

    • @SlyHikari03
      @SlyHikari03 5 лет назад +14

      It kinda reminds of vocaloid.

    • @marios1861
      @marios1861 5 лет назад +11

      it reminds me of the shape cardioid

  • @petersilktube
    @petersilktube 5 лет назад +1

    I've often found some of these videos interesting but, a little ... not hard to follow, but hard to understand how you get from the explanation to the utility, and there was one sentence in this one which suddenly explained to me why I was having trouble. The part where you say you tend to compose from a chord number-first sort of perspective is super interesting to me.
    It's obviously totally valid (everything is) but it's SO different to how I work. I can now understand why you would find it useful to think about things in terms of, say, chordioids to break out of roman numeral thinking. But the way I work is largely rooted in melodicism - most of what I do, even when building harmonies is to think of them as layering separate (but often interdependent) lines on top of one another, and from there the harmonies I want emerge - and later I can go back and analyse and think 'Okay, this is 2nd inversion I, this is a secondary dominant V/iii or whatever it happens to be. I haven't checked specifically but I'm *sure* that lots of chordioids slip into my work because I'm not really thinking about filling out harmonies as much as I'm thinking about 'where does this line need to go that would help the piece'
    Must stress my intention is not to be critical of your approach, at all, but I find it super fascinating how we land at the same technique via such different thought processes :)

  • @chiara3603
    @chiara3603 5 лет назад +8

    To address the confusion about the term "chordioid" (as in the video description): from a strictly etymologic point of view, the -oid suffix derives from ancient greek (-oeidēs), which combined with the root of the word would end up meaning "that which resembles a chord".
    Is it used correctly though? Eh, I guess it depends on whether you actually consider a chordioid a type of chord or not, so it's kind of subjective.

    • @Michail_Chatziasemidis
      @Michail_Chatziasemidis 2 года назад

      Being a Greek, I was at first intrigued by the name "Chordioid". I said to myself: "what can resemble a chord, but isn't a chord?" In the end, such chordioids are considered chords in my theory textbooks.
      In Greek, Chordioid could be translated as "συγχορδιοειδές".

  • @yogscrashnsmash
    @yogscrashnsmash 3 года назад

    As someone who makes music yet can't read a music sheet for the life of me, your videos are SUPER cool since you give more practical explanations of these, AND also open me up to learn stuff I otherwise wouldn't be able to really understand at all. Thanks for your cool videos. :D

  • @SuperIsaiah
    @SuperIsaiah 3 года назад +3

    When I make music it's literally just "hey i like how these notes sound lets do that". Especially when it comes to jazzy type stuff if you asked me what my chords were from a song I probably couldn't tell you. like if I looked over a recording of what I was playing i could be like "oh yeah it was that" but it'd take me thought to figure out what chord it was.

  • @junwuwang5701
    @junwuwang5701 5 лет назад

    these chordioids are clean but different, rich but not excessive. They have the power to touch one's heart in a simple way

  • @cobaltray2375
    @cobaltray2375 3 года назад +5

    7:04 S U S
    8:35 even more S U S
    8:44 F U N N Y
    9:38 sussy baka
    9:56 Ok, now thats actually funny
    Conclusion: my humor = trash bin...

  • @itried8968
    @itried8968 5 лет назад +1

    I love your videos to bits and pieces, dude. I'm taking an AP music theory class currently and I like all these examples and how I can apply some of the things I'm familiar with and still learn something new with these videos. If there's one suggestion I could make is that you provide examples of what the chords sound like when talking about them in theory, like the way you added the third into 1pm for Animal crossing. It really helps people understand your music jargon and the wonderful points you make about the properties we love.
    Thank you for doing what you do!

  • @gruforevs
    @gruforevs 5 лет назад +6

    a work sheet! ooh ooh, thanks very much

    • @hps362
      @hps362 5 лет назад +1

      I like homework when it's given to me by a youtuber person yay

  • @crono303
    @crono303 5 лет назад

    I love watching your videos because we seem to come from similar educational backgrounds and have had similar realizations about music with more analysis of music outside the jazz idiom. I remember learning a tune of my teacher’s called “Theme for Malcolm” which has a lot of triads shifting around at the end, like Eb/F, etc. But one was G# C# D# over A, which is kinda Lydian, but it’s really more like the chordiods you talke about in your video.
    I remember adding some notes to some of his compositions at the time and he would tell me that those extra notes weren’t part of the sound he had in mind, sometimes he just wanted a simple triad, like G/C, with no E in the chord. I didn’t quite get it at the time, but learning a lot of rock/pop and composing since I’ve graduated has given me a new appreciation for thinner textures like the ones you talk about here.
    Incidentally, my teacher loves using the 1 b2 4 voicing that you mentioned in the Metroid example a lot. He even does a similar thing of sliding it around in whole or half steps. I think it may be a Herbie thing? Anyway, thanks so much for your videos, it’s fun for me to watch ‘cause I feel we’re on similar wavelengths. Have a great day, and keep doing what you’re doing!

  • @freezeframeplease
    @freezeframeplease 5 лет назад +11

    "let’s talk about chordioids!"
    Wait a min......
    "HOW ABOUT SUNRISE LAND!!!! (Bill W. history of japan)
    *i see what u did there..... AND I LOVE IT ! *

  • @lexan2002
    @lexan2002 5 лет назад +1

    This is such and awesome video thank you. Really shows the ingenuity of those old 8 bit songs on retro games and how you can envoke tones and atmosphere with limited resources

  • @NightshadeNate
    @NightshadeNate 5 лет назад +13

    How did those two people comment like 17-ish hours ago? Did they anticipate time travel?

    • @StrixLuke
      @StrixLuke 5 лет назад +14

      Patrons have early access to the channel's videos!

    • @NightshadeNate
      @NightshadeNate 5 лет назад

      @@StrixLuke ah, makes sense

  • @mazeradeville2911
    @mazeradeville2911 5 лет назад

    I find this channel very interesting since it gives a name to the various techniques I've been naturally using in my compositions. I've never studied music theory so I know absolutely none of the vocabulary. I've just used previously nameless techniques from other people's writing in my own and so once I come across these videos explaining what these techniques are called, I can look deeper into it on my own to find new ways to implement those techniques outside of what I'm already using.

  • @virtualnuke-bl5ym
    @virtualnuke-bl5ym 5 лет назад +5

    Me: I want a D in top of this note, but an Eb sounds cool too...
    Wait...
    Why not both?
    *chordioid unlocked*

    • @cmingus2044
      @cmingus2044 4 года назад

      I don't think that'd sound that great...

  • @cosmoblender
    @cosmoblender 3 года назад

    My god this explains so much. I’ve heard so many chords in songs and when I try to replicate them sometimes it just sounds wrong. Thanks to this video I’m gonna be looking out for chordioids next time I try to copy a chord. Thank you my friend :)

  • @josuebustillos8874
    @josuebustillos8874 Год назад +4

    I never understand about 70% of what's explained on these videos but I actually do not speak english.

  • @Kirk.Schr0dinger
    @Kirk.Schr0dinger Год назад +1

    It's kinda funny; I was just making up some stuff involving chorioids before watching this. I was messing around with "flat 7 power chords" because they give a dark, gritty sound without being as "in your face" as a minor triad.

  • @stevethepocket
    @stevethepocket 5 лет назад +5

    Hmm. This might explain why the Snowdin themes in _Undertale_ (especially the one you played) always gave me such an _Animal Crossing_ vibe.

  • @cloudanimal5209
    @cloudanimal5209 5 лет назад

    I’ve played 1pm and Snowy and never stopped to think about the chords

  • @MaximQuantum
    @MaximQuantum 3 года назад +4

    Hidden Rickroll Easter Egg in the video 9:00

  • @Professor_Whom
    @Professor_Whom 5 лет назад +1

    Neat stuff. In my own experience working with these structures, I always considered them sort of half baked chords implying the "true" quality without stating it outright but now I'll have to explore that harmonic ambiguity. Thanks!

  • @TheAdvertisement
    @TheAdvertisement 5 лет назад +7

    3:48 Who would’ve known one of the least popular Undertale songs would have been this useful! Lol.

    • @lawrencian
      @lawrencian 5 лет назад +2

      I love that song lol

    • @cupfulofeathers
      @cupfulofeathers 5 лет назад

      Why is it not popular? It's in my top 5 favorite Undertale songs

    • @TheAdvertisement
      @TheAdvertisement 5 лет назад

      Sarah Smith Eh.. in my opinion it could have been more atmospheric.

    • @gbpooky
      @gbpooky 5 лет назад +1

      @@TheAdvertisement highly subjective claim. i dont doubt many people would disagree with you, myself included. dont be so quick to say "least popular"

    • @TheAdvertisement
      @TheAdvertisement 5 лет назад

      G.B. POOKY But it is? It’s barely ever mentioned and like you said most people would agree with me. I’m not saying it’s a horrible song, that’s a degrading opinion, I’m saying it’s one of the least popular, which is a statistical fact.

  • @bluebotlivingston6016
    @bluebotlivingston6016 5 лет назад +1

    This channel is pure gold for musicians and gamers, thank you so much

  • @KuraIthys
    @KuraIthys 5 лет назад +4

    My jimmies are thoroughly ruffled.
    But mostly because I don't really know any music theory.
    Or what 'jimmies are'.
    XD

  • @angledcoathanger
    @angledcoathanger Год назад

    One of my favourite tings in music writing is to have a repeating part, usually in the bass, and recontextualise it in different ways

  • @nerdymusicks5381
    @nerdymusicks5381 5 лет назад +43

    May I offer an argument on your Metroid example:
    For the chordioid you picked at 6:54, I hear it as a D-flat major seventh chord (minus five) with the seventh moved to the bottom. In my opinion, the chord sounds too centered towards D-flat to be interpreted as one with root note C.
    To my more classically-inclined ears, it sounds like the whole passage is planing between E-flat major, D-flat major and G-flat major, all with added major sevenths as the bass note.
    Regardless of how one interprets these chord(ioid)s, what 8-bit talks about here is absolutely true. The current system of chord symbols can limit the countless possibilities of tonal music, and it's important for us musicians to think outside the box, and be open to discovering new ways to express music.
    .
    .
    .
    .
    .
    .
    (subscribe to my channel pls thx)

    • @Paradockzz
      @Paradockzz 5 лет назад

      The current system doesn't do anything wrong, you're just using the wrong chord symbols. Just be specific.

    • @marcoswappner8331
      @marcoswappner8331 5 лет назад

      I was going to say something similar about Perplexing Pool, at around 8:50. In absence of the melody, I'd have said that was a C7 chord in third inversion, with the flat seven. But as he said, the melody recontextualizes the chord(ioid).

  • @gyd67ckn
    @gyd67ckn 5 лет назад

    I think that even if I wasn't interested in game soundtracks, I'd find this channel to be valuable and return to each video. This topic especially is seriously neglected in most books and videos of music theory.

  • @elistafford4746
    @elistafford4746 5 лет назад +4

    What makes the chords in Norfair 1 b2 4 voicings rather than maj7 voicings?

  • @koskk_
    @koskk_ 5 лет назад

    Man. I don't know a thing abt music, music theory, or reading notes. But boy do I love your videos!

  • @foxy1281
    @foxy1281 5 лет назад +4

    Question:
    How are you able to find all of these different video game music examples for all these different topics? I would be very interested to learn how you discover these unique music techniques “in the wild”

  • @daccrowell4776
    @daccrowell4776 Год назад

    This clip demonstrates one of the most compelling arguments AGAINST common-practice harmonic analysis. One of the things that you discover in upper-division theory is that this underlying problem that the usual techniques don't work after a certain level of complexity. This is why, for example, the "Tristan chord" isn't considered to be possible to properly analyze under that set of methods...but in Schenkerian methods (too involved to explain in comments) actually IS capable of analysis. You just have to "retune" your understanding of what and why the "T" is where it is and how it tends toward AN harmonic resolution...but not THE harmonic resolution that traditional harmonic analysis would cough up. As for the nomenclature, we were taught to call chords missing a degree "open chords" due to the necessity of removing chordal degrees for harmonic clarity's sake.
    For a really good example of music where you're constantly dealing with various broken/unbroken variances over the course of a piece, I suggest NEU!'s "Für Immer", which is based around what all can be done over 11 minutes with an F9 chord. Sorta like Steve Reich meets the Surfaris!

  • @samwise2588
    @samwise2588 5 лет назад +23

    Any one else? Every time I hear "1 PM" my mind starts singing "Girl from Iponema."

  • @xyshomavazax
    @xyshomavazax 4 года назад

    Just the creative spark I needed to end a post-holiday dry spell -- thanks!

  • @korohacker
    @korohacker 5 лет назад +3

    So, to make things terribly simplistic, a chordioid is a chord that omits the 3rd, 5th and/or 7th of chord?
    Seems fun, being someone with no music background at all, this all sounds more like my sometimes hobby of messing around with the piano app on my phone to make weird yet interesting sounds