Friday 7 December 2012

Random Post- Song Progression 1: The Intro

I'm starting a series of posts regarding some technicalities I consider when reviewing.

This post is not a review, so please do not expect one. It's going to be a clarification of sorts, a cogent piece explaining some stuff which I say quite often in my reviews. It's about progression. I've mentioned this many times before, and why? Because I firmly believe that a good song should be one that draws you in to an emotional experience, a narration where one is able to really feel something from it.

Take a song to be a story, with climaxes, falling actions, build ups, the works. The introduction of a song should serve a clear purpose in the song. It could be used as an artistic effect, like a slow beginning that contrasts with the rest of the song (Eg. I Will Show You by Ailee), that actually melds in with the build-up, resulting in a longer, more drawn out buildup that intensifies naturally. Take note, while I bashed Boyfriend for their dull introduction, my main gripe was not merely that it was really boring, but actually taken into context with the portion after, it really didn't do anything. After the slow and slightly cheesy opening, the pace drops even lower to this awkward rock-piano hybrid which well, I guess only adds negatively to the progression of the song. 

Looking at progression, the introduction, by right, should start of on a low key, before the dramatic build-up climaxes into the chorus that should be the explosion of emotion worthy of everything before it. But can an introduction start out high? If it did, wouldn't the pacing have to be held way up throughout?

Well, no.

This is actually where pacing sets in. With a booming intro, to sustain a narrative would be Herculean task, but one can overcome it with consistent, or better, livelier pacing. With a beat to stick to, or an emotion which we could tag upon for a long duration, one would never feel empty even with a slower track.

Looking back at Janus, the beat after the introduction really dies and seems almost of an alien genre. The emotional transitions are too quick, and comprehending or devoting oneself to the emotions in the story would be perplexing and downright cluttering to musical soul. 'The Chaser' on the other hand, starts really strong and manages to sustain the pace to the chorus by means of drawing the listener to the emotions of being in a chase; the fear, the anxiety, the excitement, all mushed up into a fiery ball of soulfulness that the listener can grasp and attach to. In this case, song progression in the introduction at least, would have the potential to be sustained and developed for the rest of the song.

This is it for the intro, and other sections of the song will be up soon.

No comments:

Post a Comment