Why do Christians put their hands up when they listen to music?
What do you get out of that? Is it like dancing for you? I mean its basically easy listening from the eighties, yet nobody else listens to that type of music that way. Just Christians.
What do you get out of that? Is it like dancing for you? I mean its basically easy listening from the eighties, yet nobody else listens to that type of music that way. Just Christians.
I really like slow music, of the type "my heart will go on" (celine dion) and whatnot. I know it’s cheesy but I really like it, can’t help it. i like other stuff too.
I am trying to understand why there is an overall perception that this type of music is cheesy, why do people don’t like it?
Thanks in advance for sharing your thoughts!
well what my question asks really…
im into music like:
Kelly Clarkson
The Calling
Carrie Underwood
Sarah Barellis
A Fine Frenzy
Chad Kroeger
Plain White T’s
Switchfoot
Jem
Gavin De Graw…
just the type of music you find in romantic comedies like
failure to launch, a walk to remember, america’s sweethearts…
or on programs like one tree hill, bones, greys anatomy, cold case etc.
any suggestions on bands or songs??
xx
thanks
I want to know how the composer compose the left hand part in piano piece such as
I want to know how does the composer thought up the smooth, flowing left-hand parts of these type of music (i think it is called easy listening):
I want to know how does the composer come up with such composition. Sometime when the song play a arpeggio, it seems to not be in any chord category. I guess it is rather "modified" and it still sound perfectly fit with the flow of the song. I want to know what the composer is thinking when he put those irregularities into the song, yet it works perfectly.
Same goes for the left-hand part. The left-hand seems to flow continuously. Yet, sometime it doesn’t play the chord that it is supposed to play, or for example: the melody is in C-chord, yet the left-hand part seems to play something other than C G E. How does the composer think such "irregularities" that flow even better with other notes than the normal chord for the left-hand part?
Is there a book that teach how to compose a smooth flowing piece such as these songs?