Hi Steve:
Yep, it is. I wasn't listening for the intro and outro. You're messin'
with my count, man... ;)
Must have more...
Best,
dp
Steve D wrote:
On Tue, Nov 23, 2004 at 09:02:02AM -0500, Dave Phillips
wrote:
>http://www.xscd.com/pub/music/blues-in-c_number-2.ogg
>
>
>
Good stuff, very good sound. But, umm, how is it a blues ?? (Not that I
care what you call it, but it's not in a typical blues form)...
--- --- ---
It is an extremely simple C-F-G progression, a three-chord blues in C--
Framed by a 4 chord "intro" and "outro" that ends on the dominant G,
the
structure of the 2 "verses" of this short piece, with base chords bar by
bar, is:
C C C C F F C C G F C C
(the bars are in 12/8 time signature)
The key is C major with heavy harmonic use of the 6th, 9th and augmented
9th with suspended 4th, and heavy melodic use of the dominant 7th
I have been fascinated for some time with taking a minimalist, limited
structure and elaborating on the details and harmonic content. This is
my second "blues" study. The first has so many "passing chords" in the
transitions from C, F and G that it is hardly recognizable as a simple
three-chord blues in C major, but that's what it is. ;-)
-steve d
NM US