What's your favorite music trope?

audrbox@lemmy.blahaj.zone to Asklemmy@lemmy.ml – 110 points –

Can be from any genre. Mine is when an acoustic guitar comes in towards the end of a song and totally changes or reframes the mood/energy (see "Money" by Widowspeak)

103

I love songs that completely change genre partway through. Can be slow acoustic songs that switch to fast techno; loud, bangy songs that turn calm and soft; rap songs with calm, piano-based choruses; whatever.

Examples would be:

Don't forget Bohemian Rhapsody, the all-time king of this niche.

God yes, using changing genres to tell a story in your music is such a power move

Here is a song I think you are going to LOVE: Set to Stun - Walk Tall II

Scaretale by Nightwish and Little Piece of Heaven by Avenged Sevenfold are both all over the place in terms of genre.

Little Piece Of Heaven is the Bohemian Rhapsody of metal, I love it.

2 more...

I love when the track goes completely silent for a single rest after some buildup and then punches back into the full chorus. If that “gap” in noise is part of the melody itself it’s even cooler. It makes the following sound so much more impactful, even if the actual volume hasn’t increased by much.

Yeah, that's one of my favorites too! Got any good examples you like? One of my favs is "Ivory" by Polyphia. It hits right towards the end of the song and always gets me good.

Going back to my skater teen phase, "hands down" by Dashboard Confessional has a good one.

I like it when the vocalist announces what's coming next, like yelling "GUITAR!" right before a guitar solo or "bring back the horns" right before the brass section kicks in or "sing it, girls" right before the female backups echo the refrain.

I really like this one for certain genres like Funk or RnB that are generally more energetic and spontaneous when performed live. Helps the recorded material feel a little more alive.

Even better when the singer "requests" it from their bandmate by name. (e.g. Honey Don't by The Beatles)

Siren noises and airhorns and generally post-ironic soundboard noises. Like remember DJs in the early 2000s? When the radio sounded like

(Tires screeching) Husky overly excited voice: you’re listening (Siren blaring) To the one and only (Red tailed hawk screech) (Machine gun noises) 97.4 (Dog barking) (mgm lion roar) KZRL “Krazy” FM (Choir sings hallelujah) Your one-stop-shop for hits from the 70s and 80s (Chorus from “don’t you forget about me” plays) (Guitar solo from Panama)

All those stupid noises are great when they get shoved into mid 2010s dubstep music, and when they are put into SoundCloud mashups.

Teacher: "You can't hear text"

Random Lemmy Comment:

Back when you downloaded new ringtones via SMS short codes you found on the back of a magazine

Only assholes put sirens in music. Me in my car trying to find where the trouble is.

I love that train track or horse gallop chugging rhythm some songs have.
Gives me feelings of movement forward, travel or progression.
Great car songs!

Muse - Knights of Cydonia, Roy Orbison - I Drove All Night is probably a good examples of this.

A lot of old Iron Maiden will fit that quite well, of course, maybe most infamously, The Trooper.

Mixing metal with other genres or introducing instruments or elements that you otherwise wouldn't expect in metal.

By now most of these are considered to be subgenres of metal but for me it blew my mind when I first encountered them.

Bands like Ayreon, Avantasia, Subscribe, Therion, Haggard, Nightwish, Ostura, just to name a few.

Wheel of Time by Blind Guardian is one of my all-time favorites. Looking at the other bands you linked, I'm guessing you've already heard it; but for others reading this, clicky the linky!

Symphonic Metal is such a small genre though... I want more! Q_Q

I quite enjoy it when songs sneakily build up, starting out with a mellow rhythm and after a few minutes, you find yourself in the middle of an epic solo on top of this thick carpet of rhythm, and it's all very much over the top, but it works, because of that slow build-up.

I used to get annoyed by pink floyd songs being so slow. I now realize it's so much more powerful and overwhelming because it started slow

I don't know you or your general taste in music but if you ever want something a bit more modern yet als doing the 'start slow until you made a wall of sound out of it' thing, I highly recommend you check out the band Motorpsycho! Pretty much every album they made in the 90s and early 2000s have always at least one great song which will build and build and build up to a great crescendo. Their other stuff is absolutely great too! Their song Vortex Surfer got played for 24 hours on new years eve (I think it was 99 to 2000) on a Norwegian radio station.

2 more...

Not sure if this is a trope per se, but I love when sounds don't sound "perfect" - the producer kept in a little vocal waver, or the snare isn't hit with the exact same intensity every time. The little imperfections make it feel/sound like real humans are playing the music!

I think that can be said about pretty much any creative work. Those little imperfections are what make it real, and I love it.
Hollywood using old vintage lenses for their design flaws, CG artists deliberately putting scratches and dust spots on their models, and so many more examples.

To come back to music, I believe no robot will ever be able to play Clair de Lune with the gentle delicacy and softness that a human who just lets themselves flow with the sound can produce.

That's what it's all about.

Check out Since I've Been Loving You by Led Zeppelin. The kick drum pedal squeaks all the way through, and they left it in.

My favorite is when a high energy song does a soft version of the chorus towards the end of the song, and the singer sings more mellow, or sometimes even an octave down. Then the singer goes back into full energy and original octave for one line before all the instruments come back in at full volume.

I like it when a song turns to sounding like a large group of people singing the song.

Music that is REALLY stereo. I recently-ish got a pair of open back planar magnetic headphones, which sound bloody brilliant. So wide, so open, so crisp! It's almost like VR for your ears with certain tracks and albums.

So ye! Songs that really lean hard on having fun with stereo, or just really well engineered music in general. I was FLOORED when I listened to Nine Inch Nails' The Downward Spiral for the first time with those things, so much fine detail and incredible audio engineering in that album. I'd honestly consider it one of the best engineered albums I've ever listened to, and I'm saying this as a huge Steely Dan fan.

Another go to for me is Pond's Man, It Really Feels Like Space Again. Psychedelic music just hits so incredibly well when I use those headphones, and this album in particular just really takes me through a friggen journey when listening to it.

All Along The Watchtower blew my mind when I listened to it through headphones for the first time. I'd heard it hundreds, if not thousands of times over the years, but either in pubs and clubs, or through fairly crappy equipment where you couldn't hear the effect.

I got myself a pair of half decent headphones, and decided to try something different to the usual fairly modern punk and rock that I like, and it just happened to be in the playlist.

I had no idea that it sounded that good :)

Lucid Dreams by Frans Ferdinand was one song that stood out to me, at least it was the first one that did after I got my first pairs of nice headphones. It's the 7:55 minute version, and the part starts to build around 4:38

Breakdowns. Chug chug chug chug chug Random growls and barks

Mmmmmmmmmm. Soothes my soul.

I like it when a chorus gets built up more on each repetition, either with the addition of more instrumental parts, new harmonies or background vocals, or a beat change that brings up the intensity.

Similarly, I like when that same effect happens within 2 halves of a chorus. Example of one I heard recently is the chorus of the song "Breathing" by ELLEGARDEN. The 2nd half adds a higher vocal harmony + a picked lead guitar line that open up the sound a bit and just give it a nice little emotional boost.

Untitled 8 by Sigur Ros does this sort of thing.

It's fairly slow towards the beginning, but then they go into the best buildup-drop-buildup-drop-final climax thing I've ever heard.

Not sure if it's a trope, per se, but I love finding good covers of my favorite songs in other languages.

Edit: When the lyrics switch into a different language on a breakdown. That's a trope, right?

If you're on Twitter, the account @foreigncovers posts covers in other languages.

2, 5, flat 6 to the key change. Or a nice 4 minor chord.

Never knew I liked this too, but it sounds nice so I guess I agree.

Note bending. Blue notes. Slide guitar. Whammy bar. Probably because I was raised on the blues, soul, and psychedelia

I call them groove breaks, when the song takes a little break and just grooves for a bit.

The video version of Even Flow by Pearl Jam has a great one, Stranglehold has one, the album version of Sweet Emotions has one as the intro, so maybe not technically a break.

You might like Utah, Gateway to Nevada by A Plage of Locusts then. It changes back and forth between a slower, groovy chorus, and a slightly more energetic refrain.

I really love concept albums where the chorus of the first song makes a return in the finale. Makes it feel so conplete.

Examples, all power metal:

  • Gloryhammer - Return to the kingdom of Fife
  • Memories of Old - The Zeramin Game
  • Marius Danielsen's Legend of Valley Doom - (all three albums listened to together)

In a similar vein i really like the pink floyd vamp. Its on (i think) 50% of the songs on dark side of the moon. Its Gm7 and C9 back and forth on great gig in the sky but there are a few variations. For example Em and A7 on breathe or its used here and there in "time" with F#m and A.

It ties alot of their songs together and sounds amazing.

BLEGH whenever the Singer in a hardcore show says BLEGH sucker punch yo neighborhood. See Hatebreed, Terror for examples of BLEGH

I love when something is sung in a lower, more calm register and towards the end when things get fast the same thing is said but with a higher octave and more energy like it's so exciting it feels like character development but for music

I think sidewinder by avenged sevenfold does what you're talking about.

I love a good "stickedibum". Which is a song ending in 4 quick drum sounds. I can't quite explain it, but for example the four very last drum notes on Alive by Pearl Jam is a stickedibum.

Multiple lines of a song being one sentence, with the candence carrying it through the lines. Eg. Snowman by Sia.

I like when there's a whole change in rhythm that makes the song totally different. Like this one: https://youtu.be/ibmk1RDHaEs?feature=shared

Any percussive delay with loads of filtered feedback in dub or tech house

Really repetitive samples that evolve like Global Communication - The Way

This one is probably very specific but Utada Hikaru has one that I love, where towards the end of certain songs she sings the chrous, and then keeps the same melody going multiple times but with different lyrics. It's like she extends the feeling and rhythm of the chorus but keeps it interesting by using different lyrics the whole time. Some examples: Goodbye Happiness, Making Love, About Me, LETTERS, Sakura DROPS.

acoustic guitar comes in towards the end of a song and totally changes or reframes the mood/energy

The Stage by Avenged Sevenfold fits the bill. Especially if you watch the video along with the music, that song is just all around fucking great, to include the ending.

I was also reminded of A7X except I thought of their song Sidewinder. The guitar ending is my favorite part.

I can't think of any more examples, but bands that rework an old popular song and keep parts of the melody and make a new one. Both examples I know of are teen spirit/rape me by Nirvana.. and linoleum/linewleum by nofx and are both, imo, reflections of what gained them a larger following. Can you name some more?

Right now it's breakdowns in hyperpop songs that are a lil too dubstepy but don't overstay their welcome. Underscores is a great example

I like short intros with only vocals like "Hush" from Stick to your Guns.

I don't know how to describe it or have the music theory knowledge to understand why it's so satisfying, but the outro for Tank! (Cowboy Bebop opening song) is just so good and I can't explain it.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UFFa0QoHWvE?t=194