The Secret Scale that Hollywood Composers Use | Music Theory Lesson - OMNI Music Publishing

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If you've ever wondered how Hollywood composers like John Williams write "mysterious" music, then this video is for you. The augmented scale has its roots in the music of Debussy and Holst, and contains endless possibilities for mystique.
An augmented chord is denoted using either a + or 'aug' following the chord's name. For example, C+ means "C augmented", and Gaug means "G augmented". Try out these Advanced Harmonic Concepts in your music!
0:00 Introduction
0:58 Slonimsky's Ditone Progression
3:19 Augmented Scale Examples
5:49 Film Score Examples
Purchase the Slonimsky Thesaurus here:
www.amazon.com/Thesaurus-Melo...
Please support this content by liking and sharing this video. Let us know down below what you would like to see next!
Video edited by Dallas Crane
You can find the full score book for many film scores the Omni Music Publishing website.
Website: omnimusicpublishing.com/
Facebook: / omnimusicpublishing

Пікірлер: 61

  • @JoshLucan
    @JoshLucan3 жыл бұрын

    Also the planing major thirds in Empire Strikes Back when the camera goes to empty space right after the opening crawl! Dear lord, I puzzled over this for so long. There is a hex scale in Persichetti's book that I thought could be the source but showing how it's been used in the repertoire really clears this up. Mystery solved! Thank you.

  • @bpe-music
    @bpe-music3 жыл бұрын

    Thanks so much for the Franz Schreker "Prelude to a Drama" shoutout. It is such a magnificent wonderful piece I fell in love with the first time I heard it live at the Wiener Musikverein with the Radio Symphony Orchestra Vienna under Ingo Metzmacher in 2012 (yes, I still remember that experience almost 10 years later). SOOOO many composers, especially for film, owe a lot to Franz Schreker, Ernst Krenek and many others :-)

  • @scottglasgowmusic
    @scottglasgowmusic3 жыл бұрын

    THIS SCALE! So many films. Then POLYCHORDS! You know how many scores I have done where the cadence is that C# / Amin you discuss at 7:50? Too many! Reminds me of what Charles Ives was doing in his "Unanswered Question". Great video post!

  • @bobblues1158
    @bobblues11583 жыл бұрын

    I have owned the Slonimsky Book since 1969. That and Barry Harris and Louis Armstrong, Duke, Art Tatum . Bird and Bud -Monk is still a mystery. I will include Vincent Persichetti ´s 20th Century Harmony and Paul Hindemiths´Two Voice Writing. And I am a Jazz player. Endless!!!

  • @jangoisbaddest
    @jangoisbaddest3 жыл бұрын

    Please, make more of these videos! :)

  • @chromaticswing9199
    @chromaticswing91993 жыл бұрын

    Wow, I was surprised to see such high quality content with a random click. Your editing, narration style, humor, concepts, and examples are all top notch. I'll watch your other videos, and as it stands right now, you have just earned a subscriber through an excellent video. Can't wait to see what comes next!

  • @AFRoSHEENT3ARCMICHAEL69

    @AFRoSHEENT3ARCMICHAEL69

    9 ай бұрын

    Chronos won't have this shit

  • @homeofcreation
    @homeofcreation3 ай бұрын

    One of the best Music Theory book I ever bought.

  • @muzikmystro
    @muzikmystro3 жыл бұрын

    Tim/ Dallas, you gent. Thank you for this video. My students will be delighted. And I’m greatly looking forward to the Star Trek score, whenever Omni are able to publish it. Stay safe and well x

  • @TheDetective86
    @TheDetective863 жыл бұрын

    I thoroughly enjoyed seeing all the examples of the Augmented Scale. Keep up the great work, Tim.

  • @KaceyBakerFilms
    @KaceyBakerFilms4 ай бұрын

    Amazing. Thank you. Proof KZread has every thing you want to learn. Appreciate the video.

  • @milessafford
    @milessafford3 жыл бұрын

    More videos from this channel, please!!! Great stuff.

  • @turnerhortonmusic
    @turnerhortonmusic3 жыл бұрын

    great video! Please keep 'em coming!

  • @drew6524
    @drew652410 ай бұрын

    When I was in music school I was obsessed with such abstractions. I composed fractal music by hand (back when 1 in 10 had even heard the word fractal) and even sold the framed notation - because it was literally fractal notation. I studied Schoenberg and Raga and everything in between always searching for some magic hidden in the very “dna” of music itself. Since humans now how a 6 second attention span and don’t understand the idea of actually listening to music without rubbing their butts against things or “pumping the bass man”, very very sadly my dream of being a composer old school was murdered by people shouting about money, sex and how tough they are in their athelesiure.. So I started doing soundtracks as my only option. This taught me a very important lesson specific to cinema but 100% true for all music: ITS ALL ABOUT THE FEELS! Soundtrack music is all about either telling people how to feel or enhancing how the movie is making them feel. Fascinating techniques are useless. I think this applies to all music. Aleatoric scales, 12 tone, polytonalism etc fascinating yes but use it for a movie and people will basically feel the same each moment as these abstract scales chords and techniques do not CONNECT TO HUMAN EMOTIONS they are ideas of the brain. To other composers they are fascinating and it’s these types of techniques which birthed the infamous statement that “his music is better than it sounds” used about Wagner. I think there is much brilliant sounding Wagner but I absolutely understand the statement- he worked so hard to be clever and use abstract techniques that often all that was lost and all that mattered was the FEELS of it. The melody, the harmony and the motion. Sometimes applying these fascinating and ever so clever ideas backfired on Wagner. He would have a beautiful leitmotif etc but would cram in so much abstract left brain logical mathematicalism into the music that it would sound AWFUL. Beware cleverness. Half a century of composition has taught me to keep it simple, don’t overcomplicate, don’t get stuck up in your head and stay in your ears and heart. It’s what you HEAR and what that makes you FEEL that matters. Play the melody of “Marion’s Theme” along with the chords just as whole notes and you’ll see what I mean. It’s not clever, it’s not innovative but it’s Einstein level BRILLIANT the way he evokes such a specific and powerful feeling from a banal ordinary chord progression as basic as that of a marching band. I spent years creating new methods, of working on the meta tonal fractal technique (so called because it was played using a special interlaced hand technique so you’d be playing octuplets of chromatic intervals so quickly that the tones would blend into a glassy texture of fractal exposition) but ultimately it was just compose what FEELS right which got me somewhere.

  • @journey624
    @journey6243 жыл бұрын

    Which edition of the Slonimsky book would be best to pick up? There is a updated breezier 'guitar' version and older editions floating around. Great video btw and thanks for letting me know of which 'version' to pick up.

  • @CJCalvertMusic
    @CJCalvertMusic2 жыл бұрын

    Incredible video - great content, and you have a fantastic teaching style. Please keep creating these!

  • @fuglbird
    @fuglbird Жыл бұрын

    This was a fantastic introduction to the augmented scale. Thank you! And the references are excellent.

  • @edbuller4435
    @edbuller44353 жыл бұрын

    Fantastic Stuff...thank you so much.

  • @GenuineHeather
    @GenuineHeather3 жыл бұрын

    Wow. Just wow. Fantastic. Thank you for doing these videos!

  • @nowhereman1402
    @nowhereman14023 жыл бұрын

    Brilliant, thank you

  • @Tauramehtar
    @Tauramehtar Жыл бұрын

    I have always wondered what gave those John Williams passages their particular flavor. This really gets to the bottom of it. Great video. I am going to have to practice with this scale in my own compositions.

  • @KrystofDreamJourney
    @KrystofDreamJourney3 жыл бұрын

    Fantastic stuff Tim !

  • @houdinididiit
    @houdinididiit11 ай бұрын

    The effort here is above and beyond. Thank you sir. Considering there are over 16k views I'm a bit shocked that so many can't even give a thumbs up. I'd give thousands if I could. Subscribed.

  • @scottgilesmusic
    @scottgilesmusic3 жыл бұрын

    Very well organized and informative!

  • @brettchassen2888
    @brettchassen28883 жыл бұрын

    AWESOME 👍

  • @chrisf5828
    @chrisf58288 ай бұрын

    That clip from Holst's Neptune is almost indistinguishable from the spooky Ark theme in Raiders.

  • @omarirm
    @omarirm3 жыл бұрын

    Gracias! Gran video! Muy bueno, realmente fantástico.

  • @whittymusic
    @whittymusic Жыл бұрын

    Love this!

  • @yadinmichaeli12
    @yadinmichaeli128 ай бұрын

    Really cool thank you for the lesson 😊

  • @baardmanbeats
    @baardmanbeats8 ай бұрын

    great vid!

  • @handznet
    @handznet Жыл бұрын

    I just found your channel. My god. One of the best content on KZread- sad that you are not making more videos. Please consider continuing. Make patreon and Im in ❤️

  • @MePeterNicholls
    @MePeterNicholls2 жыл бұрын

    More! This is top content

  • @PentUpPentatonics
    @PentUpPentatonics Жыл бұрын

    I've been googling fruitlessly for years trying to understand what you just explained so succinctly in 10m minutes.. These sounds are so distinct to my ear but I never had a clue what was going on or how to replicate. I can't read music so it's always been such a mystery to me. Can anyone point me toward more resources like this that just explain interesting textures and harmonic ideas simply without relying on notation? Thanks for the excellent video, please make more!

  • @scottfoster3643
    @scottfoster3643 Жыл бұрын

    Fantasztikus

  • @basscat111
    @basscat1116 ай бұрын

    Thanks for this awesome video, but I think there is a mistake at 3:00. There are 2 different scales shown for the nonatonic scale. The one on the bottom is the same as Slonimsky's #184 and I think is correct. It follows a h-w pattern from each of the notes of the augmented scale. The one on top is h-w from C then w-h from E and w-h from G#. I am a bit confused.

  • @sorartificial
    @sorartificial3 жыл бұрын

    Very nice video, I notice there are different augmented scale and this particular full name is augmented hexatonic

  • @JbPianiste
    @JbPianiste9 ай бұрын

    Thank you for such a clear and fascinating video. Plus, am I the only seeing a skull on the left of your background picture ? Made by the stars and dust.

  • @liimlsan3
    @liimlsan32 жыл бұрын

    1:50 - All my life I've thought of Chromatic Mediants as "the thing from the pianissimo organ chords in the bridge to "Watcher of the Skies.""

  • @TheBob0111
    @TheBob01113 жыл бұрын

    5:17-5:18 Illuminati confirmed? 👁 👽👽 👽👽👽 👽👽👽👽

  • @thegoodgeneral
    @thegoodgeneral3 жыл бұрын

    Whoa, wait... where did you get the score for The Phantom Menace? Is it from a live performance score, where an orchestra plays to picture? Or did Omni publish this score?

  • @ThinkSpaceEducation

    @ThinkSpaceEducation

    3 жыл бұрын

    Tim has hidden depths :)

  • @GeorgeStreicherMusic
    @GeorgeStreicherMusic3 жыл бұрын

    Love this! Example of this would be in the choir for the opening titles of Jurassic Park?

  • @omnimusicpublishing974

    @omnimusicpublishing974

    3 жыл бұрын

    Williams used the Romanian minor for the opening Jurassic chord (with an added F when the shakuhachi comes in). However, Don Davis used a D augmented scale for the opening chord in Jurassic Park III.

  • @TimHareMusic

    @TimHareMusic

    3 жыл бұрын

    Only you would know this, Tim 😉

  • @RomanWaves
    @RomanWaves Жыл бұрын

    that's an amazing breakdown, thank you ! may I ask, where do you get the orchestra sheet music from ? especially qui gons funeral , much appreciated

  • @vadimkozlov3228
    @vadimkozlov3228 Жыл бұрын

    Thank you, What i was looking for. Different ways of going beyond the major minor scale. This sounds similar to the batman score by danny elfman.

  • @ericmpereira
    @ericmpereira3 жыл бұрын

    I appreciate the Giant Steps background piano

  • @ericmpereira

    @ericmpereira

    3 жыл бұрын

    While talking of the three-part division of the octave*

  • @omnimusicpublishing974

    @omnimusicpublishing974

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@ericmpereira You caught the reference! I was wondering if anyone would notice....

  • @KrystofDreamJourney

    @KrystofDreamJourney

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@omnimusicpublishing974 I love it too ! After all Coltrane studied Slonimsky’s Thesaurus on daily basis :-)

  • @ralphmarshall1000
    @ralphmarshall10003 жыл бұрын

    If you’re missing a folder, you’re page turner is standing on it.

  • @GuitarUniverse2013
    @GuitarUniverse20132 ай бұрын

    Why is it the second inversion chords seem to be more powerful than root position or 3rd inversion?

  • @emanuel_soundtrack
    @emanuel_soundtrack Жыл бұрын

    7:14 this is an harmonization to highlight the aug triad, and another typical consequence of chrom. mediants, easier explained so

  • @aierterkorekamusiccomposer6949
    @aierterkorekamusiccomposer69493 жыл бұрын

    Do you offer online classes?

  • @emanuel_soundtrack

    @emanuel_soundtrack

    Жыл бұрын

    i do

  • @Labyrinth1010
    @Labyrinth10102 ай бұрын

    Was ready to click off the video if you said Lydian. But then I was like “ooh, augmented”. Nice.

  • @alanluevano5393
    @alanluevano539329 күн бұрын

    ye

  • @farnaztabatabaee
    @farnaztabatabaee Жыл бұрын

    Why didn’t you continue?!!😢

  • @emanuel_soundtrack
    @emanuel_soundtrack Жыл бұрын

    i think these examples are harmony based, not scale based. The scales are natural consequence of some chord progressions.

  • @franciscoaragao9672
    @franciscoaragao96722 жыл бұрын

    C - D# is not a minor third, even inside the american pragmatism.

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