Author
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Frequencies
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Kaz
IsraTrance Full Member
Started Topics :
90
Posts :
2268
Posted : Oct 24, 2004 12:26
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Full-on has frequencies that no other genre has? What about techno? Mainstream dancefloor techno has superior production to full-on, has fatter basses, louder percussions, smashing melodies and a lot of funk, and probably 'more frequencies' whatever the hell that means.
And as to LSD being a 'converter' track, I don't really know - it's had an amazing success rate. Especially at my university where so far not even one person disliked this track.
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ZeRo
IsraTrance Junior Member
Started Topics :
39
Posts :
802
Posted : Oct 24, 2004 16:01
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trance does have a very wide range of frequency in the sounds that it employs. in one trance track there can be sound spanning the aural spectrum. from like what is it 25Hz to 10k hz
135-148 bpm....trance inducing bpm duh!
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Pointy
Started Topics :
6
Posts :
278
Posted : Oct 25, 2004 11:55
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Nice one ZeRo, I am glad somebody finally made that clear.
It is of course true, that different frequencies work differently on the body, you can make somebody ill, or do healing with sound, but since there is usually a very wide range of frequencies in all genres of trance music, I think you can't really use that as an explanation, why so many people like full-on.
It is an interesting question though. I remember reading about an experiment, where there was three different test groups, which all listen to the same piece of classical music, just that one group had it underlayered with a very low (not hearable) frequency, the other group had it underlayered with a high (non hearable) frequency and the third group listened to the original. Afterwards the people discribed how they experienced the music, how they felt and so on and it was signifficantly different from group to group.
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Spindrift
Spindrift
Started Topics :
33
Posts :
1560
Posted : Oct 25, 2004 12:11
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Basically most music wheater trance or not tries to make use of the full audible range (20hz-20Khz),
Some stuff, trance or not, don't make much use of frequencies below 40-50hz, most PA systems cut away anything below 38hz.
If one frequency in full-on is more dominant, it would maybe be that they mostly use the same mastering engineer and he does a bad job. Now of course thats not the case.
Pretty much all pop, rock and trance is packed full within the audible range.
Full-on don't really look any different than britney in a spectral analyzer, only maybe pumping a bit faster.
The peak in a well master mix will be in the bass region though, so you might if you anayze various material fine that the dominant frequency is somewhere between 70-120hz. That mostly depends on what scale you work in though, and will aslo vary a lot between different material, wheater different styles of trance or whatever.
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Krell
IsraTrance Junior Member
Started Topics :
33
Posts :
1114
Posted : Oct 25, 2004 12:48
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Alll right
How you guys seen the movies Liquid Crystal Vision ?
Actually Profane got me to see it....
Theres a guy, who says that the frequencies (some of the beats) line up with alpha, beta and theta waves in the brain and thus it creates a trance state.
Then by repeating the same stuff over and over again, you connect with it...
Or something like that I think it sounds, ehh, interesting... that music plays along the same frequencies that we have in the brain.
I think the frequencies that were mentioned were around ehhh, 120-160 BPM or 240-360 BPM. As far as I can remember from the movie hehe.... so, not really per second but per minute.
Isnt the brain operating around 40MHz ? I read that somewhere 10 years ago or so hehe.
Im sorry if Im not very clear about this, I saw the damn thing well over a year ago - but in principle this is what this guy was saying - If theres anything to it or not, I have no idea.
Im sure however, the brain doesnt care if the music is called full on or progressive hehe.
*Curious Face*
Krell
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Spindrift
Spindrift
Started Topics :
33
Posts :
1560
Posted : Oct 25, 2004 12:55
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Well, the bpm is also technically a frequency.
The way I got the initial post it didn't mention BPM, so I assumed we are talking about what is normally referred to as frequency in audio terminology.
Sure there is a trance inducing element with a rythm around 120-150 BMP.
Again, it's quite a lot of music around that BPM and it's definatly not a range of BPM that would be more used in full on than in other genres.
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