Forum / Music Theory Tips / Good example of pandiatonicism
Good example of pandiatonicism by Mike Bielenberg
Music is great art. Only genius can create it, write some songs or music. I prefer classical music.
I would love more simple and practical music theory ideas. Maybe I could make a post how I do it, I'm very simplistic when it comes to chords.
Nice! I thought I heard a Maj9 chord in there...
Nice! There's a couple brief instances where it implies a IV chord with some nice tensions too (or bVI, as I end up hearing the whole piece in Am now that I've heard the minor chord in the middle :)
Composer Aaron Copeland often used a technique called pandiatonicism. Pandiatonicism is when you use only the notes of a given major scale, say C, but do not combine those notes into any conventional harmonic rules like a I-IV-I-V7-I a chord progression. It's basically "anything goes" on the white keys.
Check out this attached example I created in Logic 8 using standard orchestra samples:
https://www.musicrevolution.com/static/ftp/Pandiatonicism2.mp3
There's a strong hint of a minor six (vi) chord at :24 which began as a happy accident. I wound up augmenting that section with percussion because that one familiar chord feels great in the midst of all the other note movement.
That's the point of pandiatonicism: The notes are familiar but the usage of them is not.