@obwan4 sey did an amazing job immersing himself in these different styles, combining the fundamental "feel" or "attitude" with painstaking attention to instrumentation/harmonic and melodic material/song structure and texture/production/atmosphere for each EP. Each one feels like a part of him, not just a genre that he is emulating.
@obwan4 ay more than instrumentation/production/stylistic practice to play in a particular style. Let a die-hard Metal player noodle around on pentatonic scales all day with an SRV Strat into an AC30, and it still won't completely sound like Blues because it will be missing that "attitude." And on the flip side, that Metal player could probably make that 100% Blues rig sound like Metal if that's what he immerses himself in. That's what's so impressive about The Color Spectrum, it seems like Cas
@obwan4 This is definitely true. But I think in most cases it involves the combination of stylistic instrumentation and stylistic practice (I.E. chord changes/harmonic approach, melodic approach, etc.) with the actual authentic "feel" that you're talking about. I also think that in Casey's case with the Spectrum, a large emphasis was placed on production (compare the harsh/industrial atmosphere of Black with the sweet/natural tone of Green with the theatricality of Violet). Of course, it takes w
@SaotaTheSangheili Its not really the instruments or chords, its more of the style you play using those instruments and chords. An acoustic guitar can be used in Country music and also in Metal. A violin can be used in pretty much any genre of music, as well as many other instruments.
@EvanManynamesMcgee Once you're a musical genius like Casey, it's not hard to have versatility. The thing that seperates music genres is simply the instruments being used, the the chords used. Once you understand the generalization for that, it's not hard to emulate pretty much every genre :)
@obwan4 sey did an amazing job immersing himself in these different styles, combining the fundamental "feel" or "attitude" with painstaking attention to instrumentation/harmonic and melodic material/song structure and texture/production/atmosphere for each EP. Each one feels like a part of him, not just a genre that he is emulating.
BrandonMDove 1 month ago
@obwan4 ay more than instrumentation/production/stylistic practice to play in a particular style. Let a die-hard Metal player noodle around on pentatonic scales all day with an SRV Strat into an AC30, and it still won't completely sound like Blues because it will be missing that "attitude." And on the flip side, that Metal player could probably make that 100% Blues rig sound like Metal if that's what he immerses himself in. That's what's so impressive about The Color Spectrum, it seems like Cas
BrandonMDove 1 month ago
@obwan4 This is definitely true. But I think in most cases it involves the combination of stylistic instrumentation and stylistic practice (I.E. chord changes/harmonic approach, melodic approach, etc.) with the actual authentic "feel" that you're talking about. I also think that in Casey's case with the Spectrum, a large emphasis was placed on production (compare the harsh/industrial atmosphere of Black with the sweet/natural tone of Green with the theatricality of Violet). Of course, it takes w
BrandonMDove 1 month ago
Umm....AAMmmmmmazzzingggg!!
angelgen011 2 months ago
@SaotaTheSangheili Its not really the instruments or chords, its more of the style you play using those instruments and chords. An acoustic guitar can be used in Country music and also in Metal. A violin can be used in pretty much any genre of music, as well as many other instruments.
obwan4 3 months ago
That's a pretty sweet solo.
The Color Spectrum is a masterpiece.
Directorbbz 3 months ago
@EvanManynamesMcgee Once you're a musical genius like Casey, it's not hard to have versatility. The thing that seperates music genres is simply the instruments being used, the the chords used. Once you understand the generalization for that, it's not hard to emulate pretty much every genre :)
SaotaTheSangheili 5 months ago
Sounds like an old late 80s early 90s band. :3 I love their versatility
EvanManynamesMcgee 5 months ago