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How many should a band line-up be?

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Comments

  • It depends what they are doing. White stripes and death from the above 1979 are great examples of nice duo bands. Primus is a prime example of 3 men band. Ratm/audioslave could be 3 men bands if some instrumentalist would also sing. So its not too much about the number of players, some even 2 man bands can sound like a full band depending on what they are trying to do. Some band like slipknot would not work with 2 or 3 or even 4 people. Some stuff requires an orchestra if not using playback/samples for that. For example:

  • Yes, White Stripes are very much an outlier to any of these theories, in a positive sense of course.

    The thinking behind orchestral music (I’m not a fan of) seems to be to collect as many timbre generating things as possible and to cover the entire pitch range. The thinking behind a four-piece pop or rock band is probably less adventurous timbre-wise, but a good shortcut to covering enough of the pitch range in the same way that giving us R G and B is enough to cover the colour spectrum most of the time.

    I often ask myself things like ‘what is drum’; ‘what is bass’ etc, is it simply the shortness or long ness of the sounds, the wide ness or narrowness of the harmonic content, the lowness or highness of the pitching? Should I be free of all such restrictions (yay, of course, anything is anything) or should I pen the tones in to different cages? I think the key to good pop music (that’s what I do, no fancy new genres, I just do pop) is to partition the pitch ranges, to partition the note length options, and in doing so, to also leave spaces in between these partitions.

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