My sketching / art practice has informed my guitar practice: I now play along to the background music when @sharanvkaur is playing video games. And it’s surprisingly fun and interesting. The Opportunity stage in Borderlands 2 is in E, and Sanctuary (the home base) is in D
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Now she’s in the Bloodshot Stronghold, which is in C. And whenever you go back home to Sanctuary, it’s in D. Something interesting about this. Different stages have different atmospheres not just visually but musically as wellpic.twitter.com/9bMQqQFGNw
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This is actually super exciting for me now because I realize I can probably accelerate my music learning by framing it in terms of learning to play video game atmospheres. I wanna learn the Diablo 2 soundtrack. And every fighting game stage I know
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question: if the main root note in a riff is C, and the other most common notes are C# and A#/Bb, is it still technically “in C”? Does that even mean anything? I don’t entirely understand the terminology around keys. Other two notes include E and F. F harmonic minor seems to work
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this is the soundtrack I’m talking about, if anybody wants to make sense of it https://youtu.be/i330CKx-eUs
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now we’re in a main story mission, and the main note being played over and over is F, then going to F#, Eb and back. And then that whole riff modulates a whole step up to G#. Really gives it an intense, dramatic vibe befitting the story at this point. We are far from home (D)!pic.twitter.com/GledBuXYUX
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