Hey guys
can anyone help me with what makes a horror surf track aside the sound effects? Like scales, chords used, how much reverb
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Joined: Nov 05, 2021 Posts: 62 |
Hey guys can anyone help me with what makes a horror surf track aside the sound effects? Like scales, chords used, how much reverb |
Joined: Mar 02, 2006 Posts: 11046 Berkeley, CA |
Use as many minor chords as possible. Extra credit for using diminished chords. —Danny Snyder Playing keys and guitar with Combo Tezeta Formerly a guitarist in The TomorrowMen and Meshugga Beach Party Latest surf project - Now That's What I Call SURF |
Joined: Sep 16, 2009 Posts: 73 Pajaro Valley |
Diabolus in musica. Throw in a tritone here and there. \m/ |
Joined: Apr 13, 2018 Posts: 1374 New Orleans |
It's intense and scary. Sound fx are cheap, you don't need them if your music is scary enough. The Ghastly Ones are about the only band to do it fairly well, although the fuckin samples really take me out of the moment. —Daniel Deathtide |
Joined: Feb 02, 2008 Posts: 4427 Not One-Sawn, but Two-Sawn . . . AZ. |
Harmonic minor scales and their related scale tone chords, with possible excursions into parallel melodic minors or even Hungarian minors. The Munsters theme is a good example, living in A harmonic (as I play it) and the last phrase, measure 8, being a walk-up from E but using an F# instead of an F natural, so for just that measure, it’s in A melodic minor. Harmonic minor scale tone chords. I chord, minor of minor natural 7. II chord, minor 7 b5. III chord, augmented Major or possibly a Major with a 6th. IV chord, minor, minor 7th or minor 7th b5. V chord, Dom 7th or Dom 7th augmented 5th. VI chord, Major, Major 7th, Major 7th b5, Major 6th, Major 6th b5. (I love the 6th b5 to Dom 7 turnaround, such an F6b5 to E7.) VII chord, Dim 7 or min 7th b5. One cool oddity is the harmonization of a Hungarian minor, where the II chord is a Dim 7th b5. You can slip between parallel minor key tone centers pretty safely, so I frequently will be in A harmonic minor, for instance, and play a passage using an A Hungarian or an A melodic minor scale, then slip back into an A harmonic minor. —The artist formerly known as: Synchro When Surf Guitar is outlawed only outlaws will play Surf Guitar. |
Joined: Jul 05, 2023 Posts: 32 Sherbrooke, QC |
Locrian is a pretty scary mode. It's diminished, and you do have the tri-tone. Root - minor 2nd - minor 3rd - perfect 4th - diminished 5th - minor 6th - minor 7th. |
Joined: Feb 02, 2008 Posts: 4427 Not One-Sawn, but Two-Sawn . . . AZ. |
HeroSandwich wrote:
Very cool, indeed. It brings brings to mind also the super locrian, and even the name of that is too cool for school. Super Locrian would be like a melodic minor played from the 7th degree to the 7th degree. If you play a super locrian over any dominant 7th chord, you will get the notes for a b9, a #9, a b5 and a #5. Jazz players use this a lot, and it co tributes to a very exotic sound. —The artist formerly known as: Synchro When Surf Guitar is outlawed only outlaws will play Surf Guitar. |
Joined: Nov 05, 2021 Posts: 62 |
Thanks guys had a little practice/experimenting earlier and I really like the results for using the locrian scale. I just got a EHX C9 organ machine and the tones I’m getting are also helping to dial up the creepy |
Joined: Jul 26, 2015 Posts: 258 San Diego, Ca |
About 15 years ago, I put 13s on a Strat and tuned it down to C. (I might have tried heavier strings, but beyond that, I would have had problems getting it to intonate properly. At least with that particular guitar.) If you have a guitar that you can dedicate to tuning down, it might be worth a try, especially with the suggestions mentioned above. Depending upon the song, you may wish to try substituting tremolo, in place of the usual reverb. —-Cheers, Clark- -Less Paul, more Reverb- |
Joined: Feb 23, 2018 Posts: 100 Oslo |
I really like the sound of Hungarian minor! I used it my song called "Cannibals" as well. The link is in my signature if you are interested. —Beach Bomb - Black Surf from the cold waters of Norway! |
Joined: Nov 05, 2021 Posts: 62 |
I had a listen, very cool! elmorto wrote:
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Joined: Jul 26, 2015 Posts: 258 San Diego, Ca |
I’m not sure how to post the link, but I just saw a video on YouTube, by a channel called “Signals Music Studio”, and title of the video was, “Six Spooky Secrets Composers Use To SCARE you.” It gives a quick rundown of the ideas mentioned above. It’s about five and a half minutes long. Worth a look. —-Cheers, Clark- -Less Paul, more Reverb- |
Joined: Nov 05, 2021 Posts: 62 |
Thanks for the heads up |
Joined: Jul 07, 2023 Posts: 20 |
My tried and true method: Shake, stir and season to taste. But in all seriousness, dark movie soundtracks and songs in rock and roll forms other than surf can be a phenomenal source of inspiration. |
Joined: Mar 14, 2006 Posts: 2230 Kiev, Ukraine |
Garrett_Immel wrote:
Nice recipe Garrett! I also like to add a drop of The Cure or Type of Negative to the sauce) —Waikiki Makaki surf-rock band from Ukraine https://linktr.ee/waikikimakaki Lost Diver https://lostdiver.bandcamp.com |