gio wrote:geiginni wrote:unarmedman wrote:There only so much you can do with a 12-tone musical system.
And guess what?
It's all been done.
So who's going to be the first indie rock band to build and play quarter-tone guitars?
Well, electronics instead of guitars, there's Four-Tet.
Is that just a name, or do they base their music on a 4-tone scale?
I assumed Four-Tet is like Quatre-Tete, a really stupid band name making a play on the word "forehead". Kinda like Cabeza Fria was doing back in the 90's with "head cold".
Please let's not have names like that, people.
As far as quarter-tones guitars, I mentioned here probably more than a year ago that Todd from US Maple/ Cheer Accident has a guitar that has half-frets installed between the 0 and 5th frets for the 1st through 3rd strings. I got to play it once. It was interesting, though unnecessary.
Let's keep in mind that what with the string bending ("blue" notes) guitar is already not limited to any number of "notes". Kinda like any fretless stringed instrument, like a violin or whatnot. Or a trombone. Or any other instrument where you have to work to get proper intonation.
Considering one single instrument, let's go with a guitar... with 12 different tones, if you make a 3:00 song (and of course songs could really be any of an infinite number of lengths) and arrange combinations of those 12 tones, considering you could have a rest, a single note, a doublestop, a 3-note chord, etc, and you can arrange every combination of those notes/chords in every order, with note durations of any of an infinite number of lengths...
long story short, the idea that 12-tone scale = "it's all been done" is stupid. There are infinitely more 3 minute songs, that could be played on ONE INSTRUMENT with those 12 tones, than you could ever listen to if you spent your entire life doing so. It's a stupid idea. Think about it.
"The bastards have landed"
www.myspace.com/thechromerobes - now has a couple songs from the new album