You might want to avoid the entirety of social media
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I don't wanna know which rarely played song they'll swap for Wrathchild before the Bergen show.
What genre?Dear diary:Man, my tenosynovitis has gotten better, but it's still not gone which is quite annoying. Started recording bass for my second album and it's going slower than I hoped, but I'm managing.
Heavy Metal with some Prog, (Greek) Folk and Power Metal influences. Fairly traditional stuff, but the drumming is rather modern and the guitar riffs are inspired a bit by metalcore-style pedal point riffing.What genre?
Heavy Metal with some Prog, (Greek) Folk and Power Metal influences. Fairly traditional stuff, but the drumming is rather modern and the guitar riffs are inspired a bit by metalcore-style pedal point riffing.
A bit more abstract I suppose. The epic on my first album for example includes a section in 9/8 basically playing a zeibekiko. Some of the acoustic passages use a bouzouki and there are a couple of parts in Greek (and even an intro in Ancient Greek lol). So, it's mostly inspiration, not a nod to a particular era or musician. There's gonna be a bit less of that stuff in the second album though.Greek folk like what? Stratos? Akis? Modern?
A bit more abstract I suppose. The epic on my first album for example includes a section in 9/8 basically playing a zeibekiko. Some of the acoustic passages use a bouzouki and there are a couple of parts in Greek (and even an intro in Ancient Greek lol). So, it's mostly inspiration, not a nod to a particular era or musician. There's gonna be a bit less of that stuff in the second album though.
Yeah, both 7/8 and 9/8 have been entrenched themselves in the folk music of those regions for centuries and probably millenia. Many folk dances have so called "short steps" (one quarter note) and "long steps" (one and a half quarter notes, or one dotted quarter note) and combine them in various ways, resulting in the odd time meters mentioned. For example you could have two short steps followed by a long, which would be 1+1+1.5 = 3.5/4 or in eighth notes 7/8. Even though I grew up outside of Greece, those rhythms, those songs and dances are still ingrained in my mind which is quite fascinating.9/8 is very unique rhythm and one that remotely every Greek today knows to play even without knowledge of music theory. I've read that 9/8 has been used in religious hymns /music since at least Pythagoras' time.