Not the 4 chord, silly; Intravenous (IV's, as in intensive care. Speaking
of which, do they play muzak in the ER, too?)

But, the IV chord can be a marvelous thing, as long as it's loaded with
non-diatonic tensions! (or just apply a liberal dose of the MixoLocrian
scale from the root a perfect fifth below.)

I'm glad we have certifiable nuts who post here; working in a non-music
office environment painfully lacks a certain joie-de-vivre.

but seriously folks, does anyone know why you can't multiple or
non-contiguosly select handles of notes in the midi tool edit window? (for
changing velocities or start/stop times). I can drag select the ones I
want, but then the edit only applies to one note of all the ones I
selected. (Boy does that suck.) AAAAAND.... if you are trying to goose the
velocity of the lead note in a voicing (anything more than 2 notes), try
figuring out which handle controls the top (lead) note! It is not always
the top handle, and even tho the line goes red, you may have to select
another note until you hit the right pitch. This is NUTS MAKING! Anyone
else had the pleasure of fine tuning a piano or guitar part this way? Oi.

>
> On 19-Feb-07, at 1:56 PM, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>> Music can cease to be soul food if you are having it fed to
>> you on IV's 24/7.
>
> Yes, I agree. I have often maintained that overuse of the IV chord
> makes everything sound real bland.
>
> 8-)
>
> Christopher
>
> (yes it was a joke, but it is also true! Try almost anything except
> the IV chord, and only use it when nothing else will work.)
>
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>


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