A comparison of the Daniel Powter’s acoustic BAD DAY, meanspeed=67.7 bpm with the contemporary studio recording, bpm=72

The cognitive music tempo of the faster version at 72 bpm sits in the category of grace according to the meanspeed music conjecture. The acoustic version is more ritualistic and austere, hence its location at the speed of ceremony.



Back from: Mission Springsteen. As you know, in matters such as that with one as that of the “Boss.” Long story short: thank you to all the people of Asbury Park, Bradley Beach and Belmar New Jersey who were fantastically fantastic hosts for Mission Springsteen—a secret mission about which I hope to be able to speak in an open manner. For now, suffice to say: Bruce is “totally fine with” my site and the use of his songs on the site—as long as I do not start publishing lyric and chord sheets. While waiting around to meet Bruce and his most pleasant and friendly entourage (more like good friends than a “posse”), I had time to prepare these charts which feature two things: the two 3-D graphs and the linear graph show Daniel Powter performing Bad Day, an iTunes download, alone with a piano accompaniment only. As you can see from the chart on the top which compares the two performances: one is a sequencer in repetitive time, the other in Powter’s head—pure live time. Is one better than the other? No. Is one way more “pure” than the other—hey, isn’t a metronome cheating, didn’t Powter obviously cheat in the “rock” version??? NO! Playing with a sequencer is as tricky and difficult and musically demanding as playing live, and those musicians who can play either way—Metheny, Mays, Collins, Gabriel, Bowie, The Stones, Dave Matthews band, Clapton, Townsend, John, Sting, Springsteen—these people make it. There used to be a commercial in the 1970s pitching Memorex Brand cassette recording tape. The slogan, after a recording of an opera singer was so well duplicated on the cassette that the reproduction of the high notes shatters a wine glass: “Is it live, or it Memorex?” As per the metronome, the best bands and musicians, a few mentioned above, have musicians who have all trained themselves to have fun playing on a sequenced track or have fun just playing live—and what happens is is that often the sequencer frees up the playing, and such recording sounds more Live tan a real live recording than is trying to Stay on Beat. These are the meanfrequencies for the acoustic version of Bad Day, calibrated as my team’s undisclosed vehicle passed the Cavalry Baptist Church on E Street in Asbury Park. The song : My City Of Ruins was blasting in my head. Asbury needs a Bruce Museum on E Street—an amazing place—bring your bathing suit, etc—2 blocks from the sea. Please notice, as Sting and a list that could go from Paul Simon to Bob Marley, the disproportionate number of artists who live almost next to an ocean? Is it the salt in the water that increases creativity? I think it is a possibility. Anyway, the breakdown of Bad Day, live, acoustically:
Mean speed=67.7 beats per minute

Mean emotion=ceremony
Mean space=0.886 seconds between beats
Mean space=3545 milliseconds between measure
Mean beat=1.128 beats per second Meanpulse=1.128 cycles per second
Mean pitch=288.85 Hertz, 71.5 cents above D4=293.665 Hz and 28.5 cents below D#4/Eb4=311.127. Back from the beautiful New Jersey shore, reviving Atlantic Ocean, kind people—Mission Springsteen accomplished,

Ian Schneider
New York City
27 July 2006

Changing the Mood With Custom Music Creation – Tempo is there, but so vague as to be confusing, as fast is not "happy" and slow is not "sad")

Changing the Mood With Custom Music Creation

If you’ve created many Photo Stories or read
Adding Music
from the
Beginner’s Guide to Photo Story
then you know that you can create
custom music from many built-in options. This mini-guide will show you
how you can change the emotion of your stories by changing the mood of the
custom music.


Emotional Rollercoaster

Some of the best stories are those that are able to affect a
wide range of emotions. While images can certainly convey different
emotions, music is even more emotional by nature. We often associate
music with emotions. Celebrations usually have faster-tempo music, while
ceremonial events have calm, slower tempo music.

You can use this to your advantage and Photo Story even helps
you out by naming the moods of the custom music.


Getting Started

Start by
Importing Photos
into Photo Story. Arrange the pictures so that
they make sense (emotionally speaking) and so that they convey the story you
wish to tell. Once that is done, you’re ready to set the mood with music.

Obviously, you could always do this with some careful choosing
of own windows media audio files. The point of this article is to
highlight the Create Audio abilities of Photo Story. Not only can it set
the mood for a series of pictures, but the audio that it generates has a introduction,
a middle, and an end. What that means is that you have no
abrupt beginnings or endings and one mood can seamlessly transition into
another. In fact, that is what Photo Story is doing. It’s the
audible equivalent to the visual transitions that Photo Story provides.


Setting the Mood

Setting the mood in Photo Story is very easy. On the Add
Background Music
slide, you can either select the slide and hit the Create
Music
button, or right click the slide, open Music from the
context menu, and select Create…

This will bring up the Create Music window.

Photo Story helps you find the music that you are looking for by
organizing the custom music. Genre is the most broad. You
can even set this to All to see all Styles. Once you find a
style, you can select the instruments, or bands that will be playing the
music. The next three settings will help tweak the music to the specific
mood that you are shooting for. Mood, tempo, and Intensity.
Play with the settings. Some sound similar to each other, but the
descriptive terms like “Adventurous” and “Tense” help you decide.

Don’t forget that the Custom music that you create will have a
beginning, middle, and end. Either set the duration of the slide you are
working to be long enough to include all of these elements (30 seconds minimum,
in my opinion), or set the total duration of the number of slides to be that
long (again, 30 seconds minimum).

You may not have known that you could create several pieces of
custom music. Now you know that not only is it possible to have custom
music for each slide, but you can use the mood and tempo to your advantage,
adding to the impact of your overall story.