When you go in and out of intervals; if you want major harmonies then you use the third and fifth intervals, and octave the octave interval of course. But to obtain harmonies in certain keys, play around with harmonies other than thirds and fifths. Use creative ones, and for dissonance use harmonies such as the sevenths and such. By the way to acheieve harmony you need more than one voice. ;) figure you should know that, but just in case...
2006-08-06 15:03:36
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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it would be like having different people singing the same song but not the same notes. You always base it from the chords in the song (for ex.:3 people singing a C major would sing C, E, & G.) The chords can be inverted (instead of C, E, G it would be E, G, C or G, C, E. it's the same notes just flipped around in different ways)
I went to go see my cousins sing tonight and they do 3 part harmony (tenor, lead (sings harmony), & baritone)
2006-08-06 15:55:01
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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Singing harmony is done by voicing thirds and fifths of a given scale--either higher or lower than the melody run.
2006-08-06 14:52:06
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answer #3
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answered by Guitarpicker 7
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I can not harmonize to save my life. My teacher always tells me NOT to listen to the people around me, but I can't help it.
2006-08-06 15:32:56
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answer #4
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answered by ballerina_kim 6
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just try to match up your vioce...and if you can't you have to practice a scale...that's one way
2006-08-06 14:33:50
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answer #5
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answered by Jesika 2
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