I remember a Clapton song off his "Backless" album which I believe followed directly behind the "Slow Hand" album. Anyway the song was a blues kind of thing. It was all in one chord with a woman screaming unintelligible vocals. I think it might be a classic now. Too bad I can't remember the title.
I was pretty underwhelmed by it. I think you gotta have at least two chords or whats the point?
I once brought Vance Terry to a Zydeco gig. The kid genius squeeze box player Andre Thierry was pumping out his music over the usual one chord funky grooves. Vance listened for a while and then said:
Damn!! One chord!! Let me play some of that. I could play the $h1t out of that. I wouldn't have to think about the changes!! Simplicity rules.
I've recorded groups who did songs with up to five modulations, and maybe 8 or 9 chords in each key. That's when I'd rather be out fishing. I think it's absurd and very unmusical to move around that much.What would have been the feel of the song goes right out the window.
All modern American popular music began with the blues. You can really hear it in country up into the 1950's. There's really nothing wrong with 3 chord songs.
And by the way, in my composition classes of long ago, I was taught that there are, in fact, only 3 chords in existance, the tonic, dominant and subdominant. Every single chord, in every single musical composition, is serving one of those 3 functions. There is nothing else.
Edward Meisse wrote:, in my composition classes of long ago, I was taught that there are, in fact, only 3 chords in existance, the tonic, dominant and subdominant. Every single chord, in every single musical composition, is serving one of those 3 functions. There is nothing else.
There are more things in heaven and earth, Horatio, than are dreamed of in your teacher's philosophy.
A local club owner was quoted as saying the difference between jazz musicians and blues musicians was that the blues musicians use 3 chords for 100 people, and jazz musicians use 100 chords for 3 people.
HOw long ago was it when Hank Williams Senior played Lovesick Blues on the Oprey?
There are a lot more than three chords in that song.
There is so much variety in Country music.
For instance, there is country blues, country swing, country rock, Bakersfield country, Texas Dancehall country, etc.
I think the bottom line is, either you like country music or you don't.
I think you have to admit that the majority of country music is only 3 chords (the new stuff don't count)
I think rock'n'roll is generally thought of as three-chord music too, but country is three chords and the truth!
Of course you can take a 3-chord tune and rearrange it and add a bunch more chords. One of my favorite examples is Jeff Newman and Mike Auldridge's version of "I'm So Lonesome I Could Cry" from the Slidin' Smoke album.
on the flip side, you can take a song with more chords and trim it down to three. Check out the country version of "Nowhere Man" by Red Knuckles and the Trailblazers (aka Hot Rize). it's great. (I don't think "By the Time I Get To Phoenix" would work quite as well!)