• Ephera
    link
    fedilink
    456 months ago

    I always hated that. It always felt like they just admitted defeat. They could have made an excellent song, but settled for disappointment.

    Now I’m doing music myself, and goddamn, I get it. You can have a cool song going, and then you try to end it and it just sounds like disappointment every time.

    • The Picard ManeuverOP
      link
      166 months ago

      I’ve always wondered how you would do this when playing live.

      • @[email protected]
        link
        fedilink
        166 months ago

        In my experience, the songs with a fade out on the album usually get a real ending when played live. So they figure it out somehow

        • @[email protected]
          link
          fedilink
          56 months ago

          In some instances, you just sort of decide to wing it and jam for a bit until you all find a spot that works. So, sometimes, you get to hear the ending get written live! (Though, usually, you just end up repeating whatever you’d do when you were practicing the song before)

          Source: Had a band, had trouble writing endings sometimes.

      • Ephera
        link
        fedilink
        56 months ago

        Fading out? With my wind band, we’ve never done it.
        You can have everyone play pianissimo and also reduce how many players play each voice, but unlike a digital fade, this does change the way it sounds.
        It’s also difficult to stay in tune when playing at a low volume with a wind instrument, so it starts to sound horrible before it becomes inaudible.

        @[email protected] mentioned mic+soundboard, but for a windband, the band itself would need to be out of earshot, which is rarely possible.

        So, yeah, if we ever need/want to cut a song short, we make use of a marching band signal.
        Basically, the person on bass drum does two double-hits, which are out of rhythm so you can hear them, and then another hit on the first beat of the next measure, which is when everyone stops playing.
        That does not always sound great either, but better than nosediving the whole orchestra. 🙃

      • Kairos
        link
        fedilink
        46 months ago

        Musicians can play at different volumes, and there’s usually a mic and soundboard.

      • @[email protected]
        link
        fedilink
        English
        26 months ago

        Maybe some theater stages feature sound-deadening curtains that can get you most of the way there, then you’ll have to become a marching band.

    • @scrion
      link
      36 months ago

      Honestly, I often like a fadeout, e. g. keeping a slow bass beat around, fade everything else out slowly, sounds like a heart beating its last beats. Super cliché, but I like it.

  • 🇰 🌀 🇱 🇦 🇳 🇦 🇰 ℹ️
    link
    fedilink
    English
    31
    edit-2
    6 months ago

    The best ending for a song is Pink Floyd’s Time.

    The time is gone, the song is over, thought I had something more to say…

    And then it starts right up into Breathe Reprieve.

  • @Darkmuch
    link
    196 months ago

    Alternatively you get the funky song that decides to have some weird change up for the last 10-20 seconds which you suffer through on every repeat.

    • @Trail
      link
      16 months ago

      Black sabbath war pigs intensifies.

  • @AgentGrimstone
    link
    146 months ago

    And the part they’re fading usually sounds really good and I want it to last a little longer

  • @MeaanBeaan
    link
    136 months ago

    Hey man, sometimes you try a bunch of shit. None of it works. Then you try a fade out and it does.

    Often times I find that songs sorta just write themselves. And sometimes the right ending is just a fade out.

  • @[email protected]
    link
    fedilink
    76 months ago

    If I remember correctly, the very first fade out was at a live performance included the orchestra to physically leave the room

  • @SpiceDealer
    link
    76 months ago

    Or you could take the Dream Theater route and end the song abruptly.