Sorry for the sketchy explanation, Paul.
Yes, the chords underneath the Batman melody are simple triads. Cmin, Ab, D.
The interval between root notes from C to Ab is a major third. From Ab to D is a diminished 5th.
In the Mediant concept, chords dont move in triads, technically. Chords are moving in INTERVALS of thirds. Major or minor thirds - doesn't matter.
A mediant chord progression could be Cmaj - Abmin - Emaj - Gmin - Bmaj. Look at the intervals between the root notes. Down a major third, down another major third, up a minor third, up another major third. The triads built on the root notes can be major or minor, depending on the color you're going for. If you add an Fmaj to the progression, that's a root note a diminished 5th higher than B - the wild card interval. You could try first playing all those chords in root position. Sounds kind of 'blocky', right? Now try playing them so that voice leadings move smoothly from one to the next and you start to get the idea. It's an interesting progression, isn't it? I just dashed this out as an example without even hearing it myself, but it you were to write a melody over that progression you can see that it would be a little more of a challenge than if it were a traditional ii-V-I or IV-V-I progression.
Scott made the point that so-called 'color' notes, 7ths, 9ths, even 13ths, can make a modern film score sound dated. Great, if that's the desired effect. But by moving in more interesting (like mediant) chord progressions...and sticking to simple triads - major or minor chords...we acheive a 'film' sound. (He went into a further explanation of how you can reflect more complex chords as triads over triads. A C 11, for example, could be seen as a Bb triad over a C triad.)
For film scoring, I think there are two terrific advantages to mediant harmonies. First, they sound inherently emotional and dramatic to me. Second, you can create almost endless chord progressions, never really landing on a recognizable tonic. Great device for building emotion in a scene.
Did I explain it better?
Fred Story
Yes, the chords underneath the Batman melody are simple triads. Cmin, Ab, D.
The interval between root notes from C to Ab is a major third. From Ab to D is a diminished 5th.
In the Mediant concept, chords dont move in triads, technically. Chords are moving in INTERVALS of thirds. Major or minor thirds - doesn't matter.
A mediant chord progression could be Cmaj - Abmin - Emaj - Gmin - Bmaj. Look at the intervals between the root notes. Down a major third, down another major third, up a minor third, up another major third. The triads built on the root notes can be major or minor, depending on the color you're going for. If you add an Fmaj to the progression, that's a root note a diminished 5th higher than B - the wild card interval. You could try first playing all those chords in root position. Sounds kind of 'blocky', right? Now try playing them so that voice leadings move smoothly from one to the next and you start to get the idea. It's an interesting progression, isn't it? I just dashed this out as an example without even hearing it myself, but it you were to write a melody over that progression you can see that it would be a little more of a challenge than if it were a traditional ii-V-I or IV-V-I progression.
Scott made the point that so-called 'color' notes, 7ths, 9ths, even 13ths, can make a modern film score sound dated. Great, if that's the desired effect. But by moving in more interesting (like mediant) chord progressions...and sticking to simple triads - major or minor chords...we acheive a 'film' sound. (He went into a further explanation of how you can reflect more complex chords as triads over triads. A C 11, for example, could be seen as a Bb triad over a C triad.)
For film scoring, I think there are two terrific advantages to mediant harmonies. First, they sound inherently emotional and dramatic to me. Second, you can create almost endless chord progressions, never really landing on a recognizable tonic. Great device for building emotion in a scene.
Did I explain it better?
Fred Story