Turn Your Favorite Song into a Round with the Autocanonizer

Studio 360

Attention: music nerds!

In music, a canon(also known as a round) is a piece where one voice states a melody, anda second voice repeats that melody before the first is finished — think “Row Row Row Your Boat.”Here’s a fancierversion of a canon. The Autocanonizertakes any song and turns it into a canon byidentifying melodies or motifs within the song and repeating those parts over each other in a looping pattern.

Not every song comes out of the Autocanonizer sounding great. After some very scientific experimentation (playing around with it for an afternoon), we foundthe best results come from songs that have the same chord progression throughout, and don’t modulate in key.A few of our favorites:

Songs that go “bleep, bleep, bloop”

“Oblivion” — Grimes
Why it works: The song is two chords repeating (the tonic I to relative minor VI), and her descending “la, la, la’s” perfectly complement the recurring line “see you on a dark night.” Plus, Grimes just knows how to have fun.

“Lotus Flower” — Radiohead
Why it works: As if the chorus of “slowly we unfurl as lotus flowers / ’cause all I want is the moon upon a stick” wasn’t haunting enough, the Autocanonizer gives us a double dose of Thom Yorke, creating a sort of delicate, out of phase stereo. It makes us yearn for a world in which two coexisting, identical Radiohead front men engage in a post-modern danceoff

Pretty much every Sufjan Stevens song, ever

“Casimir Pulaski Day” — Sufjan Stevens
Why it works: Sufjan could teach a master class on writing songs without bridges (it’s the same V, IV, iii, I chord progression throughout). The tl;dr version of the story in this song: Pulaski was born in Poland and became a celebrated cavalry officer in the American Revolution. His holiday is observed on the first Monday of every March.

“Romulus” — Sufjan Stevens
Why it works:SinceCarrie & Lowelltold more of the story of Stevens’ relationship with his biological mother, this songis that much more heartbreaking. The doubling on “we grew up in spite of it” gives us the feels, man.

Tasteful Indie Rock

“Float On” — Modest Mouse
Why it works: Isaac Brock is already a pretty conflicted dude. We imagine two Isaacs combatting each other in his signature spastic vocal style, with one yelling, “All right!” with the other furiously responding “Already!”

“Carry the Zero” — Built to Spill
Why it works: Because lead singer Doug Martsch shreds. And it’s the same four chords, save for the guitar outro, which is whenthings really get cooking. Two Dougs = double shred.

What songs work best for you? Share your results on Twitteror in the comments below. For the audacious and programming proficient out there, the source code, which was designedby Paul Lamere, can be found here.

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