I always used to think that modulations (key changes) would be obvious, but they're not always, and often seem really subtle (to me, at any rate) and not really so apparent to anyone who isn't looking at the music, or very familiar with it.
Here is a Youtube which shows some options - https://youtu.be/Vxac3hHrxg8
To start with there are some very obvious ones - which gives us the idea of what's going on, but later on there will be some less obvious ones.
"Obviously" modulation provides variety for a composer, and also can be more interesting for a listener, but if many people don't notice, then the effects can be lost. Perhaps because most of us are now used to listening to highly chromatic music, or even atonal music, or music which "just" includes random sound effects, our collective expectations about key changes as a musical effect have been somewhat dampened down.
Here is a Youtube which shows some options - https://youtu.be/Vxac3hHrxg8
To start with there are some very obvious ones - which gives us the idea of what's going on, but later on there will be some less obvious ones.
"Obviously" modulation provides variety for a composer, and also can be more interesting for a listener, but if many people don't notice, then the effects can be lost. Perhaps because most of us are now used to listening to highly chromatic music, or even atonal music, or music which "just" includes random sound effects, our collective expectations about key changes as a musical effect have been somewhat dampened down.
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