T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
447.1 | Fingering Guides | AQUA::ROST | December boys got it bad | Tue Dec 29 1987 09:49 | 14 |
|
Re: .0
It sounds like they are fingering guides.
I.E. the numbers tell you the fret to use, the little "o" means
open string.
Think about it...C is the third fret on the A string, on the D string
D is open, E is second fret, F is third....
The letters "i", "m" probably refer to fingers, index, middle, etc.
|
447.2 | accidentals | CLOSUS::JENSEN | | Tue Dec 29 1987 10:44 | 10 |
| >>3. If a note has a sharp on it instream (as opposed to key signature)
>>does that note stay sharped everytime it occurs?
A note may have a "sharp", "flat", or "natural" symbol instream.
When these symbols occur in this way they are called accidentals to
indicate that they are not a part of the key signature. Once an
accidental occurs, it stays in effect for the remainder of the bar
in which it appears.
steve
|
447.3 | | MTBLUE::BOTTOM_DAVID | Fat man in the tub w/dabluz | Tue Dec 29 1987 10:54 | 8 |
| Thanks gents for the answers..I suspected it was a fingering guide
to some extent but decided to check to be sure....
re: accidentals, does the accidental effect the same note, different
octave within the same measure also?
dave_isn't_self-instruction_fun?
|
447.4 | | MTBLUE::BOTTOM_DAVID | Fat man in the tub w/dabluz | Tue Dec 29 1987 10:55 | 6 |
| Oh yeah, short of just doing it all the time does anyone have any
suggestions for the fledgling sight reader?
thanks
dave
|
447.5 | The Black Page | ERASER::BUCKLEY | Street Lethal | Tue Dec 29 1987 11:09 | 25 |
|
Re: .3 & .4
Yes, an accidental effects all the octaves of a note within a measure
unless it is altered otherwise (natural sign, double sharp, etc)
A good tip (worked for me) for sight reading is Read Under Pressure!
I learned to sight read by not practicing my sight reading lesson
and having to SIGHT READ it in the lesson. Talk about pressure.
See if you can get another player (guitar, keys, sax/flute) who
is more advanced to read with and do duets. It will force you to
concentrate and keep up your part with the other person. Another
suggestion for sight reading is to try and read in several positions
on the guitar instead of going for tougher music. You can start
off reading in 2nd position, but should try and move to 5th soon.
7th and 12th positions should be goals thereafter. A good practice
for position playing is to shed major scales in chromatic intervals.
This forces you to use all the different fingerings, as well as
cover more area on the neck. For example, play A major scale from
the root in 2nd position, Bb from the root in 5th, B from the root
in 7th, C from the 3rd in 12th, etc etc.
Good luck with the reading DB_II
wjb
|
447.6 | | MTBLUE::BOTTOM_DAVID | Fat man in the tub w/da bluz | Tue Dec 29 1987 12:30 | 6 |
| Part of my problem is I know the scales....(some exceptions like
melodic minor)...I just don't read. I've misplaced a book I had
called the blues scale that wasn't just the straight scales...that
one forced me to read rather than just go "Oh A minor?" zoooooommmm....
dbII
|
447.7 | db or not db, that is the question | DREGS::BLICKSTEIN | Dave | Wed Dec 30 1987 10:23 | 13 |
| Don't think that the reference in the note title of .5 went by
unnoticed or unappreciated WJB!
If you can sight read that, you can sight read anything.
db
p.s., one of these days we're going to have to establish a convention
or standard for folks whose initials are D. B. It's frustrating
to read notes like "Yo, db, that was great", or "I can't
believe you're such a jerk, db" and not know for sure whether
they're talking about me or one of the dozen or so other
"db"s.
|
447.8 | | BAXTA::BOTTOM_DAVID | a promise your body can't fill | Wed Dec 30 1987 10:30 | 11 |
| Hmm I know what you mean, at one time I was gonna get into the stomp
box business with a friend (we built a great distortion deviceand
compressor) and I wanter to use the name db systems...unfotunatley
a stero company out of NH had already established themselves with
that name....and as things usually go we couldn't raise the capital
necessary.....
But I didn't get the "black page" pun if that's what dbI was referring
to...
dbII
|
447.9 | The sight reading benchmark | DREGS::BLICKSTEIN | Dave | Wed Dec 30 1987 14:04 | 13 |
| "The Black Page" is an old Zappa tune that has an unusual amount
of odd things (for rock music, ok tom?) in it like playing 13 over
5, etc.
Steve Vai's earliest claim to fame was providing the transcription
for "The Black Page". In fact, it was on the basis of that
transcription (I believe) that Zappa hired him to do more
transcriptions and eventually brought him into the band.
The overall point being if any one tune was picked as the ultimate
test of sight reading, it might be "The Black Page".
the "real" db - ;-{)
|
447.10 | Sheeesh | INK::BUCKLEY | Street Lethal | Wed Dec 30 1987 15:52 | 9 |
|
I like the 27:3 (27 notes over three beats) ratio myself.
The scary thing about Zappa is that sight reading his music is a
must for a position playing in his band. Its what the auditions
consist of primarily. Just think the people playing with him can
READ that stuff?!?!? makes the mind boggle.
|
447.11 | Some sources | NEXUS::DICKERSON | | Thu Dec 31 1987 11:25 | 21 |
| Some good sources for study would be Frederic Noad's books
(although they do lean toward classical technique, the info
on music theory and notation is good), Wm Leavitt's book
A Modern Method for Guitar from Berklee and, also from
Berklee, Reading Studies for Guitar.
This last book ( Reading Studies ) is excellent. It supports
a previous suggestion to "read under pressure". The whole
idea of this book is to provide lots of studies in all keys
and to READ them. You shouldn't "practice" them or play any
single study on consecutive days. I've found it a great help
if a little intimidating ( esp if friends or family are within
listening distance ).
Also, a recent Frets magazine ( last month's? ) had an entire issue
dedicated to notation and reading. There was a very basic, very
clear article by Fred Noad about notation.
Happy reading
Doug Dickerson
|
447.12 | | DEC25::COSTIGANB | Bought a Beat-Up Six-String... | Fri Mar 02 1990 16:22 | 17 |
| I have a question on reading a piece of music in the key of A. In the
following diagram, '|' is the beginning/end of a measure, 'n' is a natural
accidental, and '\/' shows two tied notes.
3rd Str| nG | G |
| \|/ |
4th Str| | E E D D |
| | |
5th Str| A A A A | nC |
| \/ | |
6th Str| nG G G | |
My understanding is that once an accidental appears, it stays in effect
for the rest of the measure. First Question: why are there two naturals
in the first measure above? This leads me to believe that the 2nd and 3rd
G's should be sharped. Second question: how do I tie together the last G
(natural) of the 1st measure and the 1st G (sharp) in the second measure?
Should I hammer-on? Help! - Brian
|
447.13 | the way I read it... | SUBWAY::BAUER | Evan Bauer, DBS Tech Support, NY | Tue Mar 06 1990 00:16 | 19 |
| Haven't got an axe at hand to see how it sounds, but if standard
conventions are being used (and you described them correctly) all the
G's are natural -- redundant accidental notations for clarity are
common. If a slur (slide or hammer-on) were indicated in the
tied notes across the two measures shown, then the notes would be shown
on two separate bars of the staff (I assume that this was in standard
notation when you started). It would then have showed up as a natural
G to an A flat. If it was tab in the first place, then conventions are
less clear, though slides or hammer-ons are usually indicated with an
"S" or "H" under the tie.
BTW, went to the closet got a guitar and found too little present to
indicate whether a G# fit or didn't (too my admittedly mediocre ear).
Any onelse got any thoughts?
- Evan
(You could always play it the way you like it best. :->)
|
447.14 | | BUSY::JMINVILLE | rockin' through the wilderness | Tue Mar 06 1990 12:25 | 3 |
| If it's a tied note, then it stays a G natural.
joe.
|