T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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2805.1 | | CHEFS::BRIGGSR | Four Flat Tyres on a Muddy Road | Tue Sep 14 1993 03:33 | 18 |
|
Well I'm not sure what the basis in theory is but key is all important
to the overall feel of a piece of music. Certainly classically trained
musicians will tell you this and give the theory as to why. Someone's
bound to respond here with the 'real' reason.
From my own experience on the guitar what seems to be important is the
'shape' you're playing not necessairly the key. So, if you want to
raise a song in C to E place a capo on (or use barre chords) and play
the C shape further up the neck. Just playing open chords in E will
make the piece sound 'wrong' to my ear.
Also, there's a right and wrong place for barre chords. I have a friend
who thinks playing open chords is for sissies basically. I cannot get
it into his head that some songs just sound better with open chords
whereas others sound better with barred chords.
Richard
|
2805.2 | 8^} | NAVY5::SDANDREA | IfoughtTheLawn&TheLawnWon | Tue Sep 14 1993 08:13 | 20 |
| John,
In one of my former 'cover' bands, we used to transpose a few songs
'cause our lame singer didn't have the range. A few of these tunes had
'real' signature guitar parts like the Doobies "Long Train Runnin'" and
Edgar Winter's "Free Ride". I HATED the transposed version....it just
plain and simple did NOT sound 'right'. The non-musicians in the
audience never noticed. I don't think theory applies here; it's an
aesthetic thing more or less......in the arena of covering popular
songs, some tunes just demand to be copied in their recorded key. IMHO!
RE: -1
Absolutely! Open chords and many other 'cool' chord voicings sound
really neat to me! Barr chords are cool too, and necessary for certain
sounds or 'voices'. They each have their place. Tell yer friend that
if he/she thinks open chords are for sissies, he's/she's got his/her
blinders on!
My $.02
|
2805.4 | don't you hate it when...... | NAVY5::SDANDREA | IfoughtTheLawn&TheLawnWon | Tue Sep 14 1993 08:53 | 10 |
| Ditto...again! In this band we wanted to play "Listen to the Music"
(Doobies again) and the singer says we gotta drop it to 'D'. I tried,
but I'd lose the effect of the open E string and open A string (I'd let
them ring 'quietly' for extra 'fullness' on the changes) when
playing those signature Tom Johnston type chords in 'D'...we dropped
the tune....
sheesh...we needed a 'real' singer.....ask Coop!
dawg
|
2805.6 | Cover tunes....play 'em straight or don'tr playy 'e | NAVY5::SDANDREA | IfoughtTheLawn&TheLawnWon | Tue Sep 14 1993 09:22 | 5 |
| How important is the key?
Let's do Sweet Home Alabama in F#....c'mon now, everybody join in!
8^)
|
2805.7 | | KDX200::COOPER | Testing my new personal name | Tue Sep 14 1993 10:32 | 3 |
| We needed something, thats for sure...
:-)
|
2805.8 | Still don;t get it | ULYSSE::WILSON | John,Valbonne,France 828-5631,VBE | Tue Sep 14 1993 10:53 | 14 |
|
Thanks for the replies. But I still don't understand. Let us leave
aside considerations of vocal range and open strings. Did the writer of
Long Train Running decide that it had to be in G# for any reason other
than to suit the singer's range (for example)?
Do songwriters change keys until they find one which sounds
best? When a song is demoed (say on a piano), will someone comment
"Great song, but it would sound better in the key of F"? I doubt it,
but I am open to persuasion.
Regards
John
|
2805.10 | IMHO *everything* matters | SUBSYS::GODIN | My other preamp is a Tri-Axis. | Tue Sep 14 1993 12:26 | 44 |
| Obviously, open strings are going to make a big difference (That's why
moving from C to E or vice versa is not recommended.).
Voicings, or the "shape" of the chords, make a huge difference to me.
Some people don't seem to notice.
Certainly if your lowest (or highest) note runs off the instrument,
you're gonna have to flip a voicing somewhere, & that's going to matter
(to me).
Not so obviously, perhaps, but along the same lines is when you shift
from/to wound/plain strings on the guitar. Typically E, A, & D are
wound & the others plain (except on acoustics where the G is often
wound as well). Rearranging a chord or part can sometimes force it to be
played on a plain instead of wound string.
The "length" of the string used in making the note can affect
intonation, as can the tension in the string. For example, moving a song
from Bb to B by moving up a fret (assuming all barre chords & all same
shape) would sound different from that same key change accomplished by
tuning the guitar a 1/2 step higher. (Try playing along to G 'n' R's
Sweet Child o' Mine after tuning up to a 440 A on a quartz tuner !)
Piano "strings" (real ones) also have their own characteristics. The
bass notes consist of one heavy "string" per note, the middle ones use
two "strings (wires)" for each note, & the upper register uses 3
"strings" per note. Any time any key transposition causes one of these
boundaries to be crossed, it's going to result in a different "sound".
Whether you *care* is another matter. Playing SCOM in Db is a plain
pain & won't ever "sound right". Moving Mandy from Bb to C probably
won't upset anyone's day. Often shifting keys a 4th or 5th instead of a
tone or half tone does less dammage. The song usually has a different
"feel" though.
In my bass playing days, I always arranged my parts so that certain
notes landed on certain strings, even though they're all huge wound
things.
Synthesizers, sampling, odd-ball tunings, & "partial-chords" in "weird"
keys have muddied the waters considerably lately, but in the *vast*
majority of cases, songs sound better (to me) in the "right" key.
Paul (who once sustained a "sports related injury" trying to play
"Hocus Pocus" by Focus a half step higher)
|
2805.11 | | TECRUS::ROST | Raymond Burr 1917-1993 R.I.P. | Tue Sep 14 1993 12:53 | 20 |
| In some ancient cultures, the modes and key centers were considered to be
tied to things like the zodiac (notice there are twelve months, twelve
mode, twelve notes to the octave, etc.). On one Mahavishnu Orchestra
album, there is a piece where the soloists play in the mode suggested
by their zodiac sign!
Because of the equal tempering used in western music, certain keys *do*
sound different. With instruments that can play microtonally (fretless
strings, winds), playing in C# as opposed to Db can be quite different,
though at a piano it may sound the same! This is above and beyond the
issues of register and voicing that have been mentioned.
With respect to the guitar, open tunings have been around for years.
While they facilitate playing certain types of music, they also have a
characteristic sound. Keith Richards' five-string open G tuning used
on many Stones songs is a good example. Tune up like Keith and "Brown
Sugar" is easy to play, in standard tuning you can get the chords but
the sound isn't right.
Brian
|
2805.12 | | POWDML::BUCKLEY | Live at the Marquee | Tue Sep 14 1993 13:37 | 8 |
| As noted , some transpositions will make for strange guitar voicings
(Sweet Home Alabama in F# was a good example).
But as far as the SOUND of the key goes, it makes a BIG difference to
me. Ask db -- I keep on trying to get him to play one of my original
tunes in the key of C# Major ... it doesn't sound right to me unless
it has that really 'bright' sound to the key. It just doesn't cut it
transposed to the key of C Major imvho.
|
2805.13 | | GOES11::HOUSE | I walk 47 miles of barbed wire | Tue Sep 14 1993 14:26 | 17 |
| I've been learning some cover songs recently and the tape I got with
them on there plays at the wrong speed for some of the songs in my
cassette deck. So I'm finding how much the key really does set the
"feel" of the song. Some of them don't make much difference, some make
a huge difference. I don't know enough about music to explain it in
the right theory terms, but the different keys have a different
emotional "feel" to me. Some songs work ok in a different one, some
don't. It seems to me that the smaller the change (1/2 step, 1 step),
the better the chances for it still sounding ok.
re: 2805.5 (Larry)
> Try playing help by the Beatles in other than the key of A.
Done it, hated it.
Greg
|
2805.14 | | USPMLO::DESROCHERS | | Tue Sep 14 1993 14:39 | 7 |
|
Gee, Larry/Greg. Help in G ain't so bad. It's Ticket to Ride
that must be in A...
Black Velvet in D is a real scream... Where'd the bass go?
|
2805.15 | You Can't Win | TECRUS::ROST | Raymond Burr 1917-1993 R.I.P. | Tue Sep 14 1993 15:32 | 8 |
| > Black Velvet in D is a real scream... Where'd the bass go?
Bass players have long hated keys like D and Eb where they can't get
that big boom of the E string, so some graduated to 5 strings where they
can make the big noise in those keys, as well as C and B. Then the
bandleader calls one in Bb....
Brian
|
2805.16 | Life in the fast lane | SUBSYS::GODIN | My other preamp is a Tri-Axis. | Tue Sep 14 1993 15:33 | 10 |
| RE -1:
Try 'Zep's "Communication Breakdown" in F ;-)
RE wrong speed tape:
When a tape runs at the wrong speed, you also get a shift in tempo
either faster or slower. This will do more dammage than a small key
change. That's why I *love* E-drums. They always play at the same
speed.
Paul
|
2805.17 | Tastes like G | NACAD::HERTZBERG | History: Love it or Leave it! | Tue Sep 14 1993 17:58 | 19 |
| >> It's Ticket to Ride that must be in A...
Actually, it has to be in A minus about 1/4 whole note to be exact.
Sometimes a particular key has a feel, mood, or "taste" to it which
makes it distinctive. I was surprised to hear Buck mention C#, as
that's one of the few keys I can feel very strongly. I always play
"Iguator Vitae" (sp?) in this key with big pipe organ sounds. Just
isn't right in any other key. C# sounds "majestic" to me.
The bass player in my band knows next to nothing about music theory...
he plays completely by ear. If we decide to work on a song we've never
done before, I usually know the chords but sometimes not the key. So I
start playing, he starts singing, and then he says "that's not right."
Then he'll start hunting for a second and then starts singing the song in
what turns out to be exactly the right key. He can feel when it's
right. Sort of "perfect Beatles pitch."
|
2805.18 | And here comes the pitch... | MSBCS::ASHFORTH | | Tue Sep 14 1993 21:40 | 37 |
| Heck, everyone else has put in their two simoleons, why not me...
I came into this thread late, and found two distinct items being
discussed: chord voicings, specifically those on guitar, and key (as
opposed to pitch).
I have friends who envy my finger-picking the way I envy their
flat-picking, who obviously (though they try to hide it) disdain my use
of a capo. This relates to "happy" chord patterns for finding the right
open strings for slick bridges and/or chord voicings, which don't much
matter for screaming leads. Playing a "C" pattern two frets up just
ain't the same as playing a "D" pattern.
The other thing, the key thing, is most closely related (as one noter
mentioned) to the use of equal temperament. You simply can't create a
scale in which all fifths are perfect, so equal temperament makes a
reasonable compromise, with the result that some fifths and/or fourths
are slightly sharp or flat, giving a certain sound- or even a distinct
feeling- to some keys. I know a *lot* of people who pretend to be able
to discern the difference between playing a song in C and B-flat, and
probably some that actually can. I'll confess candidly that despite a
lot of theoretical and practical background, I *can't,* but I'll stop
way short of contending that noone else can.
Oh, BTW, this *does* leave out the *pitch* thing (as opposed to key).
The thing about the key of a piece is that it identifies the relative
pitches (and associated perfection or lack of same in the intervals) of
the individual notes. Changing the absolute pitch of *all* the notes,
say with a signal processor, should *keep* the key-associated
uniqueness of the original; it does, though, possibly introduce the new
consideration (again, I think someone mentioend this) of nonlinearity
of our hearing apparatus with respect to pitch.
FOrgive my rambling; it's late, I'm tired, and this is all *so* much
more interesting than the proceedings of an MBC meeting...
Bob
|
2805.19 | Question again | ULYSSE::WILSON | John,Valbonne,France 828-5631,VBE | Wed Sep 15 1993 03:54 | 20 |
| Thanks for all the replies. Perhaps I should have specified pitch instead
of key. Maybe I can refine the question to this:
Leaving aside the limitations of individual instruments (open strings,
chord voicings etc) and human voices, does a song sound different if
played higher or lower than its original pitch (within reasonable
limits, say half an octave)? Does the song necessarily sound worse? If
so, why? What musical (as opposed to practical) principle says that
Crocodile Rock is best played in G?
I know there are people with perfect pitch who could tell the
difference, but will they think it sounds better or worse? Did Elton
John try all 12 keys on his piano before deciding that Crocodile Rock
sounded best in G, or did he just pick a key that suited his voice?
So much for refining the question.
Regards
John
|
2805.20 | The solution lies somewhere in 1754... | PAVONE::TURNER | | Wed Sep 15 1993 06:34 | 9 |
|
If you want to check out that mine of information, note 1754, there's a
whole discussion on this very topic. It starts at 1754.151 and goes on
from there.
Note 1754 needs a little sorting out. It covers every theory issue
imaginable, and then some!
Dom
|
2805.21 | And yet it SOUNDS better in G | GANTRY::ALLBERY | Jim | Wed Sep 15 1993 07:11 | 34 |
| >> The other thing, the key thing, is most closely related (as one noter
>> mentioned) to the use of equal temperament. You simply can't create a
>> scale in which all fifths are perfect, so equal temperament makes a
>> reasonable compromise, with the result that some fifths and/or fourths
>> are slightly sharp or flat, giving a certain sound- or even a distinct
>> feeling- to some keys. I know a *lot* of people who pretend to be able
This doesn't make sense to me...
Equal temperment means that the frequency of each 1/2 step is product
of the 12th root of 2 and the frequency of the half step below it.
As a result, all fifths (or fourths or whatever) will have the
identical relationship (sharp or flat) when compared to a non-tempered
scale. I don't see how this can make certain keys have a certain
sound (although I certainly see how it could if we tuned the instrument
for a non-tempered scale). When dealing with brass instruments, for
which hamonic overtones (an thus non-tempered intervals) are a key
mechanism for producing tones, I can see how this MAY have an impact.
Play a trumpet in C instead of Bb (concert pitch), and you must make
adjustments to keep "in tune." This need for adjustment could very
well lead to certain unique properties for specific keys in an
orchestral setting.
Acoustic instruments often have components that vibrate sympatheticly--
open strings on guitars, the strings for the top two octaves of a
piano... I don't doubt that these have some impact on the
characteristic sound of a certain key played on those instruments.
And certainly all of the arguments made about restrictions on voicing
and ease of fingerings apply (even on piano-- at least its much easier for
ME to play piano in G than in Gb). I'm not saying that there is no
reason (other than pitch) that certain keys have "personalities"-- I
just don't understand why.
Jim
|
2805.22 | | NOKNOK::ABATELLI | | Wed Sep 15 1993 07:43 | 25 |
| RE: .19
If the voice doesn't cut it why sing it in a key that doesn't work?
Vocals are *THE* major piece of a tune (unless it's an instrumental
tune in which case you're not restricted by any specific key) and in
my opinion need to dictate the key used. Certain singers I've worked
with (none anyone knows personally in Digital) had a one or two keys
range! Talk about limiting yourself and every tune had to be transposed
if it wasn't in the original key. Sometimes vocal sound better if the
singer has to work, or reach for a note that's not as comfortable.
If there are vocals in a tune, the singer will dictate the key in which
the tune is played... good, bad or indifferent. Sometimes it works...
sometimes not. Does it sound better, or worse? I think that's up to the
singers "interpretation" of the song. If the vocalist sings a "lame"
interpretation... it will sound lame even if the band is crankin'. In
which case you kick the vocalist and tell them to sing it like they
"mean it".
Here's a thought for ya, if you're working on a new tune and it lacks
something (but you can't pin point what's wrong) change the key *up*
a � or full step and try it again. Maybe having the singer reach alittle
for a note will give it the balz you lacked in the first few go-arounds.
Just my 2�
Fred
Rock on (� step higher),
Fred
|
2805.23 | ...whatever you can get away with... | SUBSYS::GODIN | My other preamp is a Tri-Axis. | Wed Sep 15 1993 09:35 | 5 |
| RE a few back:
"Musical principles" don't apply to crocodiles *or* rock. ;-)
Paul
|
2805.24 | A lot less expensive then adding another string | GOES11::HOUSE | I walk 47 miles of barbed wire | Wed Sep 15 1993 10:35 | 10 |
| > > Black Velvet in D is a real scream... Where'd the bass go?
>
> Bass players have long hated keys like D and Eb where they can't get
> that big boom of the E string, so some graduated to 5 strings where they
> can make the big noise in those keys, as well as C and B. Then the
> bandleader calls one in Bb....
That's why Hipshot makes those D-tuner devices...
gh
|
2805.25 | lesson from India | RICKS::CALCAGNI | Will work for '59 Les Paul | Wed Sep 15 1993 12:18 | 14 |
| We had Warren Senders onsite yesterday for an India Festival during
lunch. He's a Boston area jazz bassist who studies and performs Indian
Classical music. One interesting thing he said was that the great
Indian Classical singers typically sing in one 'key' their whole career;
whatever the natural pitch for their voice is. Two singers will sing
the same Raga in different pitch. Warren said that relative pitch is
important, but he doesn't know any Indian musicians who have what we
call perfect pitch and that this would probably even be a hinderance
in Indian music.
So it appears for this music, which is very rich in imagery and filled
with powerful expressions of emotion, the key has no significance.
/rick
|
2805.26 | My singing *will* work!! | GOES11::HOUSE | I walk 47 miles of barbed wire | Wed Sep 15 1993 12:22 | 4 |
| You mean they don't have to sing in key? Cool, I'll have to move
THERE!
Greg
|
2805.27 | consistency in keys.... | NAVY5::SDANDREA | IfoughtTheLawn&TheLawnWon | Wed Sep 15 1993 12:44 | 7 |
| re: singers in one key.......
Doesn't John Mellencamp do almost all his music in 'G'?
Clapton is big on key of 'D' and 'G'.....
steev
|
2805.28 | | CSC32::B_KNOX | Rock'n'Roll Refugee | Wed Sep 15 1993 13:17 | 9 |
|
A lot of bands these days tune their guitars down a half-step.
This seems to give the guitars a "fatter" sound and it gives
the singer(s) a bit of a break as well. So if you're tryin to cop
a cover tune, and you find that the guitarist is hitting an open
open low Eb, it's probably de-tuned a 1/2 step...
/Billy_K
|
2805.29 | | GOES11::HOUSE | I walk 47 miles of barbed wire | Wed Sep 15 1993 13:30 | 7 |
| Yeah, that seems to be real common. EVH, SRV, Slash, Lynch, and others
have all done that. VH said in an interview that they did it mostly
'cause David Lee Roth couldn't hit the high notes, but I think that's
kind of a cop out, since a half step difference usually isn't going to
make or break a person's ability to sing something.
Greg
|
2805.30 | | BSS::STPALY::J_KUHN | target for far away laughter | Wed Sep 15 1993 14:34 | 2 |
| and it is easier to bend strings tuned down 1/2 step. Seems to be
harder to stay in tune though.
|
2805.31 | I've Got A Bad Temper | TECRUS::ROST | Raymond Burr 1917-1993 R.I.P. | Wed Sep 15 1993 15:21 | 14 |
| re: .25
Rick, I got a different impression from Warren's comments. Indian music
is microtonal and so the temperament issue that exists in Western music
doesn't really exist in Indian music. I think someone picking their
own drone pitch for Indian music is more like people arguing over
whether music sounds better with A440 or A442.
Actually, 440 Hz is a bit sharper than A used to be back in the baroque
days. Classical performers who are into "period" instrumentation often
tune a bit flat to be more "authentic". I don't pretend to hear a
difference (I'm lucky I can tell when I'm close to being in tune).
Brian
|
2805.32 | | GOES11::HOUSE | I walk 47 miles of barbed wire | Wed Sep 15 1993 15:35 | 4 |
| > and it is easier to bend strings tuned down 1/2 step. Seems to be
> harder to stay in tune though.
Why would it be harder to stay in tune?
|
2805.33 | Everything's different now | SUBSYS::GODIN | My other preamp is a Tri-Axis. | Wed Sep 15 1993 16:45 | 18 |
| I think it *seems* harder to *stay* in tune partly because it *is* a
lot harder to *get* in tune. The looser the strings are, the easier it
is to "pluck them sharp" (momentarily) while tuning. I used to tune a
6-string guitar down an octave to play it as a bass, & it was a
nightmare trying not to pluck the strings too hard so that they stretch up
to another note. Looser strings just exacerbate the problem of picking
evenly when tuning.
Another possible source of "tuning creep" is that the less tension
there is on a string, the easier it is for it to slip (unless you have
a real stable locking system).
I also find that whatever tuning I'm using, I have to stay with it for
a while to let it "sink in". That means if I change to something
significantly different, (like tuning all 6 strings down even a half setp)
it takes a while & some fine tuning before it stays.
Paul
|
2805.34 | | RICKS::CALCAGNI | Will work for '59 Les Paul | Wed Sep 15 1993 16:54 | 8 |
| re .31
Well Bri, I remember asking specifically about whether singers would
transpose a Raga to their own range and was somewhat surprised that
they did. He seemed to indicate there was no one correct pitch range
(which I interpreted as equivalent to key) that had to be used. Remember
when he said with some of his female vocal students he would typically
play a piece a 5th higher than he himself would sing it?
|
2805.35 | Theodoric of York: Midevil Piano Tuner | LEDS::BURATI | Cold Sweat Part III | Wed Sep 15 1993 17:05 | 9 |
| >Actually, 440 Hz is a bit sharper than A used to be back in the baroque days.
This brings up a facinating point: how did they know what A was back
then. I mean, how does anyone today know what frequency A was tuned to
300 years ago? Were their tuning forks that good? And what kind of
consistancy could possibly have exsisted back then?
--Ron
|
2805.36 | Real Example | SAC::BRIGGS_R | They use computers don't they? | Thu Sep 16 1993 03:31 | 17 |
|
Just to pick up on the thread of this note and someone who said they'd
prefer not to play a song at all than play in the wrong key. Here's a
practical example. In the occasional band I play in I refuse to play
Proud Mary. Why, because the singer can't hit the high notes when we
play it in D (I think it's D, the verse opens in D anyway). As 'he who
is responsible for delivering the classic chord riff' I just plain
refuse to play the song at all if I can't play this using barred G
shapes. Anything else kills this distinctive chord progression dead.
I could always detune the guitar but that's not practical (I only have
one!).
Richard
PS: I am the singer!!
|
2805.37 | True story | IOSG::CREASY | What do you mean, RTFM? I WTFM! | Thu Sep 16 1993 06:44 | 18 |
| All this talk of transposing reminds me of a great story. It's slightly
off the topic, but what the hey!
A friend of mine used to play in Shaking Stevens' band. Now ol' Shakey
doesn't have much of a vocal range, so all of his songs tend to be in
the same key (I can't remember which one - it might be C...).
Anyway, the band are getting tired of playing in the same key all
night, so one day, when they're working out a new song at rehearsal,
someone suggest they play it in F. They get a little way through it,
and Shakey says "That's a little low for me, can you bring it up a
little?". No problem, we'll play it in F# instead. After a while,
Shakey says "That's a bit high now lads... is there anything in
between?"
:^)
Nick
|
2805.38 | | PAVONE::TURNER | | Thu Sep 16 1993 06:52 | 43 |
|
You know, if I was to give one single piece of advice to someone
learning to play the guitar, it would be:"Never play without checking
that your guitar is perfectly in tune first (i.e. concert pitch)".
I've been playing for about 12 years (nothing outlandish, I know), but
I'm sure that my learning curve would have been a whole lot different
if someone had impressed this on me. I've got a reasonably good ear and
I used to learn the chords to *dozens* of Stones, Beatles, Who, Kinks,
Doors songs without ever bothering to ensure that I was playing them in
the right key. They all sounded "more or less" right to me!
Of course, every now and then I'd play along with the record and
discover that Jumpin' Jack Flash was in B and not D, but damn if I was
going to relearn it! It was pretty embarassing when I got to share this
mine of songs with other musicians ("Oh! That's funny! I don't play
Waterloo Sunset like *that*!").
It's amazing how a certain guitar part can suddenly become easier when
you play it in the key it was originally written in. A classic example
is "Feel A Whole Lot Better" by the Byrds. It's bad enough playing it
without a 12-string Rickenbacker, but try *not* playing it in D!
Likewise, I agree with what was said earlier about voicings making a
huge difference. I remember learning to play "It's Too Late" by Carole
king from the sheet music. It sounded OK except for the BbMaj7 that's
repeated during the chorus (I forget the progression now). I tried
playing a BbMaj7 bar chord at the first fret, but it just didn't have that
"wistful" sound originally present in the song. So I tried using the
classic FMaj7 first position chord moved up to the sixth fret and...hey
presto!
Dom
P.S. Naive question about brass instruments. If I'm not mistaken, the sax
and trumpet are always referred to as Bb (or is it Eb?) instruments.
Does this mean that any song arranged for a horn section *must* be
written in Bb/Eb? I've never experimented, but I can't imagine that
almost the entire Stax/Volt output in the sixties was limited to these
keys!
|
2805.39 | | TECRUS::ROST | Raymond Burr 1917-1993 R.I.P. | Thu Sep 16 1993 07:09 | 50 |
| Re: .34
OK, what I meant was since *relative* pitch is most important in the
Indian music that it avoids the problem in western equal tempered music
where certain intervals, say a sixth, actually is a bit different
depending on which key you play it in.
If you have instruments that can play microtonally (hell, sitars let
you move the frets around, and a voice can sing microtonally) it's
possible to *always* have the correct pitch. On a piano or fretted
string instrument it's *not* possible to always have the 100% correct
pitch. Play the harmonic that's found on an open string of a guitar or
bass up near the third and fourth frets (it's actually in between
someplace) and it sounds *out of tune* although by definition it has to
be in tune. What that means is we are used to hearing things a bit out
of tune in order to facilitate playing in different keys. Indian music
doesn't have that problem.
So there may be a perceived difference because the Indian musician's
"key" may be higher or lower than anothers', but the *relative* pitches
are always at the same ratios. Not necessarily true on a guitar when
you go from C to Bb.
Re: .38
Wind and brass instruments are called "transposing" instruments. Lok
at the saxophone family: Bb soprano, Eb alto, C melody, Bb tenor, Eb
baritone, Bb bass. If you read saxophone notation, if the note is
*really* a Bb, it's notated as a C for a Bb instrument and an F for an
Eb instrument. But for the *notated* C, the fingering is the same for
*all* saxophones. So you can play any of the saxes from a score with
identical fingerings.
But if you are playing by ear (no sheet music) with a band and the
leader says "this is in Bb" it's in *C* for the sax if he has a
soprano, tenor or bass sax, and F if he has an alto or baritone. This
is why you commonly see jazz players who double onm soprano and tenor
*or* alto and bari, but doubling tenor and bari is less common. The C
melody sax, which is rare these days, is a tenor pitched in C instead
of Bb. Bb and Eb are the common transposing pitches.
You will hear wind players talk about "concert" pitch, i.e the stuff
that you and I read.
BTW, while guitars are not a true transposing instrument, but guitar
music is written an octave above where it is actually played for ease
of reading. A pianist reading the same score will play an octave
higher than a guitarist would.
Brian
|
2805.40 | A C by any other name could be Bb | GANTRY::ALLBERY | Jim | Thu Sep 16 1993 07:23 | 19 |
| >> P.S. Naive question about brass instruments. If I'm not mistaken, the sax
>> and trumpet are always referred to as Bb (or is it Eb?) instruments.
A "standard" trumpet is a Bb trumpet. What that means is that when
the trumpet player plays a "C" the actual sound is a Bb one step below
the written C. The trumpet is chromatic-- it can play in any key, but
trumpet music is written one step higher that it sounds (sort of like
a negative 2 fret capo). A tenor sax is also Bb, but sounds an octave
lower than the trumpet (if I remember correctly, its been a while). An
alto sax is Eb. FWIW, you can also buy a C trumpet, where a C is a C.
Why the confusion? Two reasons, I guess. Writing the music in this
fashion keeps a greater portion of the instruments range on or near
the staff. It also makes it easier for musicians to transfer to
different members of the same family: an alto sax player can switch
to tenor and not need to learn new fingerings.
Jim
|
2805.41 | Men men men men... I shall use manly strings today! | NOKNOK::ABATELLI | | Thu Sep 16 1993 09:18 | 9 |
| RE.: back many replies... I lost track. ;^)
If tuning your guitar to Eb is a problem, step up 1 gauge heavier on
your strings. Keep in mind the reasons for EV and SRV to tune to Eb...
the heavier the string gauge the thicker the sound, BUT it's also harder
to bend the strings. (EV = 0.010" & SRV = 0.013" I thought)
Rock on,
Fred (who uses .011's and .010's tuned to 440 pitch)
|
2805.42 | | GOES11::HOUSE | What planet are *you* from? | Thu Sep 16 1993 13:06 | 5 |
| Stevie definitely used the manley-man gauge strings, but if I remember
right, Eddie used a strange mix of gauges that were a lot lighter on
the bottom then on the top. I tried some like that once and hated 'em.
gh
|
2805.43 | | SAC::BRIGGS_R | They use computers don't they? | Fri Sep 17 1993 03:12 | 6 |
|
Re .37
Pete Lincoln any chance?
Richard
|
2805.44 | | KURMA::IGOLDIE | Dope for guns | Fri Sep 17 1993 04:04 | 8 |
| re.41
Greg,
I tried Ernie Ball hybrids for a while(heavy bottom,light tops)and
didn't think too much about them either so I went back to using 10's.
ian
|
2805.45 | | IOSG::CREASY | What do you mean, RTFM? I WTFM! | Fri Sep 17 1993 05:53 | 6 |
| RE: .43
No, Richard, I don't know Pete (though I've heard his name often
enough). This story came from Dick Hanson (of the Rumour Brass).
Nick
|
2805.46 | | GOES11::HOUSE | What planet are *you* from? | Fri Sep 17 1993 16:17 | 8 |
| re: Ian
Yeah, I've used those too and didn't care for them either. EVH
actually went the other way, heavy top, light bottom, which feels even
MORE strange to me. Guess I'm just too used to the feel of a
"standard" set.
Greg
|
2805.47 | | LARVAE::BRIGGS_R | Four Flat Tyres on a Muddy Road | Mon Sep 20 1993 04:20 | 9 |
|
Re .45
Coincidence then. Pete Lincoln was (maybe still is) a backing vocalist
for Shaky. Saw him on TOTP several times.
Richard
PS. Maybe they know each other hence maybe not such a coincidence.
|
2805.48 | | ABACUS::PAGE | | Mon Sep 20 1993 10:16 | 8 |
|
I've used the "Hybrid Slinkys" for quite a few years now, and I
really like them. To each his own... I can't stand playing a guitar
string with an .008 set.
Brad
|
2805.49 | | GOOROO::DCLARK | where the shadows run from themselves | Mon Sep 20 1993 10:51 | 7 |
| re last few
I switch back and forth between the 10-52's and the 11-52's. I think
the wound strings in the 10-46 are too slinky for the unwound ones.
But then again, most of the time I play a cheap acoustic with Martin
Bluegrass strings (13-56) and high action.
|
2805.50 | KEY IS IT!!!!! | JUPITR::NLAMOUREUX | STORMIN'NORMAN | Mon Sep 20 1993 16:08 | 23 |
| IT'S ALL IMPORTANT!!!!!!
If we're talking "ROCK'N ROLL" then the KEY is all
important, because the correct SOUND is what ROCK is really all about.
You're NOT talking about an audience of Jazz Fans, and if
it sounds good then that's half the battle!
If you check out any songs by Stevie Ray Vaughn, he's always
tuned down 1/2 step from your standard A-440, which is NOT unusual at
all! Why? Because it sounds better, it's easier on the voice, and the
guitar strings have more bend to them!
Let's face it! Rock songs are usually in the Key of "E", or
"D", or "A", or "G". Because that's what SOUNDS good!
If you then take an instrumental, by Carlos Santana, called
"Europa", that's in the Key of "Eb", or "C Relative Minor" to "Eb" then
it doesn't really matter!
All ya gotta do is sit down with some Blues Tunes or Groups
like "ZZ TOP" or Gary Moores' stuff and it'll be as plain as the nose
on your face!
So, speaking from 20+ years experience, KEY IS ALL IMPORTANT
"PRACTICE PROMOTES PERFECTION"
STORM'N
|
2805.51 | | CSC32::R_DESKO | Rick Desko CSC/CS DTN 592-4613 | Tue Oct 12 1993 16:23 | 4 |
| Dm is the saddest of all keys.
But, you already knew that.
Rick
|
2805.52 | You know the name of the song! | GIDDAY::KNIGHTP | get me a gin and pentatonic | Thu Oct 14 1993 21:44 | 6 |
| re -1
"Simple lines.....intertwining, I was really heavily influenced
by Mozart and Bach..........so this is really a Mach piece.."
P.K.
|