T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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3169.1 | been there ... | ASABET::DCLARK | voodoo mathematician | Tue Jan 30 1996 08:12 | 5 |
| That's a design problem with wives in general; it has nothing to
do with your playing :-)
do a dir/tit="chord" to find some notes on chords ... 2851 is a good
place to start.
|
3169.2 | | OCTAVE::VIGNEAULT | Minister of chiles | Tue Jan 30 1996 09:29 | 6 |
|
You could play something different every night and your wife will still
think it sounds the same. As Dave pointed out, it's an inherent design
flaw.
Lv
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3169.3 | | CTPCSA::GOODWIN | | Tue Jan 30 1996 09:47 | 12 |
|
... be thankful that your wife even notices what you play....
my wife tunes it right out.... and calls my guitar playing
a 'childhood regression'.
but besides... if you want to avoid sounding the same all the
time, don't ask for advice in the 'blues chords' topic... lest
you invoke the ridicule of our resident shredders and techno-
dweebs! ;-)
/Steve
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3169.4 | Go pandiatonic... | PTPM05::HARMON | Paul Harmon, ACMSxp Engineering | Tue Jan 30 1996 10:16 | 8 |
| For some reason, my wife never says anything about what I play, only
about what I write.
Here's a suggestion: stop thinking about chords at all. Instead, see
what happens if you substitute "note combinations drawn from the
current key signature".
Paul
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3169.5 | Has it occurred to anyone else that... ;-) | DREGS::BLICKSTEIN | General MIDI | Tue Jan 30 1996 11:28 | 7 |
| > My wife [thinks] I always play the same [thing]...
Maybe your wife is RIGHT!!!!
;-)
db
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3169.6 | | PIET01::DESROCHERS | psdv.pko.dec.com/tomd/home.html | Tue Jan 30 1996 12:23 | 15 |
|
I remember when my ex told her sister "oh, Tom doesn't
play SONGS".
Of course I do. It's just that the backing band is in
my head.
First dating - they listen intently and watch you play.
Few months pass - they read in the same room
Few more months - retreat to the bedroom
Next month - shuts the door and cranks the tv
;^)
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3169.7 | chemistry | RICKS::CALCAGNI | random acts of beautiful chaos | Tue Jan 30 1996 12:36 | 12 |
| Yeah, I get the same feedback from my so. Of course I suppose it does
sound like pointless noodling without the backup band in my brain.
And my kids are always telling me I play too loud!? Where did I go
wrong? :-)
Some real advice, hopefully pertinent to the original topic:
Get a copy of Ted Green's book "Chord Chemistry". It'll keep you
busy for a lifetime or two.
/rick
|
3169.8 | or you wouldn't say this | ASABET::DCLARK | voodoo mathematician | Tue Jan 30 1996 13:02 | 3 |
| re .5
obviously you're not married
|
3169.9 | | BUSY::SLABOUNTY | Don't like my p_n? 1-800-328-7448 | Tue Jan 30 1996 13:11 | 4 |
|
Dave Clark, I guess you missed the "blues slam" overtones in that
reply.
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3169.10 | | GANTRY::ALLBERY | Jim | Tue Jan 30 1996 13:38 | 12 |
| > Here's a suggestion: stop thinking about chords at all. Instead, see
> what happens if you substitute "note combinations drawn from the
> current key signature".
But he wants jazz or blues chords-- he needs note combinations that
*aren't* in the current key signature ;^) ;^)
(Actually, .4 is a good recommendation)
Jim (my wife *likes* to hear me play, and says so fairly
frequently. But I'm a very lucky guy.)
|
3169.11 | | AIAG::WISNER | any thought can be the beginning... | Tue Jan 30 1996 13:56 | 7 |
| > Get a copy of Ted Green's book "Chord Chemistry". It'll keep you
> busy for a lifetime or two.
Good book! Whenever I'm out of ideas I flip through mine and
try out some new chords.
Try major seventh chords, they're real pretty.
|
3169.12 | try this one | ASABET::DCLARK | voodoo mathematician | Tue Jan 30 1996 14:07 | 8 |
| Here's a chord your wife will dislike:
Emaj7+9 - play the E on the D string, 2nd fret
- play the G# on the G string, first fret
- play the Eb on the B string, 4th fret
- play the G on the high E string, 3rd fret
use it as a substitute for any chord that sounds nice :-)
|
3169.13 | | POWDML::BUCKLEY | Intl. Year of the Coaster -- 1996 | Tue Jan 30 1996 14:11 | 3 |
| Yes, the Maj 7/9 chord is a good one.
Also, another vote for Chord Chemistry -- wonderful book!
|
3169.14 | | PTPM05::HARMON | Paul Harmon, ACMSxp Engineering | Tue Jan 30 1996 14:25 | 10 |
| Here's one she'll dislike even more:
g string, 8th fret
b string, 6th fret
e string, open
What to call it is an exercise left to the reader. 8^)
Paul
|
3169.15 | just combined notes, thank you | GAVEL::DAGG | | Thu Feb 01 1996 15:00 | 13 |
| re:
"note combinations drawn from the current key signature"
I tryed this last night. Unfortunately, I found the
"drawn from the current key signature" part overly limiting,
and incompatible with my technique!
Dave - whose wife only gets mad when he drowns out 90210
|
3169.16 | | PTPM05::HARMON | Paul Harmon, ACMSxp Engineering | Thu Feb 01 1996 15:17 | 6 |
| re: "overly limiting"
So you like to play "outside" a lot? (Just curious...somehow I'd
gotten the opposite impression from past conversations.)
Paul
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3169.17 | inside or outside would be fine | GAVEL::DAGG | | Fri Feb 02 1996 06:39 | 34 |
|
It was a joke about what a lame "player" I am,
but I left out the inflection =B-)
That is actually what I try to do, I mean just
moding around on a scale (usually D or G!), and maybe
leaving a pedal going with an open string for example,
however (a) I don't know the finger board
well enough, and (b) my fingers don't go
where I want them to go in time!
If I understand correctly, your suggestion is
a great way to get started improvising, like
creating little melodies in a key, maybe with
some simple changes, and not focusing on playing
licks.
My snide little remark was intended to be the old
bash on free/avante garde playing, that the reason
they do it is because they can't make the changes
(or even stay within a key). At least that's my reason!
But its really just a joke, and I do enjoy that stuff, though
I think its really hard to do. I like late Miles (live at
Filmore), Abdullah Ibrahim (Echoes of Africa), Sam
Rivers (duets with Dave Holland), Lester Bowie (Organ Group),
even Jarret (the Koln concert), and lots more. Oddly, one of
the most intense free tunes I've heard was "classical
jazzer" Wynton Marsalis' band in 1984. They came on and
played non-stop, burning up-tempo for 20 minutes (jeff Watts
on drums), and then said "thats a song we just made up". It
was really great.
Dave - who once again broke the sarcasm meter
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3169.18 | | PTPM05::HARMON | Paul Harmon, ACMSxp Engineering | Fri Feb 02 1996 07:29 | 6 |
| >Dave - who once again broke the sarcasm meter
Oh, I get it. It's dangerous to subject a person who's
been reading X/Open specs all week to sarcasm! 8^)
Paul
|