Home Recording

Go Back   Home Recording > Equipment Forums > Guitars and Basses


        

                                
                                10/30 - [video] Demo Roland TD-20SX
Reply    Audiofanzine Guitar Guitar News Guitar Medias Guitar Tests Guitar Articles Guitar User Reviews Guitar Classifieds Ads
 
Thread Tools Display Modes
  #1  
Old 10-03-2006
dwarf's Avatar
dwarf dwarf is offline
Pok'e'mon master
 
Join Date: Jun 2005
Location: Anywhere you're not
Age: 20
Posts: 511
Rep Power: 3076
dwarf has a reputation beyond reputedwarf has a reputation beyond reputedwarf has a reputation beyond reputedwarf has a reputation beyond reputedwarf has a reputation beyond reputedwarf has a reputation beyond reputedwarf has a reputation beyond reputedwarf has a reputation beyond reputedwarf has a reputation beyond reputedwarf has a reputation beyond reputedwarf has a reputation beyond repute
reading music and timing

OK I'm getting back into reading traditional music (you know the black dots ) and well I'm having troubble counting. I have a natural ear and once I've heard the song I can pick it. But thats the problem I want to be able to sight read without hearing it.

any websites or programs I can use to help me with my timing.

Ps. To help i've taken myself right back to basics, by going through Mel-bays "mastering the guitar" It seems to be helping but, somthing interactive would also help. Also mel's compositions are not exactly mind blowing.

Thanks.

The trying to get back into classical dwarf
__________________
The leprichaun tells me what to do

and soon he will tell you too
Reply With Quote
  #2  
Old 10-04-2006
Codmate's Avatar
Codmate Codmate is offline
Force of Nature
 
Join Date: Apr 2003
Age: 33
Posts: 687
Rep Power: 8094
Codmate has a reputation beyond reputeCodmate has a reputation beyond reputeCodmate has a reputation beyond reputeCodmate has a reputation beyond reputeCodmate has a reputation beyond reputeCodmate has a reputation beyond reputeCodmate has a reputation beyond reputeCodmate has a reputation beyond reputeCodmate has a reputation beyond reputeCodmate has a reputation beyond reputeCodmate has a reputation beyond repute
This is pretty good:
http://www.amazon.co.uk/Music-Readin...e=UTF8&s=books
Reply With Quote
  #3  
Old 10-04-2006
orksnork orksnork is offline
Force of Nature
 
Join Date: Sep 2003
Location: long island, NY
Posts: 864
Rep Power: 2586
orksnork has a reputation beyond reputeorksnork has a reputation beyond reputeorksnork has a reputation beyond reputeorksnork has a reputation beyond reputeorksnork has a reputation beyond reputeorksnork has a reputation beyond reputeorksnork has a reputation beyond reputeorksnork has a reputation beyond reputeorksnork has a reputation beyond reputeorksnork has a reputation beyond reputeorksnork has a reputation beyond repute
play to a metronome and count!
Reply With Quote
  #4  
Old 10-04-2006
gordone's Avatar
gordone gordone is offline
1K Silver Member
 
Join Date: Oct 1999
Age: 32
Posts: 1,392
Rep Power: 1328
gordone has a reputation beyond reputegordone has a reputation beyond reputegordone has a reputation beyond reputegordone has a reputation beyond reputegordone has a reputation beyond reputegordone has a reputation beyond reputegordone has a reputation beyond reputegordone has a reputation beyond reputegordone has a reputation beyond reputegordone has a reputation beyond reputegordone has a reputation beyond repute
1234, 2234, 3234, 4234 :|

:-) Good luck! I started piano lessons when I was 8 or so, and I'm SOOOO glad I learned how to read standard notation.
Reply With Quote
  #5  
Old 10-04-2006
XLR XLR is offline
______
 
Join Date: Mar 2005
Posts: 4,483
Rep Power: 2014494
XLR has a reputation beyond reputeXLR has a reputation beyond reputeXLR has a reputation beyond reputeXLR has a reputation beyond reputeXLR has a reputation beyond reputeXLR has a reputation beyond reputeXLR has a reputation beyond reputeXLR has a reputation beyond reputeXLR has a reputation beyond reputeXLR has a reputation beyond reputeXLR has a reputation beyond repute
Basic Rhythmic Training by Robert Starer. All his books of rhythm exercises are good.

I think the most important thing in reading music is to learn to hear the patterns of sound in your mind when you look at the notation. The mechanical counting of beats and figuring out the math of how different note values fit into it is important of course but with reading rhythm you want to try to learn to recognize figures - note groupings - like they're words and phrases in spoken language. That makes reading rhythm easy.

Best way to study rhythm by far is to put the guitar down, keep the beat with your hand - conducting or tapping - and vocalize the rhythms. That gets it in the head. Then pick up the guitar and you'll know how it should sound.

Tim
Reply With Quote
  #6  
Old 10-04-2006
mshilarious's Avatar
mshilarious mshilarious is offline
Faithful Departed
 
Join Date: Jan 2003
Location: OBX, NC
Posts: 9,332
Rep Power: 2113196
mshilarious has disabled reputation
Check out a Suzuki method for violin, they come with a CD, it's single voice stuff so it's pretty easy to play on guitar, and there's some Bach in there
Reply With Quote
  #7  
Old 10-04-2006
Thurgood Thurgood is offline
Force of Nature
 
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Jackson, MS
Posts: 538
Rep Power: 119977
Thurgood has a reputation beyond reputeThurgood has a reputation beyond reputeThurgood has a reputation beyond reputeThurgood has a reputation beyond reputeThurgood has a reputation beyond reputeThurgood has a reputation beyond reputeThurgood has a reputation beyond reputeThurgood has a reputation beyond reputeThurgood has a reputation beyond reputeThurgood has a reputation beyond reputeThurgood has a reputation beyond repute
Bump to Lawler. One of the techniques taught at that school in Mass. is to recognize note groupings. IMHO that is a truly helpful method. You state that you are good at playing what you hear; take some notation of a piece that you know and play along while reading the notation. Break it up into rhythmic "chunks" and make the mental connection between what you are hearing and the visual representation. That way you will learn to "hear" what you see.
Reply With Quote
  #8  
Old 10-04-2006
chazba chazba is offline
terminally hip
 
Join Date: Jun 2001
Location: TOURING WITH "SPAM & VELVEETA"
Posts: 792
Rep Power: 94913
chazba has a reputation beyond reputechazba has a reputation beyond reputechazba has a reputation beyond reputechazba has a reputation beyond reputechazba has a reputation beyond reputechazba has a reputation beyond reputechazba has a reputation beyond reputechazba has a reputation beyond reputechazba has a reputation beyond reputechazba has a reputation beyond reputechazba has a reputation beyond repute
A very wise and gifted Bass player once told me that " your ability to sight read will be measured by the height of the stack of music you have read through."

Over the years I have come to appreciate his words.

just keep at it.

chazba
__________________
The issues are three, Hardware, Software and Wetware. The first two can be solved......
Reply With Quote
  #9  
Old 10-04-2006
tourettes5139's Avatar
tourettes5139 tourettes5139 is offline
ugh..........
 
Join Date: Feb 2005
Location: CO
Age: 22
Posts: 1,017
Rep Power: 93
tourettes5139 has a reputation beyond reputetourettes5139 has a reputation beyond reputetourettes5139 has a reputation beyond reputetourettes5139 has a reputation beyond reputetourettes5139 has a reputation beyond reputetourettes5139 has a reputation beyond reputetourettes5139 has a reputation beyond reputetourettes5139 has a reputation beyond reputetourettes5139 has a reputation beyond reputetourettes5139 has a reputation beyond reputetourettes5139 has a reputation beyond repute
You might even go so far as to getting a practice pad and some sticks, and do some basic snare drum exercises. This approach has helped immensely for a singer friend of mine.
__________________
Check out my band!!

www.myspace.com/darkvelvetlaughter

GFCG Membership No:000 019
Reply With Quote
  #10  
Old 10-04-2006
dwarf's Avatar
dwarf dwarf is offline
Pok'e'mon master
 
Join Date: Jun 2005
Location: Anywhere you're not
Age: 20
Posts: 511
Rep Power: 3076
dwarf has a reputation beyond reputedwarf has a reputation beyond reputedwarf has a reputation beyond reputedwarf has a reputation beyond reputedwarf has a reputation beyond reputedwarf has a reputation beyond reputedwarf has a reputation beyond reputedwarf has a reputation beyond reputedwarf has a reputation beyond reputedwarf has a reputation beyond reputedwarf has a reputation beyond repute
Yeah, we do the clappig thing at school, the teacher plays a rythm and we have to write it down only thing is I suck. "amsterdam" is possibaly the only thing I know and "tri-pa-let" yeah, i have some work to do.

Oh I make up for it with aural, me kicks major ass at intervals.
__________________
The leprichaun tells me what to do

and soon he will tell you too
Reply With Quote
  #11  
Old 10-04-2006
orksnork orksnork is offline
Force of Nature
 
Join Date: Sep 2003
Location: long island, NY
Posts: 864
Rep Power: 2586
orksnork has a reputation beyond reputeorksnork has a reputation beyond reputeorksnork has a reputation beyond reputeorksnork has a reputation beyond reputeorksnork has a reputation beyond reputeorksnork has a reputation beyond reputeorksnork has a reputation beyond reputeorksnork has a reputation beyond reputeorksnork has a reputation beyond reputeorksnork has a reputation beyond reputeorksnork has a reputation beyond repute
NOT to discourage...

but also...bad timing can be fixed with practice...

but over the years trying tons and tons of people out for various projects...there are a few people where the concept of timing simply doesn't exist...

i could get this one singer in a car singing to a recording with the rest of the band, clapping along...but when it was his turn to sing to the band he would...

1. pick a random spot in the song he felt to be correct and start his singing
2. sing at a random speed that he felt was correct for the song
3. make our ears cry
Reply With Quote
  #12  
Old 10-04-2006
daav's Avatar
daav daav is offline
Flailing up a storm.
 
Join Date: Feb 2003
Location: Vermont
Posts: 1,006
Rep Power: 38259
daav has a reputation beyond reputedaav has a reputation beyond reputedaav has a reputation beyond reputedaav has a reputation beyond reputedaav has a reputation beyond reputedaav has a reputation beyond reputedaav has a reputation beyond reputedaav has a reputation beyond reputedaav has a reputation beyond reputedaav has a reputation beyond reputedaav has a reputation beyond repute
Ted Reed's guide to syncopation. Buy it, live it, love it. It is for drumming, but nevermind that, it is exactly what you want. Buy it and steal some drumsticks from your drummer when they are looking the other way, and go through the excercises on a pad, or a book or whatever. Or it would be easy enough to figure out a way to play the excercises on strings of a guitar, but keep in mind it isn't about melody it is all about rythym.

They are super simple, but force you to methodically count and play rythyms that are not 4-beat intuitive. you will very quickly get used to how the written notes and rests sound rythmically and it will be ingrained in your brain and you will just be able to see and do.

For drummers, you play simple beats with hi-hats (or ride) and bass (or snare) and play the rythym with the free drum. So you would play straight 8ths on the ride, 2 and 4 on the snare, and then play the rythms with the kick. you start reeally slow with a metronome and force yourself to play until you can read the notes and automatically play it with the kick. Or, switch it up (and move from right foot to left hand) and play straight 4s on the kick andplay the rythym with the snare. It is a very easy way to baby-step your way to independace in your hands/legs (I know, still talking drums not guitar, but this could be useful to anyone) and makes your brain think and feel the two different things going on (the beat and offbeat) while tying that in with the printed notes.

Daav
Reply With Quote
  #13  
Old 10-04-2006
XLR XLR is offline
______
 
Join Date: Mar 2005
Posts: 4,483
Rep Power: 2014494
XLR has a reputation beyond reputeXLR has a reputation beyond reputeXLR has a reputation beyond reputeXLR has a reputation beyond reputeXLR has a reputation beyond reputeXLR has a reputation beyond reputeXLR has a reputation beyond reputeXLR has a reputation beyond reputeXLR has a reputation beyond reputeXLR has a reputation beyond reputeXLR has a reputation beyond repute
Quote:
Originally Posted by orksnork
...over the years trying tons and tons of people out for various projects...there are a few people where the concept of timing simply doesn't exist...
IME that's not because they can't. It's because they're being careless or unfocused - but very rudimentary rhythm self-coaching can overcome it. Feeling a consistent beat and a cyclical metric pulse are natural things. Many people become kind of neurotic about making music though, including their sense of rhythm, due to negative experiences with music classes or lessons when they're kids.

Tim

Last edited by XLR; 10-05-2006 at 09:10..
Reply With Quote
  #14  
Old 10-04-2006
orksnork orksnork is offline
Force of Nature
 
Join Date: Sep 2003
Location: long island, NY
Posts: 864
Rep Power: 2586
orksnork has a reputation beyond reputeorksnork has a reputation beyond reputeorksnork has a reputation beyond reputeorksnork has a reputation beyond reputeorksnork has a reputation beyond reputeorksnork has a reputation beyond reputeorksnork has a reputation beyond reputeorksnork has a reputation beyond reputeorksnork has a reputation beyond reputeorksnork has a reputation beyond reputeorksnork has a reputation beyond repute
well after about 2 hours of that...fuck him...

and kudos for dwarf for realizing his problem and working with it
Reply With Quote
  #15  
Old 10-04-2006
solo.guitar solo.guitar is offline
Dedicated Member
 
Join Date: Aug 2006
Age: 25
Posts: 254
Rep Power: 82
solo.guitar has a reputation beyond reputesolo.guitar has a reputation beyond reputesolo.guitar has a reputation beyond reputesolo.guitar has a reputation beyond reputesolo.guitar has a reputation beyond reputesolo.guitar has a reputation beyond reputesolo.guitar has a reputation beyond reputesolo.guitar has a reputation beyond reputesolo.guitar has a reputation beyond reputesolo.guitar has a reputation beyond reputesolo.guitar has a reputation beyond repute
Tap your foot.
Reply With Quote
  #16  
Old 10-05-2006
gordone's Avatar
gordone gordone is offline
1K Silver Member
 
Join Date: Oct 1999
Age: 32
Posts: 1,392
Rep Power: 1328
gordone has a reputation beyond reputegordone has a reputation beyond reputegordone has a reputation beyond reputegordone has a reputation beyond reputegordone has a reputation beyond reputegordone has a reputation beyond reputegordone has a reputation beyond reputegordone has a reputation beyond reputegordone has a reputation beyond reputegordone has a reputation beyond reputegordone has a reputation beyond repute
Back in College, I took "World Music Traditions" as an elective. This class was known as "Clapping for Credit" because the final involved learning a traditional Japanese drum piece and clapping it (and saying the names of the beats/sounds/whatever) on your desk from memory.
Eight years later, I can still do most of it!
Here it goes -
Ten Ten
Ten Ten Teka Ten
Sku Ten Ten
Toro Ro
(ok, I only remember the beginning at this point )
What a $150,000 Private School education will get you!
Reply With Quote
  #17  
Old 10-05-2006
dwarf's Avatar
dwarf dwarf is offline
Pok'e'mon master
 
Join Date: Jun 2005
Location: Anywhere you're not
Age: 20
Posts: 511
Rep Power: 3076
dwarf has a reputation beyond reputedwarf has a reputation beyond reputedwarf has a reputation beyond reputedwarf has a reputation beyond reputedwarf has a reputation beyond reputedwarf has a reputation beyond reputedwarf has a reputation beyond reputedwarf has a reputation beyond reputedwarf has a reputation beyond reputedwarf has a reputation beyond reputedwarf has a reputation beyond repute
Ok some of you seem to know where I'm coming from and some of you seem to think I'm a retard. (Thanks dor all your replys though it all helps)

I play with a metronome, it's just getting the rythms that are on the page to the "axe". It all falls down to realising and memorising sounds and patterns as stated before.

I was just wondering if there was any programs (like fretboard wizzard) around to help me.

Thanks

Dwarf
__________________
The leprichaun tells me what to do

and soon he will tell you too
Reply With Quote
  #18  
Old 10-05-2006
leddy leddy is offline
Force of Nature
 
Join Date: Jul 2004
Posts: 810
Rep Power: 1053144
leddy has a reputation beyond reputeleddy has a reputation beyond reputeleddy has a reputation beyond reputeleddy has a reputation beyond reputeleddy has a reputation beyond reputeleddy has a reputation beyond reputeleddy has a reputation beyond reputeleddy has a reputation beyond reputeleddy has a reputation beyond reputeleddy has a reputation beyond reputeleddy has a reputation beyond repute
Quote:
Originally Posted by dwarf
Ok some of you seem to know where I'm coming from and some of you seem to think I'm a retard. (Thanks dor all your replys though it all helps)

I play with a metronome, it's just getting the rythms that are on the page to the "axe". It all falls down to realising and memorising sounds and patterns as stated before.

I was just wondering if there was any programs (like fretboard wizzard) around to help me.

Thanks

Dwarf
Dwarf,

Find some sheet music where you have CD's of the same music. Play along with the recordings while you're reading. Get a lot of different material and do this every day.

Most people who read really well grew up playing in organized groups (like concert bands, orchestras, jazz big bands, etc.), or they have many years of private lessons. Chazba nailed it. You just have to put in some time.

It's so worth it. Reading well will increase the amount of opportunities you'll have to play music, and better your chances of finding good paying work doing it, if that's what you want.
Reply With Quote
  #19  
Old 10-05-2006
dwarf's Avatar
dwarf dwarf is offline
Pok'e'mon master
 
Join Date: Jun 2005
Location: Anywhere you're not
Age: 20
Posts: 511
Rep Power: 3076
dwarf has a reputation beyond reputedwarf has a reputation beyond reputedwarf has a reputation beyond reputedwarf has a reputation beyond reputedwarf has a reputation beyond reputedwarf has a reputation beyond reputedwarf has a reputation beyond reputedwarf has a reputation beyond reputedwarf has a reputation beyond reputedwarf has a reputation beyond reputedwarf has a reputation beyond repute
yeah I play in the schools jazz band the thing is I hear what everyone else is playing and ear it.
__________________
The leprichaun tells me what to do

and soon he will tell you too
Reply With Quote
  #20  
Old 10-05-2006
daav's Avatar
daav daav is offline
Flailing up a storm.
 
Join Date: Feb 2003
Location: Vermont
Posts: 1,006
Rep Power: 38259
daav has a reputation beyond reputedaav has a reputation beyond reputedaav has a reputation beyond reputedaav has a reputation beyond reputedaav has a reputation beyond reputedaav has a reputation beyond reputedaav has a reputation beyond reputedaav has a reputation beyond reputedaav has a reputation beyond reputedaav has a reputation beyond reputedaav has a reputation beyond repute
I think that unlike some other things that migth have a shortcut that software or a gizmo or whatever can fix, this is one of those things you need to physically go throguh a bunch until it starts to feel natural, which was why i suggested the Ted Reed book. TYhis thread made me pull it out last night and i remembered how cool it is, i opened to one page at random and it had the same rythm 4 different times, with 4 different notations, once you get the basic rythym, your eye tracks the notes and you *see* how the differnt notes *feel* while you track the rtythym.

Anyway, good luck

Daav
Reply With Quote
Reply



Currently Active Users Viewing This Thread: 1 (0 members and 1 guests)
 
Thread Tools
Display Modes

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off

Forum Jump
Google
 

Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
help w/ performing electronica music live Bullet Days Recording Techniques 5 02-20-2005 13:19
music for film A1A2 Recording Techniques 3 05-05-2003 16:50


All times are GMT -7. The time now is 21:09.


Powered by: vBulletin
Copyright ©2000 - 2009, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright © 1995-2008 Audiofanzine except where noted. All Rights Reserved.