
Armistice
Son of Yoda
How is having a million junior guitarists around the world wanting to learn to play YOUR song a bad thing? There HAS to be, perhaps unquantifiable, flow-on revenue for the artist.
And a lot of this discussion is centred around the fact that lots of tablature is wrong and that some of you can work it out by ear. Great. And not particularly hard when you're dealing with standard tuned guitar played in the open position and a standard pop song using standard chords.
Start delving into the world of alternate tunings, full and partial capoing, obscure and complex pieces that will possibly never actually be available to your budding guitarist where he/she lives via standard publication because it's just not available (you US dwellers would be shocked if you visited other countries and saw what you can't find that you probably take for granted), and there's a real argument that tablature does some good.
I've only ever put one piece of tablature on the net - Jethro Tull's Salamander - very obscure - I wanted to know how to play it. No-one knew, it seemed. Music not available. The couple of attempts that were up there were completely wrong and partially done - no-one could even work out what tuning was being used. So I decided to work it out, succeeded and posted it to a Jethro Tull fan site.
As a result there are now YouTube videos of various people filming themselves playing the tab I worked out and various other people watching it and being inspired to hunt down that tab and learn to play it themselves and possibly other people being inspired to remember Jethro Tull and buy their CDs and go to their gigs etc. (yep, they're still with us...). How is this bad for Jethro Tull?
I reckon Ian Anderson owes me a beer or two for working his song out for him and publishing it, seeing he never did.
If there was a reliable, pay-for-tab, iTunes type site where you could buy proper tab in PDF form, where for $1 you could get what you wanted, and where it was correct, and authorised, and if it didn't exist, you could submit your versions of things and have them verified, and could then split the proceeds with the recording artist... that would be heaven.
I'd pay a $1 for tab any day because it would save me the time to work it out myself - while I could do it, I'm sure, I just couldn't be arsed most of the time because I have other things to do.
This service exists for scored music, why not tab, seeing that's how most guitarists learn?
Now, someone get out there and invent it for me!
And a lot of this discussion is centred around the fact that lots of tablature is wrong and that some of you can work it out by ear. Great. And not particularly hard when you're dealing with standard tuned guitar played in the open position and a standard pop song using standard chords.
Start delving into the world of alternate tunings, full and partial capoing, obscure and complex pieces that will possibly never actually be available to your budding guitarist where he/she lives via standard publication because it's just not available (you US dwellers would be shocked if you visited other countries and saw what you can't find that you probably take for granted), and there's a real argument that tablature does some good.
I've only ever put one piece of tablature on the net - Jethro Tull's Salamander - very obscure - I wanted to know how to play it. No-one knew, it seemed. Music not available. The couple of attempts that were up there were completely wrong and partially done - no-one could even work out what tuning was being used. So I decided to work it out, succeeded and posted it to a Jethro Tull fan site.
As a result there are now YouTube videos of various people filming themselves playing the tab I worked out and various other people watching it and being inspired to hunt down that tab and learn to play it themselves and possibly other people being inspired to remember Jethro Tull and buy their CDs and go to their gigs etc. (yep, they're still with us...). How is this bad for Jethro Tull?
I reckon Ian Anderson owes me a beer or two for working his song out for him and publishing it, seeing he never did.
If there was a reliable, pay-for-tab, iTunes type site where you could buy proper tab in PDF form, where for $1 you could get what you wanted, and where it was correct, and authorised, and if it didn't exist, you could submit your versions of things and have them verified, and could then split the proceeds with the recording artist... that would be heaven.
I'd pay a $1 for tab any day because it would save me the time to work it out myself - while I could do it, I'm sure, I just couldn't be arsed most of the time because I have other things to do.
This service exists for scored music, why not tab, seeing that's how most guitarists learn?
Now, someone get out there and invent it for me!
