
Slowrider
STOP Voting!
I tried calling him, they said he had his head Up some cows ass right then.
well, here it comes! another non musical person trying to compare athletic ability to musical talent
I use a scale as a way of easily finding a note with a certain feeling. I don't think about the name of the scale or anything, but I know that when I play a certain note, and then I want to go to another note for a certain feeling, I pretty much instantly know how and where to find it. That's how I learned my scales in the first place: estimating the intervals between notes. In my head I put together those intervals in order, so now I know 'where I am' whatever I play. I've been playing guitar for a little over three years now, and this kind of liberal approach to learning scales works perfectly for me and everyone I've ever taught/played with.
Believe what? That someone who has a natural talent for music won't be any good if they don't practice? Or that someone who doesn't have a natural knack for music can be a good musician if they study and practice hard enough?
I HAVE seen guys that I thought sucked and had no natural talent
Exactly what I do. I learn scales only to learn how the fret patterns look on the neck, but then it's the patterns I memorize, I dont think what scale I'm playing or what the next note name is. I memorize patterns of fretting and learn to keep track of where I am at any given point, and where the pattern goes to next up or down. I try to learn both ways, play a scale going up and down the neck, but also play the same scale in a box staying on the same fret and going across the strings. I also like to figure out how to play the same riff in 4 or 5 different places and in different octaves. But when it comes time to play a solo real time, I visualize the patterns on the neck, I dont think about scale names and note names at all.
Hi, I have been away for a bit! This has been a very interesting thread and Poll. When I first started playing electric right after High School, I felt completely lost in the frets, yes I could always copy songs by ear but I knew there was logic to it. I read all I could on the subject of theories and scales. The first night back ar our insufficient little jam space everyone was impressed, I could play a flurry of notes, in key.
VP
Fuck, this idiot is back.![]()
EZ, despite the beauty and wisdom that that post evokes, I'm gonna take it all with a pinch of salt !i learned to play bass and guitar on my own. i started with guitar when i was about 14. a year later a friend's band needed a bass player so i sold my guitar gear and got bass gear. i was in a couple of bands for the next couple years, and when i was 19, the band i was in got signed to a development deal. they put us on salary and told us to write songs and get better. that band had only been together for 3 months and we only had 7 songs.
i quit my job to play music(and it was impossible to party like i was at the time and do construction). Since i had the time, i decided that i was going to take a couple of intro music classes so i can start at the beginning and learn how to read music and get a better understanding of music. As i was learning how to read music and play the things on the charts, i would memorize the melody before i had a chance to recognize the notes on the chart, and my fingers just took over. it was impossible at that point for me to go back and start at the beginning.
In no way would i recommend to someone who is thinking about picking up an instrument to NOT take lessons and learn the craft inside and out, including on how to read and write and a thorough understanding of theory. OTOH, that's a great way to get a 15 year old kid who wants to rock completely discouraged and uninterested in playing music.
EZ, despite the beauty and wisdom that that post evokes, I'm gonna take it all with a pinch of salt !![]()
that's actually one that is 100% accurate and truthful.
I partly agree and disagree with this. Some people do appear to be born with a kind of innate ability to do certain things - but they still have to practice in many, possibly most, of those instances. Pele practiced and practiced. So did Tiger. On the other hand, John Lennon by his own admission had a lousy sense of timing {great for a rhythm guitarist ! } but worked to overcome that. Ironically, Ringo never practiced ! Some peoples' drive and subsequent dominance may not be innate at all, but a reaction to all kinds of happenings or circumstances.Music is like sports - which is something I'm sure the vast majority of the picked-last musician dweebs in here have no clue about.
You can practice and practice, and get better, but you'll never be as good as the guy that just has natural ability for whatever it is he's doing. Take Tiger Woods for example. Any one of us could study the game, take golf lessons, and practice our asses off. We'll never be as good at golf as he is. Yeah, there are other great golfers, but he has that something inside of him that makes him dominant. Same with Watne Gretzky, Michael Jordon, Joe Montana, Pele, etc. It's the same with music. Lots of us are decent musicians. With practice you can get better. But with all the practice in the world, you'll never be as good as the guy that just has it and only half-ass practices.
And....while you can teach theory, you can't teach rhythm. Some people just can't keep a beat.