
VTgreen81
Active member
Does it seem to make a diff to anyone if the musicians you play/wirte/record with can read? Or maybe it's the lack of theory that should have been learned when learning the dots.
JEEZUS, I haven't had those in years! After the dots desolve in your mouth you'd be left with a paper spit ball.c7sus said:Those sticky candies from the movies. The ones that get jammed between your teeth.
I LOVE Dots!!!
Yes, and in many cases reading music is a must. I do gig's where I meet the other musicians for the first time at the job... get the sheet music, play, get paid, and go home.VTgreen81 said:Does it seem to make a diff to anyone if the musicians you play/wirte/record with can read? Or maybe it's the lack of theory that should have been learned when learning the dots.
DJL said:Yes, and in many cases reading music is a must. I do gig's where I meet the other musicians for the first time at the job... get the sheet music, play, get paid, and go home.
cstockdale said:I am fine as long as they can either:
read music
read tab
or know their chord structures and scales by name
There is nothing I hate more than asking "what chords are you playing there?" and being told,"well first I put my finger here, then it goes there, then this funny thing here"......
OR if they ask me "what are you playing?" and I respond with "it's in D, I am playing Em7, F#m7, Caug" and they say "wha?"
Ed Dixon said:While "play anything by ear" folks do exist, they are rare. I think stockdale said it well. Most players need some reasonable knowledge of chords and song structure.
Ed
EddieRay said:I've come across a great many good, self-taught players. Occasionally there's the guy who thinks his lack of music education somehow makes him better than "schooled" players. That's nonsense, of course. I just loved music theory - everything made perfect sense.
What really galls me are the guys who have no clue what they are missing. Ever had to play with someone who doesn't know that count offs are to be done in the song's tempo?