MISTERQCUE
Not Just Anutha Brutha
Been reading since the age 14! Came in handy doin' session work in the late 70's and early 80's!
Cyrokk said:I think the ideal should be that a guitar player should know everything else contained in sheet music other than the individual notes: rhythm, tempo descriptions, dynamics, endings and codas, time signatures, etc. with the rest gleamed from tab.
Drummers read music? What does their score look like?Ed Dixon said:It boils down to what you want to do with music. For most part time local groups and players it may have little impact. However for anyone considering music as a real career, it's another story.
A few weeks ago I had the opportunity to speak with Ed Shaughnessy, who was the drummer on the tonight show for many years. He commented that 3 things led to his success in the music business.
1. He played all styles well
2. He was easy to get along with
3. He read music
That's what got him started.
Ed
crazydoc said:Drummers read music? What does their score look like?
Aaron Cheney said:Yep. That combination is the only way to accurately transcribe guitar music.
mshilarious said:Classical guitar notation is standard notation with the added help of position markers (in Roman numerals). It works quite well. I was never that great at it, but that's the ideal to aspire to.
. When I was learning there just were no teachers. I wore out a tape deck learning Candyman by Gary Davis. And I play it a bit different now, but I played it over and over til I got as close as possible to how it sounded, how it pulled, how it breathed, which took a lot longer than it did to learn the notes, that's for sure.crazydoc said:Drummers read music? What does their score look like?
TexRoadkill said:crazydoc said:Drummers read music? What does their score look like?
The same as other scores but with more vomit and urine stains.