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Topic ClosedWho can read sheet music ?

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goose View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 27 2005 at 13:04
It's also rather important to be able to do the former though, no? That's something I'm not so good at as the latter.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 01 2005 at 21:46
I can read, although I rarely do. I understand theory very well. I can't sight read though, and I think a lot of it has to do with my terrible math deficiency. I certainly tried! Two years of 3 to 4 hours a day, and my dexterity improved dramatically, and my musical understanding improved, but my sight reading skills are non-existent. I.e. I see double dotted eighth-notes  and just can not process it fast enough to be effective.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 10 2005 at 01:41

I do.

I read treble, bass, and tenor clef..errr....

I learned treble when I started in band playing the alto saxophone.

Later, I learned to read guitar sheet music..which isn't *that* hard..

Then I started double bass and taught myself bass clef...THEN..to tuba..

I can play a little piano... don't ask how I know how to read tenor clef :-P.

 

And..yeah..If you want to learn modern composition..etc..study jazz theory..it's very important.

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 10 2005 at 15:40

Can't read nor write music on paper. I have used my ears for the last 39 years. But then, I am not a professional musician...just play in my spare time.

Always remember that you are unique. Just like everyone else.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 10 2005 at 16:13

I read both F and G clef, not so quick as would like, but I do.

It's handy, but not obligatory to be a good musician.

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 10 2005 at 16:17
Been practising my treble & tenor clef after realising I need to read in them for sightreading in my grade 8 'cello exam in a bit over a week
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 16 2005 at 14:17
The modes, built on the C-major scale (white keys of the piano):

C = Ionian (major scale)
D = Dorian
E = Phrygian
F = Lydian
G = Mixolydian
A = Aeolian (natural minor)
B = Locrian

As stated above, the Aeolian is the natural minor, and is the one you hear most commonly apart from the major scale in pop and popular classical music. The others are commonly used in jazz improvisation, except for Locrian, which is scarcely used because it’s “dissonant”, owing to the tonic chord being diminished. Of course, you’ll find some composers using it deliberately to take advantage of the fact that its sound is disorienting. John McLaughlin used it a lot in the Mahavishnu Orchestra stuff (and the so-called “Super-Locrian”, which is just the Locrian with a flatted 5th).

I can read notation, but I can’t sight-read, nor can I play “by ear”. I’ve always been highly envious of those that can. My method has always been to look at the manuscript and “hunt and peck” until I can play it properly (or close enough for rock & roll). Treble clef is generally fine as long as there aren’t tons of leger lines. I’ve still not quite got the hang of bass clef, and alto/tenor clefs give me a headache. (Good thing I never became a viola player!)

I suppose this explains why I never became a musician.

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MIKE (a.k.a. "Progbear")

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Edited by Progbear
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 16 2005 at 15:15

Originally posted by Sweetnighter Sweetnighter wrote:

Yes'm, I can read and write sheet music.

I hate these music theory classes they have out there... they always teach music theory from the classical perspective. Honestly, they teach melodic, harmonic, and natural minor scales/key and never teach dorian. 99% of contemporary music that you hear on the radio that employs a minor scale employs dorian minors. Just kills me. If you want to learn comtemporary music theory, LEARN JAZZ. Major, dorian minor, and dominant keys are crucial, for composing and improvising. The best composers are master improvisers, take my word for it.

It's my experience that's it's best to learn both. That makes you very versatile as a musician. I studied classical piano for about 10 years, but contemporary music and lessons in improvising, and in blue notes and all, sure meant a breath of fresh air for me, and it expanded my musical horizon enormously. Still I'm very happy with my classical background. That's very valuable for any prog musician.



Edited by Moogtron III
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 17 2005 at 17:28
Wow I'm impressed. I didn't know I was surrounded by this many fellow musicians.  I can read music and have written music. If you're gonna be a musician you gotta at least learn the rudiments of reading. I also agree with Sweetnighter and Moogtron III. You really need both especially to be a prog musician. And I'd also like to say that Aeolian is the most ignored mode if you think about it. Most popular music employs Dorian(as stated above by Sweetnighter) and almost all classical is Harmonic Minor. Now I've got a question. Is there anyone on this forum who can proficiently perform and understands anything off of Octopus by Gentle Giant? I'd love to some day. 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 18 2005 at 07:58
Utah_man get a good classical guitar beginners book - the Frederick Noad series is good. After all, there are only seven different notes- how hard can it be. BTW tab (or Tablature) is not a new invention. It is how they used to write for the lute back in the renaissance, 400 odd years ago. Tab has one drawback though- it gives you no indication of the length of notes. Back in those days they used to write the note value above the tablature.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 19 2005 at 10:27
I read bass clef, but slower than I should. A problem bassists have. We never get to play too difficult lines, so we don't get used to read 'em when they do show up!
In (prog) rock I think sheet music is the perfect way for bassists, while I know guitarists who prefers tabs. And, I can see that. The guitarist's stuff often ranges from that low B to a high E (didn't botherfiguring out which octaves...) and that makes for a lot of lines in the notes, unless you use lots of 8va stuff, and both treble and bass clef. The problem I have with tabs is that yes, they sometimes they help you figure out the fingerings, but too often the guy who made the tab is a total noob, and then the tab will just make it difficult for you, unless you're quicker than me at figuring out fingerings on your own. I had that problem a couple of years ago, when I was going to try to learn DT's Erotomania and Dance of Eternity. The former is quite easy, but the tab was sh*te, so it was quite difficult until I watched another guy playing it. Then it was like, WOW. Same thing with TDOE, which is a damn difficult one. The first tab I used had some insane fingerings, and made it all even more difficult. Then I checked another tab, and there was the WOW again. I should pick that one up again. It's so fun to play stuff that's too difficult! When you do get some things right, well, that's a KICK! 

Another prob with tabs is reading rythms. If you're looking up a tab to play along with an existing song, you'll work the rythms out by ear, but if you're writing your own music, it's notes all the way for me. Tabs are too easily misunderstood. Guitar Pro is helpful there, though.
www.geocities.com/joelbitars
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 28 2005 at 00:00
Originally posted by Progbear Progbear wrote:

The modes, built on the C-major scale (white keys of the piano):

C = Ionian (major scale)
D = Dorian
E = Phrygian
F = Lydian
G = Mixolydian
A = Aeolian (natural minor)
B = Locrian

As stated above, the Aeolian is the natural minor, and is the one you hear most commonly apart from the major scale in pop and popular classical music. The others are commonly used in jazz improvisation, except for Locrian, which is scarcely used because it’s “dissonant”, owing to the tonic chord being diminished. Of course, you’ll find some composers using it deliberately to take advantage of the fact that its sound is disorienting. John McLaughlin used it a lot in the Mahavishnu Orchestra stuff (and the so-called “Super-Locrian”, which is just the Locrian with a flatted 5th).


Eh? Being a jazz saxophonist with what I'm told is a fairly advanced command of jazz theory, I would tend to disagree. I've always learned that for jazz, Aeolian and Phrygian are seldom used and everything else is used often with Ionian, Dorian, and Mixolydian being the three most common. For example, in a minor ii-V-I, you'd have a half-diminished ii chord, which you'd use a locrian, harmonic minor, or super locrian/locrian #2/half-diminished (they're all different names for the same thing) scale over. Minor ii-V's are very common, whereas the phrygian scales are only really used over susb9 chords. Susb9 chords are MUCH less common, I might add. Also, the difference between a locrian and a "super locrian" scale is not a flatted 5th (which the locrian scale already has), but a sharp 2, hence it is sometimes referred to as the "locrian #2" scale.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 16 2005 at 17:59
I can read sheet music. I took a theory class in HS. I learned alot and hope to learn more theory in college. I actually find it easier to play be ear though (bass guitar) even on hard pieces. But when I want to write my own music then the theory will come in handy!
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 17 2005 at 01:41
Originally posted by Ben2112 Ben2112 wrote:

I can read it for keyboard fairly well, but it's slow going for me when it comes to guitar. That's why tab was invented: it is a much more accurate and logical method for transcribing guitar and bass (and maybe violin and other string instruments, I don't know). Best is the tab/sheet music combination, so you can read the notes from the tab and the rhythms from the sheet.


Tabulature (TAB) was invented in the Renaissance period (over 400 years ago) as a way of writing for the lute.

[edit] and no, it is not more accurate - it gives no indication of note length, timing or expression


Edited by cobb
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 17 2005 at 02:26

Yes.... very very slowly.

I did start learning around 8 years ago when i first picked up the guitar, then when i quit guitar i forgot everything i had learned. Then in high school when i did music i started to relearn but nothing really stuck. Now i'm going to a music school next year so i'll be relearning it all over again.

I know the rhythm side of things very well (note values, time signatures, polyrhythms etc.), it's just scales and what not i need to memorise. I'm beginning to understand how it all relates (eg. how to determine chords from scales like EbMaj-sus4 or something) and i understand how the scale determines the key signature it's just a matter of memorising it all really.

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 18 2005 at 21:47
I have a decent understanding of music theory, and I can read treble and bass clef moderately well when given time to figure out rhythms and such.
But I definately can't sight read, in spite of all my efforts over the last couple of years...

"Getting people to do what you want is simply a matter of telling them what they want to hear"
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 05 2005 at 20:41
Been reading sheet music since I was but a lad.
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