แสดงบทความที่มีป้ายกำกับ chord voicings แสดงบทความทั้งหมด
แสดงบทความที่มีป้ายกำกับ chord voicings แสดงบทความทั้งหมด

วันพฤหัสบดีที่ 9 กรกฎาคม พ.ศ. 2552

Free ebook for Guitarists, Bassists and Keyboard Players

I just uploaded a new free ebook for guitarists, bassists and keyboard players. It can help you master scales, modes, solfeggio, triad chords, seventh chords, inversions, extended harmony, quartal harmony, voicings, progressions, jazz motifs, embellishments and it contains sample tunes.

http://www.lulu.com/content/e-book/guitar-bass-piano-book/7236956

Currently its just pages in my notebook written in pen which were photographed and pasted into Microsoft Word. It has more than enough to help beginners get started and intermediate players complete their foundational education.

Enjoy,

intervals

intervals

building chords

Augmented Diminished

Dominant chords

Half Diminished

Major Guitar Chords

Minor Guitar Chords

Pentatonic

Guitar Minor Sevenths

Chord inversions

functional progressions

Guitar Modes

modes,piano,keyboard

modes

parallell minor

rhythms,notation

suspended chords

tetrachords

Triad Chords in Key

Add  chords

วันพุธที่ 8 กรกฎาคม พ.ศ. 2552

About The Music

I compose music because its a big part of myself. If I don't put something on paper and play an instrument everyday, I will get cranky. Now, when I'm composing music, I start with the big picture and I mean really big.

In talking about it, it quickly veers into politics, sociology and the philosophy of religion. I ask what I'm trying to communicate. I'm usually trying to communicate something mystical, transcendant, infinite, communal and/or abundant.

I try to recreate a feeling of the mystical, transcendant and infinite through the use of drones, chimes, gongs and finger cymbals, and through the use of rhythmic cycles. I also try to create a sense of transcendence by including techniques and instrumental timbres foreign to my own roots of rock, jazz, classical, guitar, sax, violin and piano.

As far as the music communicating or, better yet, actually building and strengthening ties between community members, I try to write music with at least a few easy parts so that anyone, even children, can also participate and I try to have a high tolerance for change and diversity based on the needs of other people playing with me. However, even I have limits. I would like to create music for people's daily activities or at least tied to utility somehow such as when two people make love, exchange massage or good conversation.

I'd like to explore more dance and rave music. Sometimes, I try to mix quartal jazz piano voicings (because its good for minor and pentatonic music)

Music ThatAccelerates From 0-60 p. 4

Postmodern music has a lot going for it. Its fresh because it avoids functional harmony without making that an unbreakable rule. People like Chick Corea, Allan Holdsworth and Frank Gambale among others expanded the palette of chord voicings thank you very much. One thing contemporary composers could do more of is cleanse the music of goal oriented progressions because in western musical practice the idea that one had to return to the tonic rose out of the unconscious philosophical orientation of the merchant classes who had become more wealthy even than the church and aristocracy.

They were unconsciously perpetuating the idea that one kind of person was more important than all the others. This created the necessity of the leading tone. Its necessity changed all the diverse modes into major and (harmonic) minor.

In my opinion and the opinion of knowledgeable others this represents big government with a lot of power in one person or group (capitalists/corporations) out of tune with the rest of humanity. Previously, in Gregorian chant, you could start in one mode and end in another on a different step of the scale. This implies local governance and control.

Postmodern music is unfortunately too improvisatory for mass consumption containing almost no examples of outstandingly composed melody whatever. The chords and key often hop around so fast (a skill in itself and not without its beauty) there's no time to state or develop a good melody. That's O.K. as far as it goes but I think even Methany is bored with it now.

Anyway, the microtonalists have alienated the audience completely but it is a direction with a lot of potential if used sparingly in the right hands.
Techno has shown its viability in the rave scene which is an effective use of ritual (usually in the wrong hands however) but it relies too much on technology. Its better if someone can be a musician first and a knob tweaker second.

One of the problems with new age and some world music is it's occasional rejection of everything western. Don't limit me please. And its placing on a pedestal everything foreign, seeing it all somehow as being more spiritual than our own.

Most people can't successfully graft themselves onto an alien religion plagued with all the same problems as our own after cutting themselves off from their own root. This is why the new agers hop around from tradition to tradition at the supermarket of religion known as the new age book store while they starve at the banquet. I like the new age book stores for the comparative religious smorgasbord they offer but, similar to commercials, we need to be media savvy about them. The same goes for the music store.

If a composer desires to illustrate thier philosophical orientation concerning a leader's correct relationship to the people he/she serves, the call and response between leader and chorus often used in African music is effective. To avoid a slavish brainwashed implication, the choruses response should be independent and overlap with the leaders. This reveals the peoples ability to interrupt the leader and speak while he/she is speaking.

To show the group's and leader's complete agreement, the last verse can be sung together. To give a strong expression to individual voices choir members can take turns responding after the leader.

Another trend in post-postmodern music is to use additive techniques. For starters, more extensive use of additive techniques is a fresh approach from what has been done in the past. However, We don't have to start with a tape loop or a melody and only play the first note, then play the first and second, next play the first second and third etc... Its already been done, isn't that effective and fractures the melody.

That method is mostly useful in recreating madness something to which I do not aspire.