jay mitchell
Roadie
- Messages
- 881
Fixed it. Intervals and their names don't come from scales; it's exactly the opposite.If you’re a beginner ( to theory) it’s useful have an abstract interval namefrom the major scale
Fixed it. Intervals and their names don't come from scales; it's exactly the opposite.If you’re a beginner ( to theory) it’s useful have an abstract interval namefrom the major scale
No it just means you have a full knowledge of all the notes and the ability to use them. Hence the interval scale practice .In the long term, that's an ineffective and inefficient way to understand modes or the fretboard. It will require that you make frequent, unnecessary position changes. I learned those fingerings ca. 1973 and used them for a time in the way you describe. A few years later it dawned on me - during a lesson I took with Bill Moio - how much that approach had limited my playing. I suggest you work on Bill Leavitt's fingerings in Book Three of his Method for Modern Guitar. Once you begin to get those together, you'll gradually develop the ability to play in any key/scale/mode in whatever position you find yourself at any given moment.
While it's generally a good thing to be aware of 3nps fingerings, that is only of significant value when you're playing sequential scales/modes using alternate picking. If you practice playing scales, your improvisation will tend to sound like you're practicing scales. Just sayin'....
So what are they when that are literally that.Fixed it. Intervals and their names don't come from scales; it's exactly the opposite.
Scales come from intervals. Intervals originated with the overtone series.So what are they when that are literally that.
I suggest you work on Bill Leavitt's fingerings in Book Three of his Method for Modern Guitar.
In what way exactly? The fingerings I referenced are targeted primarily at facilitating sight reading, and they're certainly not the only ones I use (nor were they when I was first exposed to them). They will facilitate positional independence. I've never seen evidence that legitimate musical concepts ever become outdated. Pedagogical methods, yes. Presentation graphics, yes (Ted Greene, anyone?). Concepts/fingerings, no. If they were useful then, they remain so to this day.Sorry, but those books are kinda outdated regarding their scale presentation.
That information can be condensed to knowing chord tones and where to find them on the fretboard. It's a lot easier said than done, but it's a good way to begin learning to improvise. Here's another video in which Hal Galper elaborates on the concept:Tom Quayle perspective on getting comfortable finding all the generic intervals on the fretboard vs. learning different shapes for every scale. I'm sure he's no Eagle, but he does seem to have advanced past the beginner state.
I just want to point out that there are some people, well me, reading all of this and it is generating good thoughts. I think part of what is driving this conversation is living in different parts of the world. I have found the conversation thought provoking from my own knowledge of theory and playing. I can see some of what was mentioned earlier that I think people in this thread are agreeing more than they think but are explaining things from a different angle. That is one cool but also difficult thing about music is that there are a lot of different ways to come at something. My experience is that people have to find an angle that makes sense to them. Then once the knowledge builds the other angels start to make more sense.
I am happy to see that the conversation has been civil for the most part. I certainly wouldn't put anyone on ignore for the conversation here. I think it has been a healthy debate for the most part. Explain your position and let the conversation flow. I can't be the only one reading this and following along and filtering it into my own understanding of theory. I didn't start this conversation but have been appreciative of it. I am looking forward to the triad conversation. I honestly like having and reading these types of discussion. It keeps things fresh in my mind.
That information can be condensed to knowing chord tones and where to find them on the fretboard. It's a lot easier said than done, but it's a good way to begin learning to improvise. Here's another video in which Hal Galper elaborates on the concept:
In what way exactly?
100%That information can be condensed to knowing chord tones and where to find them on the fretboard. It's a lot easier said than done,
He’s teaching G maj in 5th, 6th and 7th position?Gmaj in 6th position is really making little to no sense.
He’s teaching G maj in 5th, 6th and 7th position?
SpicyYes. No joke.
That's where vocabulary comes into play. You can't tell a coherent story with just knowledge of the alphabet; you have to know how to spell words, create phrases with those words, compose complete sentences, then link sentences together into paragraphs, and then compose multiple paragraphs into a story.For me, the only person I can speak for, it’s helpful for more than just chord tones. If I’m improvising over a one chord vamp
Getting bored is the result of limited vocabulary. It would be a worthwhile exercise to add to your seven-note vocabulary. There are infinite possibilities even within that limited space. For that matter, an infinite number of beautiful melodies can be constructed from fewer notes than seven.(for shame) I’m gonna get bored really quickly if I’m just locking into seven notes and never throwing in anything else.
Any port in a storm, I say. If "loading an app" works for you, that's great. The only musical app I have on my phone is IRealPro, which has been a real life-saver at jazz jams. I never use it for practice purposes, however.That came from loading up an app on my phone
Those are all good things to learn.and getting to where I could accurately identify the properly named intervals generically, out of context. And by then finding those on the fretboard and learning the sound generically out of context and then experimenting with them in different contexts so that I started hearing melody lines using those intervals in lots of different contexts.