Andrew Cockburn
Apr 15 2008, 02:46 PM
"A note in itself doesn't mean anything unless it is played in reference to another one ..."
Welcome to the first in our series of tips of the day - this will be a frequent feature here on the instructors board - we will post a tip from a particular instructor, then discuss it giving experience and insight into what the tip means to us individually
Nemanja Filipovic
Apr 15 2008, 03:22 PM
great idea Andrew.......
I agree with David on this one....I think that is hard to give a meaning to one note with out another...
Bogdan Radovic
Apr 15 2008, 04:15 PM
Great tip!
We need to choose notes carefully , as in life, when choosing right words to express ourself!
Nemanja Filipovic
Apr 15 2008, 04:18 PM
Great tip!
We need to choose notes carefully , as in life, when choosing right words to express ourself!
good line Bole...music is a great representation of our life's ....
Andrew Cockburn
Apr 15 2008, 04:32 PM
Knowing the way that David approaches his compositions and lessons, I would say that the intent behind this tip is to make you think more deeply about chord progresions and scales. A note on its own is nothing, but add it to some others in a scale and you set the mood of the melody, and start to choose the chords you can use.
It would be a fun exercise to start with a single note, and see how many different directions you can take it in a short amount of time - do you go major or minor? Is it the root or 3rd of the scale you are going to use? None of these questions have meaning for a single note, but as soon as you add a second or 3rd, they define it and cement it into a particular direction.
In the end, composition is about choices - one note is no choice really, it is just a jumping off point. Each subsequent note you add removes choice, but defines direction.
Nemanja Filipovic
Apr 15 2008, 05:12 PM
In the end, composition is about choices - one note is no choice really, it is just a jumping off point. Each subsequent note you add removes choice, but defines direction.
well sad Andrew.I never think about it that way.....
MickeM
Apr 15 2008, 05:17 PM
I beg to differ, there's one single exception to that rule. One!
Proven
HERE at 2:40
and
HERE at 2:25
I'd go a see a concert with just that note
man... you have to agree that single note is well played. It's quiet before and quiet after, he lifts one single tone out and the audience just loves it.
Nemanja Filipovic
Apr 15 2008, 08:03 PM
I beg to differ, there's one single exception to that rule. One!
Proven
HERE at 2:40
and
HERE at 2:25
I'd go a see a concert with just that note
man... you have to agree that single note is well played. It's quiet before and quiet after, he lifts one single tone out and the audience just loves it.
yeah you are wright,but notes before and after that long note,give that same note some sense,IMO...
Marcus Siepen
Apr 16 2008, 08:22 AM
there is so much truth to this tip! You always have to see the whole thing (song, solo, whatever), and not just focus on a single note.
Muris Varajic
Apr 16 2008, 04:11 PM
Spot on bro, for love or relationship we need 2 at least.
Ivan Milenkovic
Apr 16 2008, 04:37 PM
Very nicely said, only a intelligent use of melodic intervals can be appreciated as a good quality music ;:)
Dejan Farkas
Apr 23 2008, 03:50 PM
As Claude Debussy said: “Music is the space between the notes.”
It is a magic to hear more notes than actually played, but for that you need to leave enough space for your mind to fill with more