Showing posts with label sing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label sing. Show all posts

Play Music on the Porch Day 8/26/2023

 

Play Music on the Porch Day 8/26/2023 - I'm IN!

https://playmusicontheporchday.com/

So far Play Music on the Porch Day will be happening in over 1200 locations, in over 25 Countries around the world! Help us grow by tagging any musicians you know, or any musicians who inspire you!
#music #porchfest #porchmusicfest #internationalmusic #worldmusic #oud #guitar #sitar #dotar #tar #zither #lute #singer #songwriter #slideguitar #fingerstyle #indonesianmusic #bassguitar #uke #ukelele #ukeleletutorial #berlin #tokyo #harare

Earth at the Doctor... You've Got a Bad Case of the Humans - cartoon


Biff Rose plays the Mighty Kurzeill - Alien Supremacy - Album Cover Cartoon


Instrumental Music by 
Biff Rose on the Mighty Kurzweill... 
and
Mostly Piano sounds...
and 
Outer Space!
and
Swinging Progressive Jazz... 

Talking... excellent but, WHO IS JOE???

Even More Talking by Biff... World Trade Organization Protests

Painting of Biff Rose



On FaceBorg I Read:
A message of empathy to guitarists when it comes to learning music theory...🙏

It's totally normal to be confused at times. Unlike the piano, the guitar was not designed for an efficient overlap with how theory is constructed!

The guitar was designed for open chords to be easy to play with full-sounding voicings. It's a culture. It's about singing tunes around a campfire with friends or jamming in a garage... It's relatively easy to pick up and the first few open chords are accessible to strum. But the moment you start wanting to go a bit deeper, things get kind of confusing...

Just look at an open E major. It's one of the first chords you learn as a guitarist. It's a triad! Yet you play 6 strings on the guitar when you play an open E major 🤔.

Yes... but that's because notes repeat. Got it! So, what are the notes of this voicing from bottom to top? E, G#, B, E, G#, B? NOPE! Because the notes are actually NOT in that order. Sorry. It's E, B, E, G#, B, E.

🎸🎹And look at the fretboard! And how the notes are laid out. On the piano the easiest way to learn a chord or a scale is not to use shapes, it's to learn the notes of the scale, and THEN, just play those notes on the keyboard. It's easier to think of notes which implicitly require learning the theory behind scales first!

On the guitar, a shape is definitely your best option if you want to play quickly and not step 4 hours finding the notes on the fretboard. So you learn shapes and forget about the reason behind them or their notes. I get it!
So many things stack up against the guitarist in their quest to make sense of what is going on, even with the best intentions!

I get why you would give up and just play without thinking about it. I did that too. But I promise you that there is a way to learn theory efficiently in a way that makes sense. It doesn't have to take long, and when you get to the other side, your instrument and music, in general, will open up in a way that's hard to envision.

So if you're motivated to learn theory, or re-motivated after a long break, GOOD FOR YOU! You won't regret it. And don't feel bad if you find it confusing. Theory is not difficult, but it often IS for guitarists, and that's okay.

and then SG Replied:
I often avoid using theory for lessons for this reason. More often than not, it seems to confuse people. I could definitely see how theory is more easy to visualize and approaching on piano. When I explain triads to more intermediate students, I generally use the piano to show it.

and then SOD Said:
Theory is theory. It is applied differently on a piano than guitar. It is applied differently again on a flute or the bagpipes. But it is not harder.
That E Major triad is the same across every instrument. The easiest way for a beginner to play it on guitar is the way you have described but that does not make the concept any more difficult.
If I'm trying to figure out chords on guitar I am certainly guided by scales rather than shapes and I imagine any semi-serious guitarist would be the same.
The guitar originated in Spain early in the 16th century, so I think it's probably a bit of a stretch to say it was designed for open chords (but happy to be corrected).
I think where many piano players do have an advantage is that their learning is structured from a very early stage so they learn basic concepts (correctly) and can then apply those concepts to an understanding of more complicated ideas.

free chart - guitar piano notes


Music Video: "Simple Treasures" written and sung by Greg Vanderlaan

https://youtu.be/CLWIRyF0YnQ  

This song is about Dancing in the Mud in RFK Stadium at a Grateful Dead Concert. AND Working at WREX Plastics Factory making wheelchair wheels... on the Graveyard Shift. 

It includes two of my Favorite Chords. 

E*=e0,B0,G6,D7,A7,E0
E**=e0,B0,G4,D5,A5,E0
(NC)=No Chord=eBGDAE

E     G       D       A
Thank God for simple treasures
E     G       D        A
Thank God for rock and roll
E        G       D       A
An arena full of singing people...
D                         A
a blessed time to ease my soul
Chorus:
E              E* E**
Dancing in the MUD
E**        A (NC) E
in a stadium
E               E*
when I hear the drums
E**           A (NC) E
I know that I belong
E                 E*  E**
the hammer on the gong
E**          A (NC) E
and the momentum
E               E*  E**
will reveal the truth
E**           A (NC) E
hidden for so long

Thank God for simple treasures
Thank God for my guitar
it has a magic healing power
PARA VIVIR, YO CANTAR

Chorus:

Thank God for simple treasures
Thank God for my machine
I make another 30 wheels then,
take a rag and wipe it clean
Chorus:
In the factory
working all night long
making plastic wheels
until the break of dawn

"US Blues" by Robert Hunter, Jerry Garcia. Sung by Greg Vanderlaan Guitar, Vocals

https://youtu.be/k0_kSJTnWNI

This song has a lot of half step - step downs...
all through all the verses.

US BLUES:
A                      A Ab A                                 A Ab A
Red and white,               blue suede shoes
 A                     A Ab A                              A Ab A
I'm Uncle Sam,              how do you do?
D                 D Db D                        D Db D
Gimme five,              I'm still alive
 D                  D Db D                              E B E
Ain't no luck,               I learned to duck
A                         A Ab A                         A Ab A
Check my pulse,              it don't change
 A                          A Ab A                               A Ab A
Stay seventy-two               come shine or rain
D                     D Db D                     D Db D
Wave the flag,              pop the bag
D                    D Db D                      E B E
Rock the boat,             skin the goat

[CHORUS]
B7                                  E
Wave that flag, wave it wide and high
B7                                  E
Summertime done, come and gone, my oh my

 A
I'm Uncle Sam, that's who I am

Been hidin' out in a rock and roll band
 D
Shake the hand that shook the hand
                              E B E
Of P.T. Barnum and Charlie Chan
[CHORUS]

 A
Shine your shoes, light your fuse
 
Can you use them ol' U.S. Blues?
 D
I'll drink your health, share your wealth
                            E B E
Run your life, steal your wife
[CHORUS]

A
Back to back, chicken shack
   
Son of a gun, better change your act
D
We're all confused, what's to lose?
                                 E B E
You can call this song the United States Blues
[CHORUS]


Chords and Lyrics "White Rabbit" Jefferson Airplane

F#                            G
One pill makes you larger and one pill makes you small
         F#                                 G
and the ones that mother gives you don't do anything at all
       A      C          D        A
go ask Alice when she's ten feet tall

[Verse 2]
F#                                      G
And if you go chasing rabbits and you know you're going to fall
           F#                             G
Tell'em a hooka-smoking caterpillar has given you the call
       A    C   D              A
Call Alice when she was just small

[Bridge]
E                                      A
When men on the chessboard get up and tell you where to go
         E                                       A
and you just had some kind of mushroom and your mind is moving low
        F#      G           F#       
go ask Alice, I think she'll know

[Verse 3]
F#                             G
When logic and proportion have fallen sloppy dead
         F#                                 
and the white knight is talking backwards 
              G
and the red queen's off with her head
  A      C          D         A
Remember   what the Dormouse said
E         A       E         A
Feed your head! Feed your head!
E         A            E
Feed your head!

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