i like tictacs wrote:Play with a metronome! helped my rhythm and time keeping tremendously.
Yes, this helps more than you can imagine. Especially when you first start off -- lay that foundation, heh. You'd be surprised how much it makes a difference.
i like tictacs wrote:no.tab.for.learning.scales. if your a beginner stop resorting to tab, learn some theory, learn what notes are where on the neck and how to read sheet music. tab is a hard habit to break. Here is a A major scale for example...
A-B-C-C#-D#-F-G-A
play that on the bass, bam you just played an Amaj scale.
Isn't this the Amaj scale?A B C# D E F# G# A?
I almost edited this thinking i was wrong, but Amaj scale has the same notes on guitar too, correct? because if so, that is the Amaj scale
Shows Been to: 7-17-02, 12-15-03, 7-20-04, 7-5/6-05
that is whole whole half whole whole whole half... I believe you're wrong with the A-B-C-C#-D#-F-G-A because i'm sure of it that Amaj is A B C# D E F# G# A.. are you forgeting B and C are a half step apart?
Shows Been to: 7-17-02, 12-15-03, 7-20-04, 7-5/6-05
hey, I just recently realized that i needed to learn the actual notes on the bass and scales and stuff like that and leave the tabs alone. So, i found this note chart, and i was wondering what would be the best way to learn all of the notes.
i like tictacs wrote:no.tab.for.learning.scales. if your a beginner stop resorting to tab, learn some theory, learn what notes are where on the neck and how to read sheet music. tab is a hard habit to break. Here is a A major scale for example...
A-B-C-C#-D#-F-G-A
play that on the bass, bam you just played an Amaj scale.
.. why the hell would you give him that wrong scale first? (your missing f)
start with C my friend..
C D E F G A B C
you should see a trend of WWHWWWH.
W = whole step (skip a fret)
H=half step (the touching fret)
All scales are like that.
C and D are a W apart.
D and E are a W
E and F are a H
etc...