As I have been teaching music for over a ¼ century I have often marvelled at the nature of musical definitions. Almost all of them are only understandable if you already know what they are. I guess it is fair to say that music is best experienced verses talked or read about but nonetheless describing a pickup as “One or more notes at the beginning of a strain, before the 1st measure, are referred to as pick-up notes. The rhythm for pick-up notes is taken from the last measure and the beast are counted as such” gets the new music student no closer to playing them correctly.
Two definitions that irk me in particular are ties and accidentals. “A tie is a curved line between 2 notes of the same pitch. The first note is played and held for the time duration of both. The second note is not played”. This one covers it but usually requires further explanation. Unfortunately, in some music method books, they attempt this. Sometimes they ‘add’ the notes together which has students counting to 6 halfway through a bar of common time which is just wrong. Sometimes the phrase “2nd note is not played” is modified to “should not be played” making it less clear. Just like Johnny shouldn’t eat chocolate before supper makes chocolate eating that much more acceptable.
The other musical explanation that drives me coo coo is the way accidentals (sharps, flats and naturals) are explained. Usually something along the lines of “When a sharp is placed in front of a note that note is raised one ½ step” Well I am here to tell you nothing of the sort is happening.
The note, maybe in this case, an F# is not an F that has had something done to it is an entirely different note called F#! The note we knew before was just called F (short for F Natural). But we knew that note so well we are on a 1st name basis.
And don’t get me started on that Ta Ta Ta Tee Ta Ta baby talk way of counting!
Winnipeg Music Lessons
Musings on music pedagogy, jazz, life as a musician and other boring stuff.
May 11, 2010
Apr 20, 2010
My Mother's Passing
As I ready old photos and some of my music for use in a memorial service I find myself pondering her influence on my music life.
She wasn't overly supportive but she wasn't overly negative either. We didn't have a lot of money growing up so some free irregular guitar lessons in the churchbasement had to suffice. At somepoint she sold my guitar because 'I wasn't practicing enough' the real reason is we were broke. TO become the drummer I literally quit high school before graduating, left the house, moved to Calgary, got a job, bought drums, quit job, practiced drums and then returned east to start playing music.
But dating further back I realize that she had a very eclectic record collection. Not only that we were the only house that I can recollect actually having a modular stereo vs those enclosed ones that were disguised as furniture like they were ashamed of it.
My mom had George Shearing, Sarah Vaughan, Johnny Cash, James Last, Nana Mousqkouri etc. You get the idea. Add to that she liked more contemporary stuff, bought us stereos and radios. She even woke my older brother up to watch the Beatles on Ed Sullivan.
I had a friend who insited I needed someone to either encourage me in music so I could get some support or discourage me so I could rebel. I think I got what I needed.
Till next time
RB
Music Lessons in Winnipeg
She wasn't overly supportive but she wasn't overly negative either. We didn't have a lot of money growing up so some free irregular guitar lessons in the churchbasement had to suffice. At somepoint she sold my guitar because 'I wasn't practicing enough' the real reason is we were broke. TO become the drummer I literally quit high school before graduating, left the house, moved to Calgary, got a job, bought drums, quit job, practiced drums and then returned east to start playing music.
But dating further back I realize that she had a very eclectic record collection. Not only that we were the only house that I can recollect actually having a modular stereo vs those enclosed ones that were disguised as furniture like they were ashamed of it.
My mom had George Shearing, Sarah Vaughan, Johnny Cash, James Last, Nana Mousqkouri etc. You get the idea. Add to that she liked more contemporary stuff, bought us stereos and radios. She even woke my older brother up to watch the Beatles on Ed Sullivan.
I had a friend who insited I needed someone to either encourage me in music so I could get some support or discourage me so I could rebel. I think I got what I needed.
Till next time
RB
Music Lessons in Winnipeg
Apr 7, 2010
Godin Does it Again
It is no secret that I love Godin Guitars I currently have 3 and I recomend them regularly.
Currently I have amid priced acoustic (an S6) nothing special and fine for camping.
Along with that 2 out 3 of my main working axes are Godin.
The second is my xt SA
It Combines the same rich sound of an acoustic guitar (this time steel string) with electric gitar p/u's AND synth access!
Other guitars I gloat over are the fretless 6 string
The 11 String Fretless Glissentar
The 5 string fretless SA Bass
But I was blown away by thier new archtop series. Again they combine the elements of price good looks and play-a-bility.
Thew 5th Avenue Guitars are All Under $1,000!!
I sent my new Jazz student (a concert guitaist) towards these and he bought and loves the 2nd one (5th Avenue Kingpin)
Until next time
RB
Mar 15, 2010
If this doesn't get you, nothing does
I was looking for versions of this song as a singer I am working with wanted to do it and I ran across this smokin;' version.
You could be marveling at Pat Martino technical prowess in light of Martino having suffered a severe brain aneurysm and underwent surgery after being told that his condition could be terminal. After his operations he could remember almost nothing. He barely recognized his parents. and had no memory of his guitar or his career.
Or listening to Mingus Miles Davis alumni John Scofield as his years of experience surfaces as he rips those changes apart.
For me it is the way Joey DeFrancesco really builds his solo to fever pictch...wow
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=p2RRUVAD9Mc
Anyhow enjoy
Winnipeg Music Lessons
You could be marveling at Pat Martino technical prowess in light of Martino having suffered a severe brain aneurysm and underwent surgery after being told that his condition could be terminal. After his operations he could remember almost nothing. He barely recognized his parents. and had no memory of his guitar or his career.
Or listening to Mingus Miles Davis alumni John Scofield as his years of experience surfaces as he rips those changes apart.
For me it is the way Joey DeFrancesco really builds his solo to fever pictch...wow
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=p2RRUVAD9Mc
Anyhow enjoy
Winnipeg Music Lessons
Feb 27, 2010
Another CD I Have Played on
Along with 50 members of my church including Steve Bell & Larry Campbell we contributed to this work of art. The last Piece on the CD is a 20 minute 5 movement work I composed, arranged, performed all the instruments and recorded myself.
Beautiful Mercy
Launch is March 2nd McNally Robinson Booksellers (Grant Park, Winnipeg) 8pm
Beautiful Mercy
Launch is March 2nd McNally Robinson Booksellers (Grant Park, Winnipeg) 8pm
Feb 18, 2010
Zoom Q3 Handy Video Recorder
For years I have been making music videos. Not the MTV type, but where musicians are playing music on tape. I have not been happy with the sound as they are designed to get baby's first words they give music a very mid rangy overbite and the sound of the hand moving controls on the camera is louder than the subject being recorded.
Back in the day we had these huge cameras that took a full sized VHS tape. They were heavy and hardly convenient but you could pop the tape out of the camera and right into your tape player and watch it right away. They also had a nice feature...you could unplug the microphone and plug in a better mic or ever take a feed from a mixing board.
Today the tapes are smaller or not at all, they are now small 'palm' 'hand held' camcorders. No longer huge and bulky requiring a strong should but gone is the immediately watchable recording (unless you are moderately tech savvy) and gone is the ability to change the sound quality (without buying a commercial or 'pro-sumer' type outfit).
I was considering buying the latter or maybe one of the many portable digital recorders (Yes I have a gazillion dollars of recording gear but it is a lot to bring if you just want to do a 'report card' type of recording)
Then along comes the Zoom Q3 video and audio recorder for slightly more ($30) than a recorder alone.
Pros:
Cons:
Here are a couple of vids I shot with the Q3
Back in the day we had these huge cameras that took a full sized VHS tape. They were heavy and hardly convenient but you could pop the tape out of the camera and right into your tape player and watch it right away. They also had a nice feature...you could unplug the microphone and plug in a better mic or ever take a feed from a mixing board.
Today the tapes are smaller or not at all, they are now small 'palm' 'hand held' camcorders. No longer huge and bulky requiring a strong should but gone is the immediately watchable recording (unless you are moderately tech savvy) and gone is the ability to change the sound quality (without buying a commercial or 'pro-sumer' type outfit).
I was considering buying the latter or maybe one of the many portable digital recorders (Yes I have a gazillion dollars of recording gear but it is a lot to bring if you just want to do a 'report card' type of recording)
Then along comes the Zoom Q3 video and audio recorder for slightly more ($30) than a recorder alone.
Pros:
- Decent cost (around $300)
- Above average stereo sound. While it is not the equal of closed miking it does a 1000% better job than a consumer camera.
- Very light
- Very Portable
- Works with any Tripod
- Comes with a built in USB cable
- Carrying case, 2GB sd card and a windsock included
- Capable of expansion to a 32GB card but you get about ½ an hour recording per GB
- Some zoom ability but still fixed focus
- 3 level settings high, low and auto
- Can be an audio alone recorder
Cons:
- The name. While there is some merit in calling a product exactly what it is calling your breakfast aborted chicken embryos instead of scrambbled eggs dosen't help the cause.
- The handy USB cable is too short, while fine to hooking to a MacBook it is a male end and a port would serve better. For plugging into a serious machine like a PC you need to find a USB extension cable with both a male and a female pin
- The colour. Minor I know but what is wrong with black or grey for equipment?
- The recording format. For some reason they went with the proprietary Quicktime format instead the more useful Windows Media or the universal MPEG format. This makes editing a bit of a pain. Even with Quicktime pro the options are VERY limited compared to Windows movie maker.
- The Q3 needs A LOT of light. Most of my club recordings are grainy
- It eats batteries and while it still runs when the batteries are low the audio will fade in and out. So you need the AC adapter ($35)
Here are a couple of vids I shot with the Q3
Feb 10, 2010
Former Students of Note
I have a healthy list of former students who are now very active musicians.
The most famous of which is Jon Gallant of Billy Talent
I used to teach out of a music school in Streetsville Ontario Canada. As I taught Guitar, Bass and Drumset AND as I was seriously busy (not unlike now) I always knew that if a band made it out of that area one or more of the members would be former students of mine. Well one did but I was pretty unaware until I saw the band on Much Music but mentioning the name to current students was what really put the effect over the top. Some were impressed, some were not and some thought I was lying but EVERYONE of them had heard of the band (as I am sure you have).
Until Later
Winnipeg Music Lessons
The most famous of which is Jon Gallant of Billy Talent
Until Later
Winnipeg Music Lessons
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