Please share free, low-cost, and high cost tools - and compare their ease of use if you can.
In particular, I'm interested in open string chords - not sure if that should make a difference, but sometimes I wonder if it's not better to see them on the entire fretboard (e.g. from fret 1) - of course, it is more space and paper - but not if it's on your computer.
Throw the dots and diagrams away, Joe.
Go with the written notation.
There are two great tomes written by George Van Epps, "Harmonic Mechanisms" Vol. 1 and Vol. 2 that are a course in how to play every combination of strings starting in two note chord patterns and working upwards from there. (The signature lead guitar lick from the famous "Brown Eyed Girl" session, the walking 6ths/3rds is actually in this book and was apparently what the player on the session was working on at the time the song was recorded...).
http://www.amazon.com/George-Harmonic-Mechanisms-Guitar-Vol/dp/0871669064 Practicing these as excercises, always in time to a pulse, is a great way to kick up the sight reading skills while also learning all the possible neck patterns that make musical sense - and even those that don't, for some day they might make musical sense as our collective ears grow.
These two books are bedrock and IMO should be on every guitar player's shelf, but not just sitting there in the pristine. I can tell what the guitar player is able to do by how dog-eared and well worn these two books are. And if they aren't there at all, that's more information about what their abilities are going to be as well. <g>
--Mac
Thanks for sharing this Mac - I will most likely order that book, and unfortunately, if history proves itself over again, it will most likely sit on my shelf under-utilized, because while it will get some of my time, it will take more time to work through and benefit from than I'm able to prioritize given my many other interests (e.g., like BB/RB/RT, learning flamenco pieces, practicing the techniqe required to play those flamenco pieces, and posting on this website !!! ; )
(how's that for a run on sentence
I will add my US two cents worth now. Tabs with notation is ok but tabs alone is not. If you learn notation you can play anything but if you only play tabs you then must know the song prior to reading the tabs. Tabs may be ok to get you in the right position but for me it’s easier just to read the notes.
I’m so old that we didn’t have tabs when I learned how to play guitar. I do not want to hear any jokes about yes and guitars only had three strings back then
To this day I have a ton of problems reading tabs.
People who can't/don't read notes always say what BobC says.
That is generally because they only know the one way to do it.
They don't know what it is that they don't know, though.
No offense meant, its all good.
MarioD makes a good point about age, I don't think there WERE tabs when I started out with guitar. At least, I did not encounter any.
I think I should clarify: TAB along with notation is good stuff that can give the complete situation. TAB by itself is what I'm speaking against.
--Mac
If there was anything "arrogant" in my writing, look within for the probable cause, my brother.
Sometimes we don't like to hear certain things...
Peace,
--Mac
Mac,
I don't have to look within to recognize an arrogant statement when I read one.
Everybody's points on this topic are correct !!! especially given the materials that were available to them in their period of greatest music development.
Bob - I lean toward strongly agreeing with the points you make, even though I realize and acknowledge the benefits of reading music fluently; I've experienced that the amount of time I've had to spend trying to learn to read music fluently across the neck requires too much time given it's payback. Here are some relevant points, I think:
1.) the flamenco pieces I study cannot be read and played properly without speciffic fingerings and positions notated on the music; also, the voicings and fingerings are so unlike anything you've come across, chances are reading the tab and not having to translate it to fingerings/positions would be faster for most people, even those that read fluently
2.) the 'feel' or swing, and the timing and rhythms used in flamenco are pretty difficult to notate accurately; generally speaking, you HAVE to hear the performances to do the music justice
3.) Is not music harmony and rhythm and SOUND - and the transmitting of such to the written page, as well as the subsequent energy to decode it, unnecessary steps for your brain ? ...that energy maybe can be better spent on the 'music' as I've defined it. Reading music should be considered not literally reading what's on a written page, but as Bob says, internalizing the harmonies, rhythms and phrasing so you can reproduce it at will. The other creative aspect outside reproduction is the tasteful creation of your own expressive sequences of harmony, rhythm, and phrasing; again, no reading of written material required. The best musicians can focus on these things without wasting energy on translations of sound to written form, and the reverse. As Bob said, some of the best musicians in the world cannot read music on the written page - but you bet that many of them can probably hear and immediately copy anything that is played for them.
Written music was ABSOLUTELY indispensable when audio recordings (e.g. phonograph, tape recorder, MP3s) were unavailable to everyone at such low cost. It's also absolutely INDISPENSABLE when recordings are completelyl available (e.g. as in music that was written before the availability of recording technology). Written music on the staff is INDESPENSIBLE when musicians that play stringed instruments would like their lines played by other instruments; of course - that's the beauty of the 'universal language' of the staff - it can be played by all instruments. But for musicians that play stringed instruments, tab that includes rhythms can get your fingers to the right place (at least for fretted instruments) much faster than having to translate the musical staff to your instrument, especially if you didn't grow up at a time when you HAD to learn to read due to the absence of recordings.
Is it arrogance when the majority of good musicians can also read well? The majority of musicians coming out of Berkely, Juilliard and North Texas State are good players and good readers. Musicians who play well and are poor readers are definitely in the minority. Later, Ray
A period instead of a comma.
Suicide is the only answer.
Gotta go out an' buy me some sake first.
--Mac
For me, a uke player wannabe, Jim Beloff's books are the best of both worlds. His charts are like leadsheets, but he has chord diagrams at the top, above where the notation starts for all the chords in the song. I can read tabs, but not as fast as the chord charts. Not exactly on point for the OP, sorry. There is a little pgm for the uke, called Chordette, to make chord diagrams. It's installed in Word as a font set. I would assume that there must be something similar for guitar?
Stan