0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.
I'm not always sure when I push the slide either blowing or drawing whether I' ll get the note that's in my head, especially because of the built in redundant"Cs" which change the air direction.
Thank you Henry,This is precisely why I joined the forum community recently. I am an ear player, and decided to dust off my old Hohner 270 and learn the other keys. It helps to see the layout as a relationship, even though I don't read as I play. My mouth's "memory muscles" are getting a workout, and I stumble a lot because I'm not always sure when I push the slide either blowing or drawing whether I' ll get the note that's in my head, especially because of the built in redundant"Cs" which change the air direction. I know it takes hundreds of times playing each scale, as well as taking familiar tunes through their key paces. If you have any other "ear player hints" for getting more key fluency I would love to hear them. Doug P (from the woodshed)
No UFO'S,Henry.Have seen Allians. RomanPS I am one
Very clever Henry, but close.No i'm a croatian ,from the Roman Empire.
The very sight of written music seems to spook ear-players, and I think it is that rather then the actual "difficulty" of learning it that deters players from learning to read music. They seem to give up before they even try, thinking, I guess, that it is so difficult and beyond them that they shouldn't even try.
That is a throw away cliche Tom, that boils down to meaning nothing, the same applies to mending and tuning a harmonica, or playing it really well, ' just do it more often'. There has to be a 'will' to do it, that is the stumbling block, plus the TIME. I would not underestimate how long it would take, nor the commitment, to go from being a non reader, to an excellent reader , making it sound like falling off a log is not the encouragement it may seem. There is no point in being a bad reader (like me), it is an exact science, and in my opinion exacting, it can be a strain for those with waning eyesight, and over the centuries has accumulated many styles, abbreviations and 'new' methods.The history alone is a study. Some folks may be just as content and happy , spending their precious time PLAYING. Good luck to everybody. jh.
Transcribing (as Henry has done) is the best thing for reading.Staff beats tab, but tab has some really advantages for some things.
How does it work?Easy Peasy.If I have tabbed in 'C' and you want to transpose to 'G'=If the first note is 'E'/2 blow then slide to 'G', which is next door and you see the note is'B' or 4 draw, on your 'C' Chromatic.You have just transposed from 'C' to 'G'.If there is ANYTHING that is not clear PLEASE ask.Henry.
But in conclusion, and there is never a conclusion in playing harmonica, you HAVE to have a frame of reference. So I repeat...Learn ONE octave...everything else is just 'another' repeat.smokey-joe
Quote from: henrymouni on January 11, 2010, 12:52:07 PMHow does it work?Easy Peasy.If I have tabbed in 'C' and you want to transpose to 'G'=If the first note is 'E'/2 blow then slide to 'G', which is next door and you see the note is'B' or 4 draw, on your 'C' Chromatic.You have just transposed from 'C' to 'G'.If there is ANYTHING that is not clear PLEASE ask.Henry. I've been looking at this chart for the last several days and I need some help with it. As a test, I took the first several measures of "Mary Had a Little Lamb" in the Key of C and transposed it to the Key of G... and it worked. Painful, for me a beginner, but it worked. So then I thought as a further test, I'd take the first 3 notes of "Misty" that's been tabbed in the Key of Bb and move it to C.... just as a test, not that I'd play it in that key – I'm throughly lost. I know I'm a beginner... but, sure would like to use this chart if I needed.The first three notes in the tab for Misty in Bb are: Look (-6)...at (-5)...me (-3)Using this chart, I'm totally lost how to transpose those notes into another key... can someone walk me through with some very simple baby steps – not the whole tune, just the first 3 notes to get the idea??
Clear as mud?? Henry.