TAB Notation vs Music Notation | Tom Strahle | Easy Guitar | Basic Guitar – Xemloibaihat.com cập nhật mới

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TAB Notation vs Music Notation | Tom Strahle | Easy Guitar | Basic Guitar | Sheet mới nhất.

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Great website for printing TAB paper and staff (music) paper… This is the “Real Book” I was talking about…

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Hình ảnh liên quan đến chủ đề TAB Notation vs Music Notation | Tom Strahle | Easy Guitar | Basic Guitar

TAB Notation vs Music Notation | Tom Strahle | Easy Guitar | Basic Guitar
TAB Notation vs Music Notation | Tom Strahle | Easy Guitar | Basic Guitar

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11 thoughts on “TAB Notation vs Music Notation | Tom Strahle | Easy Guitar | Basic Guitar – Xemloibaihat.com cập nhật mới

  1. simflyr1957 says:

    WOW; yes thank you! How ever, I wish there was more info on converting right handed to left handed. I'm just starting out but doing "air guitar" for years "lefty". I tried to do it right handed, but it was "unnatural".

  2. Stephen Ashby says:

    Good insights Tom, and what I wouldn't have given to be able to slow down the tempo when trying to learn those first songs by ear back in high school! AND the tuning on every song was slightly different and I would have to re-tune my guitar for the Stones songs after figuring out Sunshine of Your Love! Ever try to learn a song off an 8 track?

  3. Garry Burgess says:

    I agree with all of the ideas on this video. But I would add that I learned Music Notation because I had a huge inferiority complex about music. But I learned music notation on the piano because it's much easier to learn on the piano, along with music theory. It would make reading music for guitar somewhat easier but there is still the difficulty of hammerons, bends, pulloffs, slides and all that stuff. But I found that in general, learning harmony on the guitar is more difficult than learning harmony on the piano, but once you learn it, it's easy to notice things on the guitar, build chords etc, and understand what you are doing from a music theory point of view.

  4. cdreid99999 says:

    On most instruments all you need is sheet music. Guitar is different. Hammerons. Pulloffs. Slides. Bends. 100 other techniques. Sure.. you can read the sheet music and play a boring slightly off rendition. Or you can read a GOOD tab and nail it. An a isnt always an a. Sometimes its a hammered on A, or bent to a.. etc

  5. mike landreth says:

    I think one of the problems with learning to read music or tab is. There are so many out there that are wrong. And on purpose. It's an "easier version" or not transcribed to what the studio player actually played. So you know how the song sounds. And when your reading and playing it. Well it doesn't sound anything like that song. So your thinking I must not be able to learn to read music cause it sounds nothing like the song. So it throws up a mental barrier. I've heard that unless you have the original "Lead Sheet " your SOL even then you should pray Tedesco didn't add something LOL !

  6. Paul Lehmor says:

    Thanks a lot Tom, I really enjoyed this! Right now I'm studying a song in combined tab/music notation. I think this is the best notation because it helps learning both styles at the same time. Good for the multitasking capacity. I played the flute as a kid and so learned music notation. Now (too) many decades later I have started the struggle with the guitar, so tabs are new to me now. Right now I'm a little puzzled with the relation between the two styles. The song I'm trying is in D Major and the tuning is open D with capo on 2nd fret. Why is this not called open E? Is it just because open D is more well known? An alternative would have been to tune to open E and skip the capo. Two possible reasons I can think of are that open D + capo gives less string tension, and second, more convenient positions on the neck with overall less string spacing. However a "capoed" string will never ring exactly the same ways as an open string. Moreover the music notation could have been in E major but is not, is it to avoid to many sharps? (My first flute was tuned in Db so I grew up in a forest of #s and bs so too speak! 🙂

  7. MMP Punch says:

    Okay, I have some sheets that show both music notation as well as tab, so I'll have to look some at the music notation. I had a previous instructor that had me looking at both on purpose, it can help when there are rests, and such.

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