judyhawkins Posted June 22, 2013 Share Posted June 22, 2013 (edited) Chapter six of Judy's harum scarum Hayden tutorial---------------- Section One -----------------[For those of you with minimal musical background.]Hmmm: I said I'd show you how to add a harmonization to a waltz, butlet's begin with learning the waltz, which is looking like taking allthe time I have for this chapter!The basic principle is to turn the waltz into a set of little, easy tolearn tunes. This is a lot easier to do from notes, but of course youmay find it hard to read notes if you never learned how! But you canlearn that from a bunch of little easy-to-read tunes, which you canfit together to make one whole tune.So I'm going give you a set of abc files you can convert on theconcertina.net abc converter, with the letter names of the notes andfingerings written in, so you can work with your button chart tofigure it out. You'll see the logic of staff notation pretty quickly,I think.There are many online places to learn musical notation from; here'sone: The Method Behind the Music It's possible to learn to play a new instrument by ear only, but you need to have other people with time to teach you, who already know the kind of music you want to know. It's harder to learn by ear from recordings; they're harder to ask questions of, and less easy to slow down, or get one phrase played over and over until you get it. If you learn a little bit about notation -- at least the basics, so you can count out the notes and get started learning a tune -- means you're free to learn any tune you're interested in; and it doesn't prevent you from learning by ear, if you want that too. It just means you have multiple perspectives on music, multiple ways of learning.The really big challenge in this chapter is the rhythm. There arelong notes, and short notes, and musical notation has some conventionsto tell you what notes are shorter and longer. You can learn the details of the notation online; I'm going to use a traditional musician's approach for teaching you the rhythm.This waltz, Tombigbee Waltz (named after a river in the southeast ofthe U.S.) has a very familiar kind of rhythm, so it should bereasonably easy to get the hang of. There's a musical technique called "diddley" -- singing a tune with nonsense syllables -- and it works really well to figure out a rhythm, thus:Short notes are the syllable "da" Medium notes are the syllable "dee" Long notes are the syllable "dmmmmmmm..." ============== Tombigbee, Tunelet #1 ================The first tunelet has the rhythm (with [ ] for a brief break for a breath!)da-da dee dee dee dmmmmm da-da dee dee dee dmmmmm []B A G B B d-- B A G B B d---3 2 1 3 3 1 3 2 1 3 3 1 Say the rhythm to yourself a few times, then figure out the notes.Play the notes a few times to get comfortable, then try saying therhythm and playing the notes in time with the rhythm.The abc:X:1T:Tombigbee Waltz, Tunelet OneS:The Waltz Book, collected by Bill MatthiesonM:3/4L:1/4K:G|: z2 "B3"B/"A2"A/ | "G1"G"B3"B"B3"B | "d1"d2 "B3"B/"A2"A/ | "G1"G"B3"B"B3"B | "d1"d2 z :|Ah, yes, the bar lines | | |.... they play a role, helping keep trackof notes by grouping them in threes, and giving some hints aboutemphasis. You can ignore them for now, or read about them online. Theones with the two dots mean "repeat", like this:|: lather rinse :|to show you where to start over again.========================== Tombigbee, Tunelet #2 ===================Rhythm for the second chunk of the tune, almost all notes the samelength, a nice easy, relaxed, rhythm like lazing about on the river ina slow row boat:dee dee dee dee dee dee dee dmmmm dee dmmmmB B A A A B d e-- d B3 3 2 2 2 3 1 2 1 3X:1T:Tombigbee Waltz, Tunelet TwoM:3/4L:1/4K:G|: z2 "B3"B | "B3"B"A2"A"A2"A | "A2"A"B3"B"d1"d | "e2"e2 "d1"d | "B3"B2 z :|========================== Tombigbee, Tunelet #3 ===================Rhythm for the third chunk of the tune:da-da-da | dee dee dee | dmmmmm da-da | dee dee dee | dmmmm [] c B A | G B B | d-- B A | G B B | d--- 1 3 2 | 1 3 3 | 1 3 2 | 1 3 3 | 1 with barlines so _I_ don't get lost.... You'll notice this is almostEXACTLY the first tunelet, except for the first "c" note! Freebie!you learned most of it already!X:1T:Tombigbee Waltz, Tunelet ThreeM:3/4L:1/4K:G|: z3/ "c1"c/"B3"B/"A2"A/ | "G1"G"B3"B"B3"B | "d1"d2 "B3"B/"A2"A/ | "G1"G"B3"B"B3"B | "d1"d2 z :|========================== Tombigbee, Tunelet #4 ===================Rhythm for the fourth chunk of the tune ( a freebie and acurve ball!)dee dee dee dee dee dee dee dee dee dee dmmmmB B A A A B d e d #F G--3 3 2 2 2 3 1 2 1 3 1Most of this is the same as tunelet 2, except the note you'll have toreach down for: the #F is on the row below the G.(The # symbol -- called an "accidental" -- has to do with music theoretical concepts -- for now, you can treat it as "that note, WHICH is a different note from the F that doesn't have the #", or you can read about it elsewhere. I'll have more to say another time, especially the delight I take in the term "accidental...")X:1T:Tombigbee Waltz, Tunelet FourM:3/4L:1/4K:G|: z2 "B3"B | "B3"B"A2"A"A2"A | "A2"A"B3"B"d1"d | "e2"e "d1"d "#F3"^F | "G1"B2 z :|============= That's the first half of the tune.=================Enough for one chapter.I'll put the second half of the tune in the next chapter, and THENI'll get into the harmony.Here's how the first half of the tune looks, without all the extranotations I added. Convert it, print it out and add your ownnotations, the ones you invent for doing things the way that worksbest for you.X:1T:Tombigbee Waltz, "A" partS:The Waltz Book, collected by Bill MatthiesonM:3/4L:1/4K:GB/A/ || GBB | d2 B/A/| GBB | d2 B | BAA | ABd | e2 d | B>c B/A/ | GBB | d2 B/A/| GBB | d2 B | BAA | ABd | edF | G2 d || You might want to write the diddley syllables in over the notes, and observe how they relate to the music notation symbols! Any time you are having any trouble at all learning a rhythm, try using diddley syllables. It's a lot easier to learn a rhythm if you start with your voice, the instrument with which you are the most familiar! And I'll churn out the second half of the waltz as soon as I can. It's mostly ready to go, except for all my final tweakings....---------------- Section Two -----------------[For those of you with more musical background.]Take a running leap into Edly's Music Theory for Practical People, andlearn something about music theory you always wondered about.Some of the Chapter Titles: Diatonic Harmony; Chord Inversion;Intervals for Ear-Training; Blues Structure; Chords: 9ths, 11ths and13ths; Secondary Chords; Improvisation Ideas; Ingredients of Voicings.My favorite chapters are the ones about Modes: Chapter 21, 22, 23,(including the section titled Scales from Mercury) and especiallyChapter 26, Diatonic Modal Chords.As I've poked around on the Hayden with a few different modal tunes,I'm realizing just how nicely it lends itself to them, with the veryclear sense of where the semi-tones land in the scale. I didn't thinkit would make so much sense, when I first started learning the Haydensystem: the semi-tone interval is such a huge leap, fingering-wise.But as it turns out, the way the modal scale is grouped by thesemi-tone is made very vivid on the Hayden. Lots of fun. (If that'stotally baffling and intriguing, read Chapter 21 and noodle around onthe Hayden, watching for the semi-tone, and how it organizes the mode.)Someone else's recommendation for Edly's:Theory’s simple. You get twelve notes andput them together in different ways...like Lego, only noisier. Edly's issimple and clear, yet goes deep intomany of theory's quirky complexities.The best book on popular theory I've seen. -- Gunnar Madsen, cofounder of the Bobs Edited June 22, 2013 by judyhawkins Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Frank Dudgeon Posted June 25, 2013 Share Posted June 25, 2013 Judy, Many thanks for these tutorials. I just got an Elise from the Button Box to see how I get on with it, and your work here will make the journey a lot smoother. Frank Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
judyhawkins Posted June 28, 2013 Author Share Posted June 28, 2013 Thanks! I've become a novice all over again on several instruments, over the years. My aim here is to put those experiences into as succinct and clear a form as I can. Judy Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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