Introduction
Many musicians these days have been wanting
to play by ear. They wonder, how can some people listen and know what comes
next. There is actually no secret to this. Some may say that it is by
experience. But every ‘experienced’ musician who play by ear MUST have some
sort of foundation. This foundation is what gives the musician an expectation
of what comes next in the phrase, or even to create harmonious music itself.
The foundation is none other than BASIC MUSIC THEORY.
Let’s not talk about jazz, blues, or
experimental music, but the very fundamentals of classical theory, where Rock and Pop music is built upon.
Many will say, “Nah, I use tabs or
numbers.” Or even, “I’ve memorised one-thousand-and-one chord patterns.” Well,
do you know which chord comes before which chord, or which note comes before which
note? This is where the basic theory comes into play. You do not want to be
able to play music only when you have the tabs, numbers, or chords. You just
want to listen, play and enjoy it!
Here, I’m going to start with the
fundamentals of music. Do pardon me if my terms aren’t correct, as I’m more of
a practical musician, and not a music scholar. J Hence,
I’m not going to go into reading music staves, but more on the practical side.
Notes
and Scales, Part 1 – Understanding the notes in music
This is the basic that every aspiring
musician should know. I’m going to talk about the basics of modern music. Figure 1 is a ‘C Major Scale’, which are
ALL the ‘white keys on the piano’. This is also where you get the DO, RE, MI,
FA, SO, LA, TI, DO in the key of ‘C’.
Above depicts a 2-octave scale where the note
C1 (DO1) is 1-octave lower than note C2 (DO2)
and note C3 (DO3) is 1-octave higher than C2 (DO2).
Every octave has the same amount of notes. The only difference is the pitch –
higher octave = higher pitch; lower octave = lower pitch.
Figure
2 shows a chromatic scale (all the notes). The ‘#’
(sharps) and ‘b’ (flats) are already there, just that they are not used in the
C Major Scale. Basically, a sharp note (i.e. C#) has a corresponding flat (i.e.
Db). They have the same pitch (i.e. C# = Db; D# = Eb; F# = Gb; G# = Ab; A# =
Bb). These sharps and flats are the ‘black keys on the piano’. There is nothing
in between ‘E’ and ‘F’; ‘B’ and ‘C’. Why is that so? I don’t have the answer
either. As it is not important, let’s not bother about it.
In conclusion for Part 1, we can see that there are
actually eight (8) notes to complete an octave (C1 to C2;
and C2 to C3 and so on) depicted in Figure 1. And there are 12 notes in total, C to B as circled above
in Figure 2.
1 comment:
Amazing! :) Thanks for sharing the gift God has given you! :)
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