...and then you start opening possibilities and discovering new ways to "do your stuff" and realize you'll be working on it until you die. One...
I don't think I ever mentioned it in this forum since playing live is not really a subject that comes up but I absolutely agree that theory is a...
It's ok, simple things like chords don't cease to have theory "behind" them just because someone is playing them and doesn't know anything about...
It's not against you, it's towards what you said. You gave the typical speech of people who think music theory is like a recipe and that people...
Easiest most blatant example I can think of right now.. Guitar players! It's very common to find guitar players that have a false sense of "I got...
I don't know why you answered my statement, also don't understand the link between what I said and what you're saying so.. sorry but I can't...
Even scarier is the great misconception people make about what theory is and the purpose it serves.
BTW, if you're going to use sheet music you'll have to understand enharmonicity. If you're going to use pianoroll, you can choose to have all...
If you want to learn about conventions you'll really have to read a book. There is no short answer. You get an answer, then you have another...
Sharps an flats are just names, conventions. All notes are the same, don't get stuck on their names.. it doesn't really matter. THe intervals...
It is as long as you transpose all the notes by the same amount. The relativity between the notes and chord functions will all be kept.
It's as much feeling as the tables with numbers that you posted. It has also been theorized and can be studied. Either way, that was not my point.
That's not the subject I am talking about. Part of harmozing and all that has to do with rhythm (strong vs weak beats) and tones that lead into...
Focusing too much in notes/degrees and forgetting about placement (rhythm, where the notes fall) usually leads to bigger frustration than knowing...
Vocals are melody, basically you should learn how to harmonize it.
If everyone keeps blabing instead of reading, this will end up turning into "one of those threads". That's what I tried to avoid.
Just... no.
It doesn't take much to know that your theory is flawed. Besides what's already been said, there are many other instruments that don't even have...
No, that's not a random thing, it's historical. Just read about it and you'll know how things evolved. If the system wasn't divided into equal...
That's it, just think of them as 12 equal notes. The rest is history.. literally.
Separate names with a comma.