Hi, I am a beginner & just started practising with Chromatic Scale & E - Phrigian Scale . What are the things I should follow while practising it ? Also suggest some basic sounds which I can compose with these ... I am very eager to compose some tune from these !! Thanks , Ramesh Jothimani
Twinkle twinkle,happy birthday, jingle bells. Those were the first tunes i learnt. Then if you have sum notes practice the scales. You can move on to songs. These are availabe on internet or igt(most on igt): dum maro dum. Oh oh jane jana thujhe dekha that sng from roja dats lyk choti si smitha mario super bros(learn it 4m a youtube vid with a channel named'fuzzymonkey777') mission imposible give me sum sunshine. Here are sum smal bits you can try urself. Gud bad and the ugly theme mision imposible cars 2 theme indiana jones theme mario start music p.s: i don remember the channel name exactly.try using a single 7 or if it doesnt work use double 7
Beginner and you start out with Modal Theory? What is this world coming to!!! Anyways, E-Phrygian is awesome for flamenco style tunes. If you use a few accidentals you can infuse the Gypsy scale too into it. You can jam on this scale with the typical E-F-G-F chord progression. To add to the gypsy effect, I like to use open high E and B strings and use a rasgueado type strumming. Easy songs in particular you could try would be Korn's unplugged version of Blind. Chromatic scale is something that I think is very atonal and sounds cool only if you use it in bits or use it at very high speeds. An example would be Flight of the Bumblebee by Rimsky-Korsakov.
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whoa!! cowboy!! i think you're moving too fast, or am i just naive?? i'm no expert but i always thought that pentatonic scale should always come first if you're just starting out, don't try to get too technical.. that's what i always tell the others.. grab a few chords, try to figure out a few songs by yourself... i don't know..do something else i'd say... Music is art, not science dude anyway , each to his own! hope you get my point.
+1 to that. Truly "sound" advice... I feel the most important aspect of learning music (at least initially) is developing an ear for it. This essentially means being able to play what you hear in your head on your guitar. This is the essence of expressing yourself through your music. Since most music that we listen to everyday are written in simple scales, it is best to get familiar with those first and then progress to more artistic and theoretical scale types.
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