Eric
Well-known member
Question for all of you. Well actually, a couple of questions -- not exactly a departure when it comes to my posts, I suppose.
1) Do you think it's important to be able to read music (clef-based), the way many many theory books encourage, or do you think knowing scales and relying on tab and/or chords for written music is sufficient? I'm coming from the angle of knowing more tab than clef. I can read music, but I do it very very slowly.
Just wondering what your input is. Reading music is in so many exercise/theory books, I tend to think it's essential for instructional purposes, but I also tend to think that not that many people (percentage-wise) actually know how to read music in real time.
2) ALSO, while I'm on the theory thing, I've thought for a while that I want to learn more bass and some/any piano, mainly for the theory end of things. Chords and inversions and scales just seem so obvious on a keyboard. I have not pursued this much, because the opportunity cost of learning different instruments would be that any spare time I have could not be spent with the guitar.
On the guitar, I know probably 2.5 positions of the pentatonic scale and maybe 2 positions of the major scale. I understand conceptually the CAGED system but haven't mastered it. I can play all major/minor/7th/etc. chords, but only reliably in the A and E shapes.
I can play simple bass if needed, but there's very little riffing. I know maybe one song on the piano.
Knowing that about my skill level, is it worth it to pursue other instruments in the interest of increasing my holistic understanding of chord theory and fretboard familiarity, or is it smarter to spend the time on guitar?
1) Do you think it's important to be able to read music (clef-based), the way many many theory books encourage, or do you think knowing scales and relying on tab and/or chords for written music is sufficient? I'm coming from the angle of knowing more tab than clef. I can read music, but I do it very very slowly.
Just wondering what your input is. Reading music is in so many exercise/theory books, I tend to think it's essential for instructional purposes, but I also tend to think that not that many people (percentage-wise) actually know how to read music in real time.
2) ALSO, while I'm on the theory thing, I've thought for a while that I want to learn more bass and some/any piano, mainly for the theory end of things. Chords and inversions and scales just seem so obvious on a keyboard. I have not pursued this much, because the opportunity cost of learning different instruments would be that any spare time I have could not be spent with the guitar.
On the guitar, I know probably 2.5 positions of the pentatonic scale and maybe 2 positions of the major scale. I understand conceptually the CAGED system but haven't mastered it. I can play all major/minor/7th/etc. chords, but only reliably in the A and E shapes.
I can play simple bass if needed, but there's very little riffing. I know maybe one song on the piano.
Knowing that about my skill level, is it worth it to pursue other instruments in the interest of increasing my holistic understanding of chord theory and fretboard familiarity, or is it smarter to spend the time on guitar?
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