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Rodney, that sounds like a great idea! We also had our guest Brandon Acker talk about tablature in his recent live stream on early music (<- click to watch) - did you know tablature is actually older than standard notation, in the guitar family of instruments at least?
Anyway, glad to hear you're having fun with Kai's course!
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As someone that has struggled for years with sight reading, I have to say it's WELL worth the time investment in learning. While I acknowledge the validity of tab, especially knowing that in the guitar family tab was first, there is a certain universality of learning notation that is gained.
My story is this: I was in college majoring in classical guitar. Life began taking some interesting turns, so I left college and joined the US Army as a guitar player. I attended the US Navy School of Music (which at that time all Army musicians would attend) and was really put through a rigorous course. However, my sight reading didn't really improve.
Many years later, I made a commitment and started reading a little every day without fail. That has made the difference. My recommendation for reading would be to get some basics down (note values and names) through the 5th position. Then invest in various guitar methods (Mel Bay, Berklee, Hal Leonard) to really dig into positional reading. Once you've gained some comfort, the Berklee "Melodic Rhythms for Guitar" book is an amazing resource. I'd also recommend looking into Colin Rhythms. Those are instrument agnostic and present melodic rhythms in various keys. The big thing to remember is you are "reading" not learning and memorizing. Never read the same thing twice in a week. If you are serious about being a good reader, you will need to invest in some charts of various styles and instrumentation.
WHATEVER YOU DO, don't make the mistake of blowing off proficiency in flat keys. While I know flat keys are usually centered around horn players (not as guitar friendly either), the flat keys offer you the ability to perform with transposition wind instruments and not only the cliche flute players.
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Jimmy Muhlenbruch said:
If you are serious about being a good reader, you will need to invest in some charts of various styles and instrumentation.What charts are these? They sound useful, but I'm not quite sure what they actually are...
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I’m also a tab lover and got a tonebase subscription to have access to Tal’s La Catedral lessons . I was disappointed that tab wasn’t available . I also have a paid subscription to another advanced classical guitar site and they have tabs . But I really liked Tal’s little ornamentations that I haven’t seen in other transcriptions, so that’s why I also paid for tonebase.
Now I can look at sheet music and identify each note within a second, and in fact I took Tal’s sheet music and wrote down the notes to those ornamentations (see attached photo). But how do I then know which string to play those notes on? As things are now, after writing down the notes, I’m still having to study the video in slow mo to see what strings/frets he’s using to play those notes. And I notice tonebase lessons don’t do a lot of closeups on the left hand that I might see on other sites, so identifying strings and frets through video is not the easiest thing on tonebase.
So any suggestions here , specifically in the case where you can read notes on sheet music but don’t know what strings to use to play those notes (eg playing a G on the 3rd fret of the high E string or on the 8th fret of the B string)?
I’m still excited to learn here, it may just take longer than expected . Thanks so much .