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How Do You Learn to Play a Song
How do you learn to play a song. I am old and consider myself as advanced mediocre. I used to learn how to play a song by buying a book by the band to learn the basic chords, then I would play the record over and over until I could play something that sounded decent.
Today, you can go on-line and get the chords with tab. Then you can go to youtube and see someone playing the song and figure it out. If you are really good and like the song, you might be able to learn it by just listening to it and playing it until you figure it out. Just wondering. How do you all learn to play a new song these days. |
#2
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And I'm old too
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#3
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I find the tab and download it into my SongSheet program, then a youtube lesson, then the original song. If the key is not correct for me to sing, SongSheet let's me change it. After that, it's all about practice.
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#4
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By ear if I have the time, lead sheet and a few quick listens if I don't.
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#5
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Depends - learn some tunes strictly by ear (especially decades back), others by listening and some sort of video or notation, others I compose myself.
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Derek Coombs Youtube -> Website -> Music -> Tabs Guitars by Mark Blanchard, Albert&Mueller, Paul Woolson, Collings, Composite Acoustics, and Derek Coombs "Reality is that which when you stop believing in it, doesn't go away." Woods hands pick by eye and ear
Made to one with pride and love To be that we hold so dear A voice from heavens above |
#6
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I strongly prefer to have the music (and a chance to hear someone else's interpretation adds to it). Lacking that, I listen to CDs or performers until I have it in my mind. Almost never touch Utube.
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#7
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Totally depends on the song. If it's a 'standard' or tune I know, I may look at the chord progression. I'm also going to check out YouTube and see if there are video examples of it being played in different styles and keys. I can read peoples hands, and have enough ear-training under my belt to know where the chords are moving (and what the chords are) just from listening to the recording/video. I also think about my role with the song. If it's for Worship Team at church which team am I playing with and what if the instrumentation? Am I responsible for any solos, or just backing chords and fills. If just backing and fills, what range to play them in so I don't walk all over the pianist or other guitarist, or play inappropriate dynamics (like playing loud during a soft passage or choosing a screaming lead voice for a hymn). If it's for me and just for fun, I try different styles and rhythms and start narrowing down the way I am going to arrange it. I seldom knock-off pieces. |
#8
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IMO another version of the songbooks I used to buy. They work the same way. Quote:
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By far I use the last method described - by ear - the most. I figure out the song and then usually transpose it to a key that suits my vocal range. Sometimes I'll get a song from sheet music. One of the benefits of a classical music education is the ability to sight read notation pretty well. I also play with others several times a week, and sometimes we show each other new songs (like the YouTube example). Last edited by Mandobart; 03-07-2024 at 12:58 AM. |
#9
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I learned pretty much the way the OP described. Today I listen to the song and play what I hear. Most pop songs are formulaic and are pretty easy. The ones that aren’t add a little interest to the process.
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#10
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I'm working on improving my reading. I will read the sheet music and "build" the song in GarageBand with the software piano. Copy and paste repeated measures.
You can change the tempo, key and play along with it very slowly and then build up your speed. I've done this for mandolin and guitar flat picking. It's a little harder for fingerpicking when reading more than one note.
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#11
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Easy. I play it over and over and over and over and over and over and over and over and over and over and over and over and over and over and over and over and over and over and over and over and over and over and over and over and over and over and over and over and over and over and over and over and over and over and over and over and over and over and over and over and over and over and over and over and over and over and over and over and over and over and over and over and over and over and over . . . .
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#12
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In fact, I mainly use software to help do it all by ear. I've been transcribing records by ear ever since the 1960s, whenever I couldn't find songbooks or sheet music. And I also I found very early on that even the best books never contained the whole song, and some even had mistakes. I used a 2-speed tape deck to start with, right up to the 1990s when I found software that was not only a whole lot more versatile and less clunky, but extremely cheap too. https://www.seventhstring.com/xscribe/screenshots.html Now, there are AI apps that will separate out vocals even from mono tracks, and partially separate other instruments too, as well as slow things down. A lot of these apps will tell you what the chords are (or try), but I never trust them without checking by ear myself - just as I'm sure you would when learning from those books! I still sometimes refer to online chord charts or youtube lessons when available, but only to get me started, to get in the right ball-park. Of course, it depends on how much of the detail you want. I happen to like getting all the details I can, even if I then ignore some of them and play it my way.
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#13
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Play it until you get it right. Then play it some more until you can't get it wrong.
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"There is a crack in everything. That's how the light gets in." - Leonard Cohen. |
#14
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If it’s a song I know, I’ll get the correct chords online somewhere, then sing it the way I want to. If it’s a song I don’t know, I’d have to listen to someone else do it first, then work up my own version
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#15
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This. If I am learning the song for my own enjoyment I always learn by ear. If for a show or performance or such, there is usually a clock involved somehow so I just do what needs be to "get the music done."
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