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Darkness of Winter Encourages Insights
The darkness of Winter has descended.
For many the long stormy nights of Winter and the proverbial dark night of the soul are uncomfortable.
In addition to being dark, times like these can feel cold, lonely and boring. Whether the dark...
Face Painting Is Gaining Popularity For Parties And Events
Face painting is the new rave in party entertainment. Over the past decade, face painting has gained popularity and become a more sophisticated art form. Event planners are receiving an increase in requests than previous years and having to find...
FSBO - You Can Save Thousands in 7 Easy Steps
Do you know that homeowners across the country sell their own
homes every day? It is true that 80% of Fsbo's' end up listing
with a real estate agent. But with these 7 easy steps you can
save thousands of dollars for you and your family.
...
Giving and Receiving the Gift of Prayer
Giving and Receiving the Gift of Prayer
Author Interview with Phyllis Zagano, On Prayer: A Letter to My Godchild
by Lisa M. Hendey
Catholic author and academician Phyllis Zagano, PhD, has an impressive list of qualifications and publications....
Keyword Effectiveness - big differences in small phrases
There are all kinds of keywords being used by people daily, in their search for information. Most professional search engine marketers learn early in their career, that all keywords are not the same. Some keywords are highly competitive while others...
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Inspired Songwriting
Here are some exact examples of what you can do to set a song together.
You can get inspired by a number of methods such as:
1. A chord progression 2. A cool riff 3. A lead melody
One of the things you require to do is generate a part that compliments your original idea such as adding a melody to a chord progression or adding up a chord progression to a melody.
Say you have a chord progression you truly like.
To make your musical painting, you have to know theoretically what key you're in. If you're weak on modal theory, but familiar with a scale or neck pattern that sounds fine against your chord progression, employ what you know to create a melody over it.
The easiest way to accomplish this is to find a multitrack recorder and record your chord progression on one track. Play it over and over a lot of times.
When you play it back, work out your melody on another track. As you're working on a melody line, try to take note for cool harmony among your melody and chord progression. If only one exacting note sounds totally
great against one of the chords, go with it and start building around that great relationship.
Now, if you're notes are all correct but you can't seem to come up with something you like, it may be time to inject a new technique to spice things up a bit.
Let's say you recognize the chords and you know the notes. Try looking at the notes in a whole new way such as:
1. Arpeggios. (The notes of the chords)
2. Skipping strings for wider note intervals.
3. Right hand tapping.
4. Whammy bar effects.
5. Pinching harmonics...
One of the biggest problems is not being able to decide for if something was good or not. If you have this trouble too, get someone else's opinion. If possible someone who can suggest helpful insight.
If you can't find someone to critique your tune, you MUST decide for yourself and move on...otherwise you'll never get your tune finished.
About the Author
Yuri Ivanov - Guitar instructor and music writer. Co-writer and webmaster at Guitar Lessons Online
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