No, my asking of this question is totally unrelated to the 'reading
music' thread. It is simply and exactly as I presented it - a quest
to find any examples of tab that indicates double stops, etc. Rather
than invent my own method I am more than willing to use an existing
system if there is one. All help appreciated.
I have no ill will toward those who want to discuss reading music, but
please post under that heading so my post won't get lost in the
shuffle. Thanks.
Doug H
----- Original Message -----
*From:* Tony Eyers <mailto:tony@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
*To:* harp-l@xxxxxxxxxx <mailto:harp-l@xxxxxxxxxx>
*Sent:* Monday, February 07, 2011 3:06 PM
*Subject:* [Harp-L] tab question
This thread seems to follow on from the Reading Music one. These
threads
come up regularly, sometimes with a little heat.
Here is my take. I read music quite well - for baroque recorder. I
play
in a professional baroque ensemble, rehearsing and performing without
music is out of the question. I hardly read at all for harmonica,
over
the years many of the elite players I've met are likewise. I wrote
the
following in one of my tremolo harmonica lessons (apologies in
advance
for quoting myself)
"The ability to read scores is useful, but not essential. Many
excellent
players cannot read scores at all, or at best, only slowly. The
scores
in these lessons are an efficient way to show the notes and the
rhythm.
But, the aim is to play music. As soon as possible, learn the tunes,
ignore the scores and just play."
If reading music is the shortest path to playing it, the case for
classical (and baroque) performers, then learn to read. Otherwise,
just
play.
Tony Eyers
Australia
www.HarmonicaAcademy.com <http://www.HarmonicaAcademy.com>
...everyone plays