PaperDog wrote:Tyler Riddim Murphy wrote:No it makes sense. The C# F# G# B E and are all in the key of C#. Is that important? And the rest of it makes perfect sense.
To Me, all a key provides is your point of reference. Wait till you get into transposition.... You'll see the beauty of this...
Also,. scales, in and of them selves, are tracks of direction...with respect to that key... By no means are they required as a hard and fast rule. SO, you can jump tracks... and pull off some interesting lead work...(Presuming you have the skill to jump gracefully)
I should also add... WHen you master the formal scales (WHich sadly, I have not taken the time to do) , you will discover that these scales can serve as "black-box" inserts into the arrangement of any piece you want. (Keeping in mind the key of the piece)
p-dog....that's one of the many cool things about music, eh? there's not ONE way of approaching it, understanding it, or creating art (or what passes for art) with it.
i think the only "right way" is the one that works best for each of us and let's us accomplish what we set out to do.
guitar is a very interesting bird as far as instruments go. an "unschooled" gtrst (as in someone that doesn't necessarily know their scales or much about theory) can function quite capably and sound great (esp in the blues or rock genre).
for instance if you can learn and can play out of an E "blues box"....and the singer wants to transpose up to F.....well, ya just slide up one fret and voila! there ya go.
now, that's NOT something you can do on trumpet, sax, piano, trombone, vibes, steel drums, or...... for those instruments you actually have to KNOW the notes that you are playing....you have to know the nuts and bolts of the scales and intervals. i mean ya can't just slide yer hand up a 1/4 inch or strap on a capo and be playing the same lick in a different key!
that's not a cut at gtrsts... i'm one myself. just an observation.
i place no musical value on the amount of theory knowledge anyone has....it always comes down to the final results.