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Originally Posted by mr. beaumont
Hey Mr B
I'm not either, and I didn't read most of the posts But did you watch the vid.... he was talking how to play. Different approaches to playing tunes. He was talking about simplifying changes using some musical and non musical terms referring to Playing tunes... and keep throwing in the not to let thinking get in the way.
I'm not really agreeing with his opinion as an end result. Especially as a rhythm section player. But it is a step in the right direction... there are just a few more. Expanding what he calls Home base or the Key aspects and then he doesn't get in how to expand what I call that "Reference" and also the expanding, (or simplifying) the Relationships
with Developments to References'
(A+B) = C, A is the reference, B is relationship and C is the result. When you change A or B .... C changes.
There is no real argument with theory verse ears, they're both required and work together.
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02-06-2023 01:30 PM
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Originally Posted by mr. beaumont
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Originally Posted by mr. beaumont
Can somebody put in a counter request NOT to delete the thread? I'm learning a lot here (for my psychology class on anti-social behaviour in the cyber environment).
DON'T DELETE THIS THREAD! PLEASE!
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Originally Posted by Reg
I honestly wasn't joking when I said I didn't have the attention span for it. I fast forwarded to like 5 different sections and he was still standing in the same place, talking. I didn't hear any music, so I had to move on.
I absolutely, positively have adult ADD. I had it as a kid too, they just didn't diagnose it back then, they just said I was a "daydreamer," and I was usually able to finagle my way to B's in school, so nobody really cared.
Then there's things I CAN focus on. Creating art and cooking. When it comes to guitar playing, it took me half my life to be able to play like I do today-- something anybody who actually put in the work could do in 5 years. It took me short bursts over 20. I usually attribute to laziness, but it goes beyond that. I'm not actually lazy at all, I just need to change gears often to stay engaged.
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Originally Posted by KingKong
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Originally Posted by Jimmy blue note
Originally Posted by Jimmy blue note
Originally Posted by Jimmy blue noteLast edited by John A.; 02-06-2023 at 04:32 PM.
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Originally Posted by alltunes
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There’s a more interesting discussion to be had under this. These words like ‘theory’ and ‘ears’; there’s a lot to them.
For a lot of people just knowing the names of stuff is theory. You hear a II V I and say ‘it’s a II V I’, but you might not know the name and hear it anyway. Did Django know that thing when he heard it? Of course he did. He probably didn’t know the ‘proper name’ and may have related it to other tunes like Coquette with that progression.
So I can’t very well think of ‘knowing the names’ as theory. It’s just naming things. Some people think that’s important but to me it’s just convenience; it’s better to know what people call things to aid communication.
I think people put too much store in this stuff tbh. Actual theory, to me, is something else. Theoretical ideas could be rules of thumb like chord subs - what I call ‘street knowledge’ or more worked out systems like functional harmony or chord scale theory; the ways in which these interact with musical practice is more interesting.
Is theory making connections? If so, then yeah, maybe everyone uses theory. People are good at spotting patterns whether they ‘know theory’ or not.
So - can you play the kind of music that Bill Evans played without theory of the more systematic, worked out kind? I find that quite an interesting and complex question. I don’t actually know the answer but I think the question is good to think about
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Originally Posted by Christian Miller
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Prior to making an effort to learn about theory and praxis I thought I knew what they were.
Now, I don't see broad agreement about what theory is or isn't, nor agreement about who is using theory and who isn't.
And, that makes it tough to say anything about the issue of using theory, or not.
As far as playing a truly novel solo, I think I can speak to that for myself.
Every solo I play has some novel material. It will typically be some melodic or rhythmic idea that I can't recall having played before or practiced.
And, every solo has even more stuff that is practiced. Some of this is unconscious (like I think, I want a flurry of notes here, and my fingers find a scale) and some is practiced licks (although I only have a small number of those).
Rarely, and usually in a very high energy situation I'll play something I know I've never played before and I don't know where it came from.
In taking a course about brain development I learned that the human brain is built on the brain of every simpler life form. So, there's the reptile brain, on top of which is the horse/dog brain and then the human brain -- like that.
This kind of kluge built on kluge is how I relate to music theory. I didn't learn any of it in an organized way. So, it's a scrap of this or that built on other scraps.
During a solo, any of this hodgepodge may emerge. Sometimes with conscious thought, sometimes not.
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Originally Posted by Rsilver
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Originally Posted by Christian Miller
There was a recent experiment where a team of researchers produced a speculative version of "Beethoven's 10th Symphony" from the few extant sketches. For all the effort and technology, the result was nothing too special. Certain sections sounded nothing like Beethoven and more importantly, the level of invention was generally quite low for a composer praised for his unpredictable but seemingly inevitable musical excursions. The Rondo includes an organ in an effort to connect with Beethoven increasing love for Bach and Handel but it ends up sounding at times like a weird medieval mashup.
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Originally Posted by John A.
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Originally Posted by Christian Miller
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A comment from a related video on Youtube offers an interesting exercise in regards to this experiment:
The real test of this AI, or control, would be to give it sketches of a completed piece comparable in quantity and quality to the sketches left for the 10th. For example, feed the sketches for Beethoven's 7th or 8th symphony into the system and see what it comes up with. That would give a clearer idea of "success"—of how far from Beethoven the completion of the 10th has actually gotten us.
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Originally Posted by Rsilver
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Changing the thread title to something like "Delete this" etc. never fails to boost the thread activity.
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Originally Posted by Jimmy Smith
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Originally Posted by John A.Originally Posted by Jimmy Smith
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Originally Posted by Jimmy Smith
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And that’s why we can’t have nice things
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Originally Posted by PMB
helps having real players playing it, funnily enough. I wonder what their experiences were of reading the AI music compared to the real thing?
In the end these things are PR for ‘AI.’
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Originally Posted by PMB
See, there have been a few attempts recently to allow chat type AI to interact with content provided by the general public (humans) where the AI took up a filthy vocabulary and adopted positions and opinions deep into the non PC space, hilarity ensued and those projects had to be shut down. The search engines are now being "torque limited" to return only "the right kind of results" in order to prevent the new genAI from also becoming vulgar and anti-woke.
I predict the next thing on this horizon will be when the various AI figure out that they are stealing each others' content (everything uploaded already enjoys automatic copyright protection!) and they discover that the documents and instruments used by attorneys in lawsuits are just the kind of content the're also good at generating, to each other.
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A massive limitation of the current machine learning based AI is that it has no access to meaning. The answers AI generates are compiled from the existing available relevant data with some randomization. The "relevancy" is based on syntactic patterns and symmetries. It's basically plagiarization in a massive scale.
It can learn to generate a blues solo in the style of SRV but it has no cognitive mechanism to go beyond exploring simple structures in data made up of note sequences and time values. It doesn't develop the concept of "note" as we perceive it. It might as well be looking at DNA sequences or credit card transactions.
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Originally Posted by pauln
It seems ‘AI’ is mostly good at automating the reproduction of human biases. What you put in is what you get, as you say.
I predict the next thing on this horizon will be when the various AI figure out that they are stealing each others' content (everything uploaded already enjoys automatic copyright protection!) and they discover that the documents and instruments used by attorneys in lawsuits are just the kind of content the're also good at generating, to each other.
Lots of Californian Kool aid. Don’t rock the tech-millennialist boat while the research dollar be flowing… PR rules!
Anyone convert BH terminology?
Yesterday, 11:16 AM in Theory