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I am wired the same way and what JonR said speaks from my heart:
Count me in. I regard them as two quite different pursuits. Making music has its rewards, and so does reading theory. They do kind of help each other a little, but not very much. Neither is essential for the other, although I think playing is more useful for understanding theory than knowing theory (in the book learning sense) is for playing music.
Best,
Helgo
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03-03-2014 08:13 AM
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Being able to play fly Sh*t and understand the theory of music is an essential for Pro musicians, take for instance studio musicians, studios cannot afford to waste the time and money while someone learns an arrangement by ear that's why you get the situation where musicians that play live are not always playing on their records. The drummer Buddy Rich considered by many to be the greatest jazz drummer couldn't read music and wasn't interested in it so the recording studios had a session drummer to play the arrangement to him so he could record it. I played in a swing orchestra, dance bands and rock groups in my youth and not being to read music would have made it virtually impossible to work as a professional. Now I only play at home for my own amusement reading and understanding the theory of music is not essential although it saves time with new tunes.
Last edited by TonyB56; 03-03-2014 at 10:11 AM.
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Originally Posted by Kiefer.Wolfowitz
Originally Posted by Kiefer.Wolfowitz
I never needed math or logarithms to understand octaves, I could hear them. In fact the only math I ever applied to music was to designate generic scale degrees, i.e. 1 2 3 etc. I could have used do re mi or some other system. Again the notes and the music came first, the theory was way, way after the fact.
Originally Posted by Kiefer.Wolfowitz
Discussing music doesn't need theory and neither music notation nor the reading of notation is theory. Probably most guitarists here can read music and discuss music with other musicians but I dare say the majority are not conversant in theory, I'm certainly not.
This will be my last post on the subject. My apostasy is obviously touching nerves. I will check in occasionally in hopes that someone can make an argument as to the practical application of theory, i.e. its value. I'm always willing to learn new and useful things.
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Originally Posted by 4thstuning
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Originally Posted by 4thstuning
Theoretical physics has moved to combining the string/superstring theories into what is now known as "M-Theory".
I personally don't know what the "M" in "M-Theory" represents, but rumor in physics circles says that it could be "Music".
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Message understood! I will immediately stop liking theory. Check in later to see how we're doing...
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Originally Posted by 4thstuning
which you might enjoy.
But: most of what is called music theory in forums like this is very different from Music theory in academia. Lots of players come to jazz from backgrounds where "play blues licks in a box based on the 3rd fret" is all you need to know to improvise. They've rarely thought any other way and don't know the basic terminology (how to build a major chord, what a scale is, etc) they call this music theory. Your earlier post show that what you already know and use (you mention chord/scales, II-V-I, hearing the harmony, pentatonic scales, substitutions, etc). You may view this as grammar and not music theory, but most discussions on this board about "theory" are exactly about these kind of topics.
So if you want to argue the lack of value of some theory (say in jazz improv) you need to point to specific examples of theory (Triad pairs? George Russell lydian chromatic, Barry Harris min6 approach?Garzone's thing? or academic stuff like 12 tone rows? ) you think are not useful. Likewise, if someone says theory is important in jazz, they should make clear what they mean by theory. Otherwise its just an argument without content.
I guess you sort of did that when you said Logarithms are irrelevant in playing jazz, but that is clear. They are also irrelevant in music theory, as far as i understand, but are related to acoustics.Last edited by pkirk; 03-03-2014 at 03:48 PM.
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Okay, I'll post again as pkirk is making some interesting points
Originally Posted by pkirk
I'll check out the Schneiderman paper when the muse strikes and the flesh is willing
Originally Posted by pkirk
I would agree that some here call this theory. I don't have a name for it but I don't call it theory as it doesn't explain anything...they're just rough tools that are only applicable for some sub-genres of western music and wouldn't apply for example to Indian or other musical cultures. So to your point, there is some semantic confusion here as to what theory actually is.
Originally Posted by pkirk
Are these theories? I have varying degrees of familiarity with them but I would not call them theories. They are approaches, techniques, etc.. I have studied Russell's lydian chromatic approach (abandoned it), use triad pairs and mess with Barry's m6 stuff occasionally and find them fun and useful, but again, they're not musical theory, they don't allow me to compose or explain good music. To me they're just more advanced forms of "play blues licks in a box based on the 3rd fret" - possible tools, nothing more.
Originally Posted by pkirk
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I don't play Sudoku, I just read books on Sudoku theory.
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Originally Posted by 4thstuning
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I like a bit of theory ....... just a bit can be very useful
like say .... learning to play 'out' by putting the 7th mode of MM on a V chord or whatever
But a little bit of that stuff can go a VERY long way
Its too easy for me to get bound up in the understanding of
the mathematical analysis side of music
and forget to just listen and play and feel the feelings
Theory is like salt and pepper in a stew
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There's a bit of a semantics issue/discussion going on here. I think theory is anything you might find in a "Theory" book.
An example of how theory has helped me... I heard that melodic minor "was the sound of jazz". I suppose that's a bit of theory, right? That didn't really help me, I tried it but couldn't get happy with the sound.
What did help me was having it explained in a book along with the exercise of writing a bunch of licks using the concept/theory. The theory took all of maybe 10 minutes to understand. The exercises... maybe I spent 20 hours initially working with it and now it's "in my playing" and I continue to work with it.
After playing for decades, a 10 minute theory lesson plus the many hours of practicing finally put the altered scale into my playing. I don't think this is something that would have happened had I not been exposed to the theory.
Just an intermediate player I think, glad to have added the altered scale to my playing. And I no longer have to think of the theory when playing the altered scales, it's just become part of my stuff.
Some of the writing exercises:
Last edited by fep; 03-03-2014 at 09:40 PM.
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Originally Posted by 4thstuning
Originally Posted by 4thstuning
Originally Posted by 4thstuning
Originally Posted by 4thstuning
Music theory is the same. Musicians make music, and theorists come along later and try to make sense of it. Then the next batch of musicians might learn something from what the theorists write, but mainly they learn from listening to older music and copying it. And if they find new sounds they like, they'll use those; and then theorists have to come back and fit those new sounds into the old theories, or write new theories to accommodate them.
And so the process evolves, but always led by the musicians (composers and improvisers) not by the theorists.
Sometimes, forward-thinking musicians try to set themselves up as theorists, promoting new systems, but those systems won't survive unless they catch on with enough other musicians.
Originally Posted by 4thstuning
Originally Posted by 4thstuning
Originally Posted by 4thstuning
It predicts very well what most people will like, simply because it spells out the familiar conventions. The same way the grammar of a language spells out the way most people speak, or think it's "proper" to speak; the way the language is understood by the majority of speakers.
Naturally there are those who like to speak a different way, and invent their own slang or dialects. Jazz (and most popular music) is a little like that. There are still conventions in slang, because it needs to be a shared language between those people that choose it. And therefore we could establish a grammar of slang.
Likewise, we can build a theory of jazz, but obviously we accept that it will always lag a little behind what the avant garde at any point are doing.
Music is always a mixture of the old and familiar on the one hand, and the new and surprising on the other. Too much familiar = boring. Too much surprising = baffling. (Music that was totally new simply would not sound like "music" at all.)
Originally Posted by 4thstuning
Originally Posted by 4thstuning
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Originally Posted by fep
Originally Posted by fep
It begins from giving a name, a label to a sound. The problem with most labels is they start off with other meanings, which can confuse the new usage.
"Melodic minor" derives from a piece of classical theory which is totally unconnected to how jazz musicians (supposedly) use the scale.
Moreover, most of the instances of what jazz theory calls "melodic minor" (or modes of that scale) is arguably better described and understood using other terms.
Eg, the connection between an "altered dominant" chord (a good piece of descriptive labelling, IMO) and the 7th mode of melodic minor is pure coincidence. A "7alt" chord is not derived from the 7th mode of melodic minor; it's derived by - er - altering the 5th and 9th, in order to provide some interesting chromatic voice-leading to the tonic. It so happens that the set of notes one arrives at by doing that happens to match that scale - it's nothing to do with how the chord functions.
A theory built on coincidental resemblance may be a handy shortcut for practical application ("oh yes, I can apply my melodic minor scales there"), but is never going to be very helpful for understanding what's happening, or for creative adaptation. It's superficial, IOW, not deep. A useful theory is one which inspires or suggests new creative directions; not one that prescribes one fixed course of action.
Originally Posted by fep
Originally Posted by fep
IOW, the only theory that's worth anything in the end is the theory that simply labels the sounds you already know (or can discover for yourself).
So...
1. You can start with the sounds, and be perfectly satisfied.
2. You can start with the sounds, and be theoretically curious. Maybe you discover new sounds that way. Maybe you just get baffled, and can't connect it at all. Or maybe (relevant to this topic), you just discover a whole new world of intellectual fascination, not requiring any connection back to music itself.
3. You can start with the theory. But if you're a musician, you have to tie it back to the music for it to make any sense. Ie, you have to get back to the sounds. And start from the sounds again.
IOW the sounds can (and should) make complete sense to us as sound. Theory is totally unnecessary in that sense. (In the same way that we speak our mother tongue with no assistance from any conscious understanding of academic grammar. We use the grammar, inevitably, but we don't need an intellectual appreciation of it. Or, as another analogy, we can walk down the street without having to know the biology of how our muscles works.)
Even if we use theory to go that extra step beyond what is intuitive - and I think most jazz musicians will do this, even if very few rock musicians do - it has to connect back and become intuitive as sound in the end.
Originally Posted by fep
You don't (I guess) even think "altered scale" while doing it, it just flows into your usual phrasing.
For me, it was basically just "chord tones to chord tones", #5 going to 9, or whatever.
IOW, one can discover all this stuff for oneself, by enough trial and error.
In fact, if one is too respectful of theory, it can be inhibiting, because you think you need justification for what you play. You think there ought to be some kind of guidelines for your experimentation, although you're not sure what they might be; so you play safe.
So the less one knows and cares about theory, the freer one's sonic experimentation can be. You just have to hope your ear (and experience and taste) is good enough to guide you...(and that's probably where many of us fall back on theory as a crutch now and then...)
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Originally Posted by 4thstuning
Octaves are important in all musical systems with which I am familiar. While you may hear octaves, you might consider that a guitarist's fingers raise the open-string pitch an octave when playing at the 12th fret, and might measure the lengths of the string towards the nut and bridge....
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Originally Posted by Kiefer.Wolfowitz
As I asserted earlier, most people here conflate theory with 'how to'. That's fine and I won't argue that anymore, I won't agree either.
When it comes to 'how to', I'm from the kiss school (you'll have to look that up) and boil it down to just a few things to play jazz:
- scales: major, mm, pentatonic, blues, dim (these are the most important IMO)
- building chords (chord tones)
- application of scales and chord tones
- chord patterns (building blocks of most tunes)
- rhythmic patterns
- and finally the hard part, practice putting it all together and learning to tell a story (where the art comes in - it is an art after all)
(yes, there's more and I may have left something fundamental out, but the items above take a person a long way down the jazz road.)
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Interesting discussion--I admit I vacillate between the 2 poles of theory is essential and it isn't. I wish I had more time to study theory and technique, also more interest in didactics in general.
Just a thought: I wonder how many of the jazz musicians we revere ever studied or even know much theory? Miles Davis and Dave Brubeck come to mind as jazz composers who studied music academically. But Louis Armstrong, Charlie Parker, Art Tatum--didn't they develop their awesome technique on their own? (In fact I wonder how many famous jazz musicians could even read music off a printed page, not to mention MOST rock musicians?)
As far as guitar's influence on other instruments, as mentioned in a post above, mostly in jazz it's the other way around, but I would say Charlie Christian influenced Benny Goodman, flamenco guitar influenced Chick Corea among others, Bossa Nova guitar influenced Stan Getz and Dizzy Gillespie, and there may be a lot more influences out there than we realize.
And for gosh sake the Beatles and Jimi Hendrix almost made keyboards and horns irrelevant to popular music. All kinds of musicians spent the last 50 years trying to imitate them on their instruments (Keith Emerson, Jan Hammer) or at least find a way to reinsert their instruments into the mix. Miles electrified his horn to keep up with Jimi and John McLaughlin after all.
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Even fooball players learn the theory/science of ball angles, training techniques, strategies, diet, physiology, psychology, investment portfolios and where to find the best looking girls.
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Originally Posted by Doctor Jeff
Last edited by Kiefer.Wolfowitz; 03-14-2014 at 03:52 AM. Reason: Q:Where is the library at? A:At Harvard one does not end sentences with prepositions. Q:Where is the library at, *sshole.
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Originally Posted by Doctor Jeff
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Lets be totally honest here, music theory isn't a difficult subject, anyone who has studied a technical subject like, engineering, maths, science etc to a high level, knows that the old cliche "it ain't rocket science" applies to music theory. The difficulty with playing an instrument is the enormous amount of disciplined practice it takes to be proficient.
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Originally Posted by GuyBoden
For instance, when I am comping a minor passage that goes Amin7 to Bbmin7, I like to know I can do a mini 2-5-1 and approach the Bbmin7 with Cmin7b5 - F7 - Bbmin7, just to keep it interesting.
And by using theory, I continue this with different substitutions that are "supposed to work," at least according to theory, and go on to create interesting comping lines.
But unfortunately, with my priorities, I can only get practice a little here and a little there. Theory has been a way to help remember just what the heck I did that sounded so good, and repeat it in different keys.
But you never know, I may get stranded on an island for six months with my guitar. With my luck as of late, I would probably break a string.
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Originally Posted by AlsoRan
I'm not denying things like that are interesting, but it's possible to be too interesting....
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Originally Posted by JonR
One has to be careful not to ruin a song with the misapplication of principles such that you adversely affect the effect of the song.
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Originally Posted by AlsoRan
I really like the study of theory as a means to understand what I am doing or what the people I listen to are doing!
Though not nearly as much as playing.
Jens
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