Posted on Feb 25 2009 05:15 PM
Funny that this topic should come up...i mentioned it in my intro the other day as something that I had started to use more...
I can also find my way around guitar pro to tab out some stuff...
Here's a tip if you can get a hold of guitar pro this tabbing/notation software will load midi tracks and try to tab it...so, for a while there I was taking things like elton john from those tacky midi sites, stripping the parts down to say just the piano or melody or whatever and opening them up.
Voila! Instant tabbed piano parts...hahaha. Not always practical to play, but you can edit it into something recognizable and learn the basic parts...good for inspiring things that might not sound so guitary!
(it plays them so you can learn them and the tempo can be adjusted...also good for generating instant backing tracks (though they can sound a bit cheesy sometimes)...just strip away the parts you don't like or are going to play)
Guitar pro tabs from notation and visaversa at the same time. You can input easily from a mouse on a displayed fretboard.
It can play multiple parts...so good for working out good bass, rhythm and bass parts...also will clearly show the number of bars and such which is important for trying to write song specific drum parts.
So...it has a lot of uses and works really well. For one thing, it helps a lot in learning to read music particularly the rhythms. As it plays back, you can hear if it is approaching something like the real thing (it will never sound like you are playing it)...so the difference between triplet quavers and straight quavers is pretty obvious.
It automatically shows what ever you tab in standard notation so learning the transition from or to TAB is easier.
The learning curve for the actual program is easy as well...very intuitive!
It also works well as a basic sequencer or midi playback program and editor.
However, with all such things it is a tool...don't give up playing the guitar for playing the guitar pro!
...
I understand the negative comments about TAB, it is limited, widely abused (people forget to listen), avoids some of the depth of how music works (things like keys and scales become abstract fret numbers) and the quality of most TAB available (especially the non-pro stuff on the 'net) is woefully wrong.
However, I can read music and studied it at uni, know perhaps too much theory. But TAB is important for the guitar due to the repetition of the notes. I have found that this has become more important with the way my "style" has developed.
Often I play with open strings within chords beyond the open position, small chord shapes that only work within certain string sets...often I play chords in positions to avoid some of the "out of tuneness" of say an open A major chord and I will often use forms that require the thumb over the top to play the bass note, some of the bar chord in the middle strings, and open strings above that doubling some of the chord tones creating a 12 string kind of effect. In standard notation, these things can be very messy and not explain how you are supposed to play all these notes at the same time.
Some easy examples of such chords...
---0---
---6---
---x---
This A major chord is always a good substitute for a straight A chord...not always easy to translate from notation. It is easy for the ear to interpret as an open A chord or some other combination of the same notes.
---0---
---5---
---0---
--(5)--
this A minor is a great sound...an added 2nd.
---0----0----0----0----0----
---2----6----5----4----2----sustain chord over bass riff!
---4----7----6----5----4-------4---4---4--
The above sequence is the chord run down I use for penetration...of course it could be notated traditionally, but this makes a lot more sense don't you think? Add to that, that the bass notes are fretted with the thumb, and a whole world of possibilities open up. Most importantly, it really opens up a window into how a player thinks and composers or arranges.
In surf music, trying to explain that a melody is played on one string rather than many are taught, in some kind of box or scale position can be vital for the tone, tremolo picking, etc
...
Anyway...some defense for TAB, even though I agree with most of the points expressed. Of the TABbing software, guitar pro has been the best I have come across. It can be a great tool to translate keyboard based theory ideas to the guitar (voice leading and such) and it can help with composing and sharing ideas as it is not just tab but midi audio as well.
There is a tendency now that it is widely available for it to really make for lazy new players. I am old enough to have had to learn from vinyl records myself, but listening to a lot of "karaoke guitar players" say on you Utube, they appear and sound as if they are playing by numbers. But the same can occur if reading from standard notation as well. Learning by ear is very important, but often the ear can lie and there are other ideas (like the simple examples above) that are not at all obvious from hearing it.
Unlike conventional written TAB, guitar pro includes the audio and the standard notation...will even transcribe from guitar to keyboard TAB and is easy to alter speed with a simple click of the mouse. Big ups for Gpro!
...
Some may have heard a demo track I made for my sustainer...it was just two guitar tracks...the rhythm vamp is is but not obvious and uses these chord forms...
-------------------0----0---
----7---9---11---9-----9--
----7---9---10---9-----9---
It may well sound like two guitars, the small forms on the middle strings I pluck with fingers, the last chord back strummed with the pick near the bridge. Only TAB really shows clearly the intention of such ideas and how easy they are. Often the ear is fooled by what people expect (standard chord shapes and techniques)...this is of course why so much TAB is so incredibly incorrect and misleading...
Of course...if I had done all that in guitar pro...you would have been able to see it in tab and notation and hear what it sounds like (the all important rhythm notation) and look a lot more impressive...and be able to email it across the world!
pete
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1 Mahogany HSS squier strat with trick wiring and noiseless SD JB pups...
other 1 Baby blue telecaster with tremolo, Fender WR-HB and DIY sustainer...
amp...fender hotrod deluxe + 15" cab!