Showing posts with label Ukulele. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ukulele. Show all posts

Wednesday, March 2, 2011

What are "Jazz" Chords

"Jazz"  chords are simply chords.

Just like the name "Folk" or "Cowboy" chords have been associated basic open position chords that movie cowboy singers like Roy Rodgers and folk artist's like John Denver played. The chords that jazz guitarists played came to be called “jazz” chords.

These jazz chords are simply chords. Typically 4-part chords like major sevenths, sevenths and minor sevenths . Although these chords appear more complex and use more of the guitar neck than the first few frets. These chords can be organized and learned like the basic chords one typically learns.

On guitar these "jazz" chords can be organized into four strings sets. And, four string set, with the most being strings set comprising strings 1234, 2345, 3456, 1235, and 2346. Using a C7 chord as your foundation or core chord - this gives you 20 voicings on guitar to learn. On ukulele one the 1234 string family is available, for four C7 chords - a little less daunting of a task. The number of chords to master as a jazz guitarist contributes to the mystic of "jazz" chords being hard to learn. Not really hard to lear, just a lot of them.

Friday, October 15, 2010

Creating Intros and Turnarounds Ukulele Lesson Videos

The UkuleleLesson Creating Intros and Turnarounds has been updated with video examples of several of the intros.

Tuesday, July 20, 2010

Musician "Mis" Communication - Which Way is UP?

Why can't ukulele players and musician communicate using, at a minimum, basic music terms?

I hear it all the time with ukulele video lessons online, in workshop and other players. It drives me nuts! They call the "higher" stings to bottom on a ukulele. The higher strings produce higher pitches and are on the top of the music staff in standard music notation and to top lines in TAB.

Learning an instrument is tough enough.

What is up, down, higher, lower, top, bottom, ascending, descending on a ukulele?. This ukulele lesson focuses on clearing up what these terms refer to and should refer too. Up, down, higher, lower, top, bottom, ascending, descending should refer to musical pitch and not be related to gravity as we know it. Up and higher refers to the raising of pitch and down and lower refer to the lowering of pitch. Top refers to the upper note of a chord voicing or musical phrase and bottom the lowest note.

The only gravity, up - down reference that is appropriate when communication musically is, when referencing to strumming or picking. Then the normal down and up that we know works.


Here is the definitive answer to Which Way is UP?

Friday, June 4, 2010

TRI-TABS added to TAB links

TRI-TABS added to TAB links


  • TRI-TABS - link

    The Easy Way To Learn Fingerstyle On Any Ukulele.

    The Purpose of this site is to provide ukulele players with a simple way to start learning to play fingerstyle tabs on any tuning of ukulele.

Sunday, May 2, 2010

New Song Section Added to Site

A NEW section for songs have been added to the TABs part of the site.

The Song & Chord Progressions section has chord chart for popular songs.

Wednesday, September 9, 2009

New Members Area of CurtSheller.com Launched

Launching a new Members Only area on the main CurtSheller.com site. Benefits of membership include access to more lessons with expanded content, video examples and access to your private ukulele and guitar teacher - me, Curt Sheller, studio quality play-along tracks for practice, discounts on my books and a lot more as time goes on.



There is a FREE Basic Member Subscription available and a Premium Member Subscription at $9.95 for three months using PayPal.



A Premium Membership includes ALL the benefits of a basic membership plus access to me, Curt Sheller, premium play-along tracks and charts, books, lessons, TABS and more.



Premium Member lessons are what you might get if you studied with me. They draw on my 40 years of studying and playing experience and 20 years of teaching. The premium lessons are detailed and take a bit more production time to put together. Hence the small fee for the Premium Membership. Need to pay for this somehow. Your support is welcomed and appreciated.



A Premium Membership is only $9.95 for three months. Considering a private music lessons this is a great deal.



Over 50 Premium Play-along Backing Tracks are being made available as part of the Premium Membership.



Several of my books are being made available FREE as PDF eBooks for FREE Basic Members and Premium Members.



Download my Midnight at the Jazz Cafe CD for FREE.



Got to members.curtsheller.com for more information.

Thursday, April 9, 2009

Tuesday, March 31, 2009

What is the different between a Scale and a Mode?

This started out as a reply to a online posting and question. I realized a lot of players don't know the difference between and scale and a mode or scale mode. So, I though I'd spin out a little Internet lesson and post it. I'll be posting this to my site at some point. So here is my take on the Scale and Mode thingy.

This is not a light read. And, as with most music things, the understanding of something is a lot easier that the application of the same.

What is the different between a Scale and a Mode?

As my music guru has said many times, "Tools not rules."

The term scale and mode are used interchangeably and in a strict theory sense there is a big difference between a scale and a mode or modal scale. They are NOT the same, even if they are the same notes.

Music is best explored and explained in context. So I'll use the G major scale as that context.

G A B C D E F# G' is the G Major Scale. It can be anyone of the those funny Greek sounding mode names that end in "ian", like Dorian, Phrygian, Lydian, Mixolydian, Aeolian, Locrian and Ionian is all notes are equal. Sounds like one of the TLC shows with all the kids.

Even starting on one scale degree vs another doesn't define one mode from another.

Dorian: A B C D E F# G A'
Phrygian: B C D E F# G A B'
Lydian: C D E F# G A B C'
Mixolydian: D E F# G A B C D'
Aeolian: F# G A B C D E'
Locrian: F# G A B C D E F#'
Ionian: G A B C D E F# G'

Most confusion when learning about modes, I feel comes from using the same major scale as the basis for study. Like we are doing here. But for our purposes this will really help clarify why a scale is different than a mode. And, you get seven modes for the price of one major scale.

To complicate matters. there are common traditional scale names for some of the modes that are in common use.

Dorian A B C D E F# G A' is frequently called a minor scale. As it is a minor scale.
Phrygian B C D E F# G A B' is also a minor scale. I don't know of any other common name for Phrygian. I'm sure there are some.
Lydian C D E F# G A B C', is a major scale.
Mixolydian D E F# G A B C D' is often referred to as the Dominant scale.
Aeolian E F# G A B C D E' this is the same as the Natural Minor scale.
Locrian F# G A B C D E F#' a diminished scale. No other common names that I'm aware of.
Ionian G A B C D E F# G'. This is the common Major Scale.

Dorian, Aeolian and Mixolydian are common modes in use in contemporary music. Moondance is part Dorian and part Minor, Sweet Home Alabama is Mixolydian, although they didn't know it when they wrote it.

All seven modes are just a collection of the notes G A B C D E F#. If all notes of the scale are equal it is just a scale and you can name it whatever you like. If one note is emphasized over the other six then it is one of the scale modes.

Melodically

Each mode has a characteristic scale step. When emphasized in a melody will give it's characteristic modal sound. You then have a scale mode or mode.

The characteristic scale steps are:

Dorian: A B C D E F# G A', characteristic scale step is F#, the sixth scale degree.
Phrygian: B C D E F# G A B', characteristic scale step is C, the second scale degree.
Lydian: C D E F# G A B C', characteristic scale step is F#, the fourth scale degree.
Mixolydian: D E F# G A B C D', characteristic scale step is C, the seventh scale degree.
Aeolian: E F# G A B C D E', characteristic scale step is G, the third scale degree.
Locrian: F# G A B C D E F#', characteristic scale step is C, the fifth scale degree.
Ionian: G A B C D E F# G', characteristic scale step is G, the first scale degree.

Even more to confuse you. Using triads, a three note chord. Mot common are built in thirds. Each mode has the same G Am Bm C D Em F#dim chords in it's "chord collection". Although modes are typically triad in nature when talking about the the primary and secondary chord's of a mode. We should add the D7 to the collection. As a 4-part chord it is so often used as the V chord in the G Major key. In a blues the chords are typically 4-part seventh chords.

Harmonically

Just as each mode has a characteristic scale step for the mode. Each mode has characteristic chords. The characteristic chords of each mode help define the modal sound.

It is the characteristic scale step that identifies the primary chords for each mode. The primary chords of any one of the modes are the I chord of the mode and the major and minor triads that contain the characteristic scale step.

One example and I'm out of here.

A Dorian:
A B C D E F# G A'
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 scale degrees
I II III IV V VI VII chord functions

Characteristic scale step is the sixth, F#. So the primary chords are the I chord of the mode and the major and minor triads: Am, Bm and D
I Am (A C E)
II Bm (B D F#)
IV D (D F# A)

The C, Em and G are secondary chords of the mode and the F#dim is the lone diminished chord.

OK, one more to show that the G Ionian mode is different that the G Major scale.

Characteristic scale step is the one, G. So the primary chords are the I chord of the mode and the major and minor triads: G C and Em:
I G (G B D)
IV C (C E G)
VI Em (E G B)

In the traditional key of G major the I IV and V chords are primary chords.

Alright, one more example. D mixolydian D E F# G A B C D'. The characteristic scale step in mixolydian is the seventh, C. The primary chords are the I V and VII. D, Am and C.

Here is a 12 bar, D Mixolydian blues

|| D | C | D | D | G | G | D | D | Am | C | D | Am ||
|| I | VII | I | I | IV | IV | I | I | V | VII | I | V ||


Each mode contains notes and chords common to the major scale. So it is easy to inadvertently slip into a mode's related major scale. When that happens, you have lost the mode and have actually moved into a major key. This can occur melodically or harmonically or both. Basically avoid or handle with care the D to G as that is the V I in our G major example.

One of the keys to all this mode or modal stuff is that the harmonic function of a chord, its I, II, III, IV, V, VI, VII is different in each mode for each chord. Here is how the AM chords functions in each mode:

Am in A Dorian is a I chord.
Am in B Phrygian is a VII chord.
Am in C Lydian is a VI chord.
Am in D Mixolydian is a V chord.
Am in E Aeolian is a IV chord.
Am in F# Locrian is a III chord.
Am in G Ionian is a II chord.

My brain hurts after that one!

Their harmonic function is completely different from mode to mode. Just like a G in the key of C is different than a G in the key of G, or G in the key of D in traditional tonic/dominant harmony.

With printed music only using key signatures for major and their relative minor keys. It is this harmonic knowledge that will allow you to determine if a song is in a major key or a mode. Yu might not need this to just play chords but to embellish the chords and improvise it is a definite plus.

This is a classic case for only naming things IN CONTEXT. In music there isn't a lot that can be named out of context.

Here is my secert, mystical key that I use to get all the chords from any mode based on a major scale: For triads: maj, min, min, maj, maj or 7th, min dim. For 4-art 7th chords: maj7, m7, m7, maj7, 7th, m7, m7b5 or half-diminished.

This allowed me to remember the chords for this example and the related modes. I can get any mode's chords from this sequence of chords by starting at a different point in the sequence. You don't have to remember so much stuff. Just this tool and your major scales.

See you in New York.

PS. I'll be giving an "Advanced Jazz" workshop. But - you definitely don't need to be advanced to attend. If you know a few 7th chords you won't get lost. Plus, I have great handouts.

Monday, March 16, 2009

Printable PDF books at 40% Off

Going Green, Save a Few Trees and get my books quicker and cheaper! SAVE 40%.




ALL of my books are available as PDF downloads that can be printed out for personal use.

Wednesday, October 22, 2008

Tijuana Taxi on Uke

Here is a cool arrangement of the classic Herb Albert and the Tijuana Brass song performed on ukulele. The tuning is standard "C" tuning gcea with a low "G".

Wednesday, September 17, 2008

THE BEATLES FOR UKULELE (book)

THE BEATLES FOR UKULELE
(book)
:


Ukulele players can strum, sing and pick along with 20 Beatles classics! "All You Need Is Love," "Eight Days a Week," "Good Day Sunshine," "Here, There and Everywhere," "Let It Be," "Love Me Do," "Penny Lane," "Yesterday," more. 72 pp. ($12.95)



(Via Elderly.com Latest - Ukulele.)

Wednesday, September 3, 2008

Pink Panther Solo Ukulele Arrangement


The Pink Panther Theme

Posted a very cool solo ukulele arrangement the Henry Mancini classic, the Pink Panther Theme.

This theme is just three (3) chords: Em, C7 and F7.

The Pink Panther - Solo Ukulele Arrangement

Tuesday, August 5, 2008

Protest the Ukulele BAN !!!! at Take Me Out to the Ball Game Anniversary

Protest the Ukulele BAN !!!! at Take Me Out to the Ball Game Anniversary:


I am mounting a protest to right the wrong of the ukulele NOT being allow at the celebration of the 100th birthday of “Take me out to the Ball Game” Twin brothers won the Baby Ruth song competition with a great rendition with a ukulele/tuba combo. The reward was they could sing “Take Me Out to the Ball Game” at the Major League All-Star Game. The ukulele was not allowed as part of the performance. I don’t understand the decision. I don’t what I am going to do, just yet. But I will not let our collective ukulele voices be unheard. Below are some the gory details of this injustice from Al Wood of Ukulele Hunt.


Terry Truhart


Baby Ruth held a contest to celebrate the 100th birthday of Take Me Out to the Ball Game. Entrants sent in their rendition of the song and the winner was decided by public vote. Obviously, the winner was a ukulelist, Adam Wilber. The prize was to sing at the MLB All Star Game. But, as Gary pointed out, the ukulele was banned and he had to sing along with a belching organ. Shame on you MLB. Give the public what it wants: ukes by the barrel-load.


I suggest your protest by grabbing these chords and playing it outside the offices of the MLB in protest. If it helps you to get as drunk as Eddie Vedder when you do it, I have no objections.




(Via Ukeaholics's Weblog.)

The Value of Formal Music Study

The Value of Formal Music Study:
Should you study music with a teacher or should you "wing" it on your own? This question always comes up in this type of discussion about music.

An objective assessment of the two alternative approaches leads me invariably towards the formal route. Why? Because without guidance, there is a tendency to go in circles, What do you practice, when do you move to the next topic? When are you doing something wrong? How do you practice what doesn't exist to you?

Many complain about time as a factor leading to the decision not to study. I would suggest that exactly the opposite is true. Those with less time need the efficiency of study. Without it, there's a tendency to "practice" what you're already good at. Study ensures that you will be working on your weaknesses. The results of self teaching are obvious. A player may get good at one thing but have blatant weaknesses in another.

If you use famous players in the past as your justification for not studying, you'd be wrong! Wes Montgomery was self taught - there's your justification. But is it? Wes was self taught because there were no teachers at that time. I don't mean no qualified teachers. I mean no teachers. Wes told me "Make sure you study. Don't do what I did."

All this, of course is premised on the presumption that you study with a qualified teacher. What makes a teacher qualified and how do find such a teacher? We'll save that one for the next installment.



(Via ChuckAndersonGuitar.)

Friday, July 25, 2008

Ukulele Arrangement and Performance of While My Guitar Gently Weeps



I always loved George Harrison of the Beatles. As a young guitar player in the lates 60's and early 70's just learning the guitar George was a great inspiration. After Jake Shimabukuro do his version on uke I decided to try my hand at it and in the original key.

There is a ukulele TAB available of this arrangement at www.CurtSheller.com/scores/uke/WhileMyGuitarGentlyWeeps.shtml

I'm using a Pono cedar top, rosewood back and sides ukulele from Ko'olau Guitar & Ukulele.