Guitar - ehh, some parts of Dream Theater Songs, Some Parts of Zeppelin Songs, some Tool and A Perfect Circle songs.. stuff I have written
Bass - A lot of Red Hot Chili Peppers, a few Charlie Parker and Miles Davis Tunes, some Incubus, Audioslave, Mudvayne (yeah...), Rush, a few more Jazz tunes of which I can't remember who wrote them.
Keyboard - some Coldplay, Straylight Run (har har), A perfect Circle. A bunch of the "Lost" theme music.
Drums - can't play any songs but i can hold a steady beat for about 30 seconds...
i think itz kinda obvius wat instrument i play... (hint hint: username!!!) im not one to brag, but i am good, i am in the best band at my skewl, and im a 1st trumpet (top 4 chairs, but im not gonna tell you which one im in) i got a guitar, but i cant play it and i play the piano. and the flute. i think thats it...
im not one to brag, but i am good, i am in the best band at my skewl, and im a 1st trumpet (top 4 chairs, but im not gonna tell you which one im in)
Omg someone who plays trumpet! I'm good too, probably the 2nd best in my school. I got this far without lessons so I'm proud of my accomplishment. The number 1 trumpet in my school is a grade below me and she takes private lessons and practices more than me. The two of us are part of a school play, and I'm trumpet 2
can someone give something new to play on the guitar, i'm bored of just about every song I wrote (nothing with the bottom string, I just broke my bottom string D=)
Another said there would be a mark whether it was one beat, two beats, half beats, rests, yadda. Power chords are like having three notes on top of each other on the same beat.
I guess I do power chords a little differently... Like for the E5 I add in a B on the G string combined with the open B, which makes the tone a little more powerful. It is somewhat superflurous, but it sounds cool.
I was mainly wondering how you differentiate between playing an A on the E string, and playing an open A on the A string. It is easy using tab, but I don't see how it is possible using standard notation. I've seen people use standard with tab under it like you did, and that seems to work pretty well.