Jump to content
Why become a member? ×

zbd1960

Member
  • Posts

    790
  • Joined

  • Last visited

  • Days Won

    1

Posts posted by zbd1960

  1. Hope you don't mind me adding to this? My main instrument is cello and I play in a number of amateur orchestras. In the hubub at the start of a rehearsal, it's difficult to hear the cello over assorted brass and woodwind, so I tune with a Korg chromatic tuner (which I've found to be reliable - I've had it 10 years now). At the start of the reharsal proper, the oboe provides an A which we all check our tuning against. It's usually more-or-less bang-on (because the oboist generally has a tuner switched on to check that hey are giving a steady A = 440 note.

    I can tune without it and I can tell if I'm out of tune quite easily too, but he tuner cuts out some faffing around and gets me round the noise. String instruments don't like temperature changes as it effects the length of the strings and they take a while to reach equilibrium.

  2. I don't have trouble reading music as I have to read all 4 standard clefs for the instruments I play. My sight singing is decent, and I'm pretty reasonable on cello and OK on tenor sax. I'm a novice on bass so I can read the dots, butnot necessarily play them! Being a reasonable sight reader has meant that I've been able to dep in some quite good concerts over last year or so (one was show music, the other was film music).

    Need get my bass playing there

  3. I'm even more of a beginner on bass than you are, but I'm fairly experienced in other areas. A big lesson I learnt from my singing teacher was to throw wrong notes away - they're in the past. It's very easy to stop, linger, dwell.... and then you've lost it :) This has provied to be a useful lesson when I moved on to playing other instrument sin recent years and I now regularly play in concerts.

    The ability to be in the right place is in fact more improtant most of the time than playing the right note: the wrong note at the right time is usually less obvious than the right note at the wrong time....

  4. Hi - brand new to the world of bass (and guitars for that matter). I already play various instruments, mainly cello and sax. I play them in various orchestras and bands.

    I went mad and I've now got a Fender Standard Jazz bass. I'm now looking for a teacher and looking forward to learning a new instrument as well as looking forward to getting to know you and the Forum.

    Eventually, I'd like to be able to play jazz with small (ish) groups and possibly big band. I know almost nothing about rock music, so you will have to put up with some very naive questions and blind non-comprehension from me on that score :)

    Thanks.

×
×
  • Create New...