[EDITED!] Music Theory for Dubsteppers [Production Bible v2]
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- Disco Nutter
- Posts: 1648
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I have also been looking for something like this for ever. Thank you so much. I find it really easy to understand, it's straight to the point.
Now it's just a matter of remembering what notes are what and training my fingers.
I wish I had the time to practice this stuff, so I might just put a few stickers or something on my keyboard.
At least I can always just throw the notes into a matrix in reason and randomize it.
Now it's just a matter of remembering what notes are what and training my fingers.
I wish I had the time to practice this stuff, so I might just put a few stickers or something on my keyboard.
At least I can always just throw the notes into a matrix in reason and randomize it.
- futures_untold
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Steve AC23
- Posts: 898
- Joined: Sun Feb 19, 2006 1:39 pm
- Location: melburn ozstrailya
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Steve AC23
- Posts: 898
- Joined: Sun Feb 19, 2006 1:39 pm
- Location: melburn ozstrailya
again BIG UP
ive been looking for something like this for ever
i dont understand music theory at all
ive been looking for something like this for ever
i dont understand music theory at all
MELBOURNE / http://soundcloud.com/ac23
Very easy to read and understand, I take my hat off to you.


The growth of understanding follows an ascending spiral rather than a straight line.
http://www.virb.com/subdept
http://www.virb.com/subdept
- kindofblue272
- Posts: 157
- Joined: Mon Aug 11, 2008 1:42 am
- Location: Arlington, VA
A decent length university course? One can get a graduate degree in the subject ... Schenker's analysis of Beethoven's Ninth is like 700 pages long ...Slothrop wrote: And since there's enough stuff in music theory to take up a decent length university course, the stuff you pick up in half an hour on the web will probably only describe a fairly limited set of the most commonly used options."
i'm not a hippie,
but yo, b, i'm hip
but yo, b, i'm hip
Hugh wrote:quick question - what are the general rules about going from one scale to the next? Would I be able to move from a C major scale to any other major scale, and are there any rules about moving from a minor to a major scale?
cheers bro ur help is much appreciated
Starting in C major there are a few scales you're more likely to move to:
The Parallel Minor - C Minor
The Dominant - G Major (5th note of scale)
The Relative Minor - A Minor (6th note of scale)
The Relative Minor consists of all the same notes as the Tonic key just starting on A this time instead of C.
Oh and if you're starting in a minor key, let's say B minor, the relative major would be D Major (the 3rd note of the scale). This is obvious as B is the 6th note in D Major.
schenkers analysises suck....kindofblue272 wrote:A decent length university course? One can get a graduate degree in the subject ... Schenker's analysis of Beethoven's Ninth is like 700 pages long ...Slothrop wrote: And since there's enough stuff in music theory to take up a decent length university course, the stuff you pick up in half an hour on the web will probably only describe a fairly limited set of the most commonly used options."
- futures_untold
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Try learning about harmonic mixing here ---> http://www.mixedinkey.com/HowTo.aspxHugh wrote:quick question - what are the general rules about going from one scale to the next? Would I be able to move from a C major scale to any other major scale, and are there any rules about moving from a minor to a major scale?
cheers bro ur help is much appreciated
My guess is that one can apply the same theory to progressive scales within a tune...?
Oh yeah this can't be said enough.Slothrop wrote:It's good info (from your mum), although keep in mind the word "likely" - if you've already got an idea in mind and it doesn't fit into one of those categories then there's probably a more obscure category that it does fit into so go with it and worry about keys and scales later.
- Disco Nutter
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If you don't have note frequency charts (or anything to do) you can always multiply/divide the frequency of A (... 22.5, 55, 110, 220, 440, 880, 1760, 3520...) by 1,0595 (which is the twelfth root of two).
A great thing to do if you're lying at the beach with nothing to do. It's fun... at least for a while
A great thing to do if you're lying at the beach with nothing to do. It's fun... at least for a while
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