Friday, March 23, 2012

Learn to Play the Guitar


You want to learn an instrument, that's a good objective, but ask yourself if you can actually realise music (any kind) with only the use of your ears and detect changes in pattern. To be a musician amateur or professional, its not the notes and practise that's pre-requisite... Its the possession of a musical ear!!! Being one with the instrument you are handling. Take a weapon only if You think you are worthy of handling the pain it gives to master it!!!

Enough with the philosophy... Boring!!!! (",)

You can use a guitar to play anything ranging from country music to heavy metal. Learning the guitar is comparatively much easier to other instruments and once you've learnt the basics it only takes consistent practise to master it. It can between a week of dedicated interest and practise to learn the instruments basics or a whole year if one wants to learn it at leisure. We also recommend a beginner to get a good acoustic guitar and master it. (Electric guitars are recommended for lazy ass's cause its easier to play. Buy it only if you think you've got the moves for it.)

STEPS:

Buy an acoustic guitar whose strings do not have much gap between the fretboard and the strings. Hence you really Do not need to press that hard. You can also procure a digital tuner for tuning the strings and its recommended that with experience one should be able to tune the guitar only by the use of ones musical ear.

Buy a pick/plectrum that's light .50. You can experiment with all sought's of picks but for clear tone and easy sweep picking light pick's are good. Heavy picks are preferred for heavy metal genre.

Learn to read tabs: 
The best way to do this is to download a sheet of written tabs of your favourite band's favourite song and listen to the music and match the tab notations with it. This will give you an idea on how to read tabs. The down part of tabs is that there is no time signature per note therefore one has to be completely through with the tune of the music.
To read the tabs as,

E|------------------------------3------------------------||
B|-------3---------3-----------3------------------------||
G|---------2---------0---------0-----------------2p0--||
D|-0-0-------------------------0--0-----0h2p0--------||
A|------------3-3--------------2----0p2-------0-------||
E |-----------------------3-3---3-----------------------||


Sunday, March 18, 2012

General types of Music Know How

Alternative rock

Alternative rock (also called alternative music, alt rock or simply alternative) is a genre of rock music that emerged from the independent music underground of the 1980s and became widely popular by the 1990s. Although the term was most commonly associated in its commercial heyday with a loud, distorted guitar sound, its original meaning was broader, referring to a generation of musicians unified by their collective debt to either the musical style.

Alternative music can have a variety of instuments couplled up. It can be heavy or very light in tones or can also be a mixture of all. As the name itself suggests, the options are innumerable. The basic setup includes a vocalist, bass, lead, drums and then any imaginable instrument. Usually, it can be observed that the beats in alternative music are very innovative or genre mixed.

Blues

Blues is the name given to both a musical form and a music genre that originated in African-American communities of primarily the "Deep South" of the United States at the end of the 19th century from spirituals, work songs, field hollers, shouts and chants, and rhymed simple narrative ballads. The blues form, ubiquitous in jazz, rhythm and blues, and rock and roll is characterized by specific chord progressions, of which the twelve-bar blues chord progression is the most common. The blue notes that, for expressive purposes are sung or played flattened or gradually bent (minor 3rd to major 3rd) in relation to the pitch of the major scale, are also an important part of the sound.

The blues genre is based on the blues form but possesses other characteristics such as specific lyrics, bass lines and instruments. The term "the blues" refers to the "blue devils", meaning melancholy and sadness. The blues form is a cyclic musical form in which repeating progression of chords mirrors the call and response scheme commonly found in African and African-American music. The lyrics of early traditional blues verses probably often consisted of a single line repeated four times. The lines are often sung following a pattern closer to a rhythmic talk than to a melody. Early blues frequently took the form of a loose narrative. The singer voiced his or her "personal woes in a world of harsh reality: a lost love, the cruelty of police officers, oppression at the hands of white folk and hard times."

Carnatic Music

Carnatic music is a system of music commonly associated with the southern part of the Indian subcontinent, with its area roughly confined to four modern states of India: Andhra Pradesh, Karnataka, Kerala, and Tamil Nadu. It is one of two main sub-genres of Indian classical music that evolved from ancient Hindu traditions; the other sub-genre being Hindustani music, which emerged as a distinct form because of Persian and Islamic influences in North India. In contrast to Hindustani music, the main emphasis in Carnatic music is on vocal music; most compositions are written to be sung, and even when played on instruments, they are meant to be performed in gāyaki (singing) style.

Important elements of Carnatic music

Śruti commonly refers to musical pitch.It is the approximate equivalent of a tonic (or less precisely a key) in Western music; it is the note from which all the others are derived. It is also used in the sense of graded pitches in an octave. While there are an infinite number of sounds falling within a scale (or raga) in Carnatic music, the number that can be distinguished by auditory perception is twenty-two (although over the years, several of them have converged). In this sense, while sruti is determined by auditory perception, it is also an expression in the listener's mind.

Swara refers to a type of musical sound that is a single note, which defines a relative (higher or lower) position of a note, rather than a defined frequency. Swaras also refer to the solfege of Carnatic music, which consist of seven notes, "sa-ri-ga-ma-pa-da-ni" (compare with the Hindustani sargam: sa-re-ga-ma-pa-dha-ni or Western do-re-mi-fa-so-la-ti). These names are abbreviations of the longer names shadja, rishabha, gandhara, madhyama, panchama, dhaivata and nishada. Unlike other music systems, every member of the solfege (called a swara) has three variants. The exceptions are the drone notes, shadja and panchama (also known as the tonic and the dominant), which have only one form; and madhyama (the subdominant), which has two forms.

A raga in Carnatic music prescribes a set of rules for building a melody - very similar to the Western concept of mode.  It specifies rules for movements up (aarohanam) and down (avarohanam), the scale of which notes should figure more and which notes should be used more sparingly, which notes may be sung with gamaka (ornamentation), which phrases should be used or avoided, and so on.

Tala refers to the beat set for a particular composition (a measure of time). Talas have cycles of a defined number of beats and rarely change within a song. They have specific components, which in combinations can give rise to the variety to exist (over 108), allowing different compositions to have different rhythms.Carnatic music singers usually keep the beat by moving their hands up and down in specified patterns, and using their fingers simultaneously to keep time. Tala is formed with three basic parts (called angas) which are laghu, dhrtam, and anudhrtam, though complex talas may have other parts like plutam, guru, and kaakapaadam. There are seven basic tala groups which can be formed from the laghu, dhrtam, and anudhrtam: Dhruva tala, Matya tala, Rupaka tala, Jhampa tala, Triputa tala, Ata tala, Eka tala.

Country Music

Country music is a popular American musical style that began in the rural Southern United States in the 1920s. It takes its roots from Western cowboy and southeastern American folk music. Country music often consists of ballads and dance tunes with generally simple forms and harmonies accompanied by mostly string instruments such as banjoes, electric and acoustic guitars, fiddles such as violins, and harmonicas.

Saturday, March 17, 2012

Top 5 Indian bands

Here is a list of top 5 bands who we think are India's Best:

1. MotherJane


Motherjane is rock music from progressive India. Spiritual, intelligent, proudly honoring its roots & fearlessly questioning its rules. We have chosen our dreams over our fears, putting 100% of ourselves into 1% chances of success and 0% of ourselves into 99% chances of failure...
we have chosen what we are ''


Motherjane is an Indian rock band from Kochi, India, formed in 1996. The band consists of John Thomas (drums and percussion), Clyde Rozario (bass guitar), Deepu Sasidharan (guitar and backing vocals), Santosh Chandran (guitar) and Vivek Thomas - Vocals.  They have released a total of two studio albums, and three singles. Since their formation, different styles like progressive rock and Carnatic music have influenced their music.


In 2008, Motherjane opened for Megadeth and Machine Head in Rock in India 2008, Bangalore and for Opeth in Saarang '08 at IIT Madras. Motherjane has been a frequent headliner of college rock festivals across India and has performed at IIT Kanpur, IIT Madras, IIT Bombay, IIT Delhi,IIT Guwahati,AIIMS, VIT University and BITS Pilani amongst several others.

Motherjane was ranked #1 in Rock Street Journal's bands of the decade in 2010.In the 2010 AVIMA Awards, Motherjane won the award for the Most Popular Act of Asia, and lead vocalist Suraj Mani was awarded Best Rock Vocalist. In the 2009 AVIMA Awards, Motherjane was awarded the Best Rock Act.


Homepage: http://www.motherjane.in/

2. Avial

Avial is an Indian alternative rock band from Trivandrum, Kerala, India. The band is named after the popular South Indian dish Avial. The band consists of Tony John (vocals), Rex Vijayan (guitars), Mithun Puthanveetil (drums), and Binny Isaac (bass). The band's music is a fusion of native folk music from Kerala and Alternative Rock. The band was formed in 2003 in Thiruvananthapuram(Trivandrum) in Kerala, and focussed on rock performances only in Malayalam language.

 Avial's performances have been in major cities like Mumbai, Delhi, Bangalore, Madras, Cochin (Ernakulam), Trivandrum and so on. Shows were also held internationally in places like Dubai, Mauritius, Reunion Island etc. They were honored to perform at the Sakifo (Reunion) World Music Festival held in Mauritius that brought together 40 rock bands from across the world. Avial was the lone band to be selected from India to represent the country in the festival. The experience was special for the band since the crowd was multinational, mostly French. Impressed with their music, the popular Italian band 'A67  approached them to be a part of one of their forthcoming album, ‘Suburb’, its one song collaboration. The collaboration spawned the song "Chi Me Sape".

 At the Jack Daniels Annual Rock Awards 08-09, Avial walked away the winner of six awards – Song of the Year, Album of the Year, and Band of the Year, for both the popular choice and critics award categories. In their recent works, Avial did the popular song "Aanakkallan" in the malayalam movie Salt N' Pepper

Homepage: http://www.phat-phish.com/avial/