Saturday, December 23, 2006
Scale of the Day: G Flat Lydian 1% wide
The G Flat Lydian 1% wide Scale.
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This scale completes a long sequence. "Scale of the Day" will resume in the new year with a new cycle beginning with the first ever pentatonic scale of the day.
Friday, December 22, 2006
Thursday, December 21, 2006
Wednesday, December 20, 2006
Tuesday, December 19, 2006
Scale of the Day: E Lydian
See also:
E Lydian Notated
E Lydian Interval Analysis
This is the E Lydian Scale found on any conventionally tuned, equal tempered instrument.
Doing the Math
There's this great meme/questionnaire spinning around from Do The Math where Ethan Iverson has been probing musical opinions around the blogosphere:
GIVE US AN EXAMPLE OR TWO OF AN ESPECIALLY GOOD OR INTERESTING:
1. Movie score: The Battle of Algiers.
2. TV theme: Knight Rider.
3. Melody: "Lonely Woman" by Ornette Coleman. A painfully obvious choice - but a great melody. Some less obvious choices are: "A Portrait of Hank Williams Junior" by Wayne Horvitz and "Dust Devil" by Bill Horvitz. Great melodies from the brothers Horvitz.
4. Harmonic language: Ben Johnston's string quartets. Not to mention the entire Harry Partch catalogue (the portion that he didn't destroy by fire).
5. Rhythmic feel: Unspeakable by Bill Frisell.
6. Hip-hop track: "Television, The Drug of the Nation" by Disposable Heroes.
7. Classical piece: Twill by Twilight by Toru Takemitsu, Symphony no. 4 by Charles Ives and Socrate by Erik Satie.
8. Smash hit: "Burning Down the House" by the Talking Heads.
9. Jazz album: "Ah Um" by Charles Mingus, "The Jazz Messengers at the Cafe Bohemia Volumes 1 and 2" by Art Blakey and the Jazz Messengers and "Live at Tonic" by Medeski, Martin and Wood.
10. Non-American folkloric group: Ivo Papasov and his Orchestra.
11. Book on music: Meta Hodos and Meta Meta Hodos by James Tenney, Sounding the Complete Violin by Malcolm Goldstein and Jazz: Its Evolution and Essence by Andre Hodier.
BONUS QUESTIONS:
A) Name an surprising album (or albums) you loved when you were developing as a musician: something that really informs your sound but that we would never guess in a million years: Tarkus by Emerson Lake and Palmer.
B) Name a practitioner (or a few) who play your instrument that you think is underrated: Composer: Somei Satoh - Pianist: Paul Plimley
C) Name a rock or pop album that you wish had been a smash commercial hit (but wasn't, not really): Tocsin by Elliott Sharp/Carbon. Why can't everyone be whistling "Raptor" on their way into work in the morning? Am I the only one?
D) Name a favorite drummer, and an album to hear why you love that drummer: Joey Baron. Especially on Where in the World? by Bill Frisell.