I use MCompressor as my compressor plugin and the built-in EQ in Ableton
@gabrielmaximo7444
Жыл бұрын
Could you provide us the tabs, please? I've been searching a lot for them and I couldn't find anywhere
@meiji...
Жыл бұрын
didn't use any tabs tho, I'll see if I have time to do them but I'm not promising anything
@gabrielmaximo7444
Жыл бұрын
@@meiji... No problem, I'm just realy bad at learning a song by ear. Even you can't do them, thanks for helping me
@meiji...
Жыл бұрын
@@gabrielmaximo7444 IMO you should continue to train your ears to learn songs, also make sure to learn basic music theory at the same time. Once you have the grasp of it you can't really go back and it's really fun to learn that way. Idk when was the last time I read tabs, maybe it was like 5 years ago lol
@gabrielmaximo7444
Жыл бұрын
@@meiji... Totaly agree, I'm just waiting my vacations to start so I can continue studying music theory. I'll try training my ear, looks tough but I can imagine being much cooler learning songs like this. Thanks for the support man
@meiji...
Жыл бұрын
oh yeah and just a few pointers about music theory and playing by ear: Don't bother with modes (lydian, dorian etc...) and weird scales (blues etc...), I rarely use them myself and honestly don't understand the point of using them at all. You don't even have to bother with notes when you're playing, unless you're trying communicate about music with another person (like I'm doing just now). Just try to view any song in a *"major scale"* point of view and *learn how to play the major scale and octaves on bass.* Basically, almost any song has a major scale, and the "key" for a song is just the first note of its major scale. For example, this cover is in Eb (as in Eb major), that means that only the 7 notes from the Eb major scale can be played on this song (theoretically). Having *only 7 notes* to choose from to recreate the bassline is way much easier than having to guess each notes to play. So yeah, I'd say *recognizing the key of a song is your priority* when trying to learn it by ear. You get better at recognizing the key of a song by trying to recognize its *chord progressions* . Chord progression = series of numbers that refers to the chords in the major scale played in a song. (example : 2-5-1) What I mean by "chords in the major scale" is this: -the chord that can be built on the 1st note of the Major scale is a major chord, -2nd note is a minor chord -3 is minor -etc... Basically, the major scale is like this : *"MmmMMmD"* (M stands for major, m for minor, D for diminished) Each chord in the major scale has a *unique emotion* if played against each other (ex: the chord that starts on the 1st note of the major scale feels like "home", while the one on 6th note feels "sad" or "tragic") *I'd advise you this :* Play those 7 chords from the C major scale on any keyboard and listen to how they relate to one another. Once you kind of know what's going on, listen to an actual song in C and try to recognize these chords. Then if you succeed, you can start looking at other keys and songs, and eventually this cover. If I apply this to bass playing: The first time I heard this song I instantly told myself "ok, the song goes 2-5-3-6 on the verse and the chorus". "2-5-3-6" are the chords I recognized that are played in the verse and the chorus. The first notes of these chords are also called "roots" or "bass notes". *These "bass notes" are the notes that the bass should theoretically play.* Therefore I should play the notes 2,5,3,6 from the Eb major scale on my bass, along with some other notes that are also in the Eb scale This mindset makes playing by ear possible without trying out every note on your instrument. With that you'll be able to improvise as well. Good luck mate
@Moon-wx4jj
Жыл бұрын
From what anime is this?
@meiji...
Жыл бұрын
Kimagure Orange Road. Kanako Wada made many songs for this anime including some openings and endings
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