Q+A #25 - Why I own an Eb Real Book

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Thanks to Jake Waterman, eatmorbagels27, Sagar Kapoor, Thomas Vogel, Morpheus X, efopee, Toshivc, Chris Moraga, Justin Hung, The Magical Cake, Wheelly, Jeremy Keaton, Trellis Rose, Mario Nikolov, Jennifer Wade, Kynaston “Zelphie” Jamison and Motanum for their questions!
Listen to today's Q+A on iTunes, or on Soundcloud below
/ qa-podcast-why-do-i-ha...
:32 Staying in the zone during recording
2:34 Emotion and Bach’s music
4:50 Incidental music and AudioBlocks
8:10 Myers-Briggs Personality (and music preference)
9:08 Modern music sounds different than it used to
11:03 Vaporware is NOT anti-capitalist
13:28 Adam stars on a cooking show
13:51 MainStage for alternative temperaments
14:18 Why I probably won’t get a DMA
15:46 My experience auditioning for composition degrees
17:45 Why I have an Eb real book (when I don’t play any Eb instruments)
19:38 My thoughts on Cruise Ship gigs
21:41 The importance of knowing good subs
22:38 Musicians have to be extroverted
24:24 Get a compressor pedal now!
24:42 Classical musicians have crazy stamina and can do 3-hour gigs
26:25 Would you be a pro musician in Singapore?
27:37 Can you include me in the Q+A?
SUPPORT ME ON PATREON
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Check out some of my music
sungazermusic.bandcamp.com
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Peace,
Adam

Пікірлер: 661

  • @MisterAppleEsq
    @MisterAppleEsq6 жыл бұрын

    I'd watch Adam Neely's Cooking Lessons.

  • @timesink8947

    @timesink8947

    6 жыл бұрын

    I laughed harder at that smash cut than you'd believe, oh my god that was great

  • @LukeBeadles

    @LukeBeadles

    5 жыл бұрын

    And as always... *STOVE*

  • @benjaminwaddill1625

    @benjaminwaddill1625

    5 жыл бұрын

    Same

  • @renerpho

    @renerpho

    5 жыл бұрын

    And he's absolutely right about the grapefruit taste.

  • @Steeyuv

    @Steeyuv

    4 жыл бұрын

    Mister Apple I’d watch his paint drying vids.

  • @gutsman85_86
    @gutsman85_865 жыл бұрын

    "I'm on a mission from Gahd." - Bach (probably)

  • @jamescannon167

    @jamescannon167

    4 жыл бұрын

    Bach: *plays rawhide theme for 6 hours*

  • @talkingbasslessons
    @talkingbasslessons7 жыл бұрын

    Spot on with the Cruise ship gigs. I did ships for years and you find many musicians become locked into that gig because the longer you do it, the tougher it is to make the transition back to land. Several years can pass you by very quickly but back home people move on in their professions and lives in general so any kind of networking just disappears. The money and lifestyle is very alluring and can hold you there for longer than you might want but I guess it all depends on your aims and aspirations.

  • @sigiriabeysekara8723

    @sigiriabeysekara8723

    3 жыл бұрын

    Heiiiiiiiiiiiiii

  • @dizyart6996
    @dizyart69967 жыл бұрын

    If all ads in real life used this format, I'd be a very happy man! THIS IS proper advertising (well, endorsement) done proper properly. Unapologetic, to-the-point, well structured, with informative content and CONTEXT!! Adam, I was afraid of the day you gave in to advertising. But now I see my fears were unnecessary. As I should have expected, this was a thorough and well thought presentation, worthy of Adam's intelligence, interests and our time. I now know what Audioblocks is and when and why I should use it. And it also shows that Adam takes what he gives us very seriously. I really wouldn't mind more advertising like this. If you are an intelligent viewer, please upvote this comment to show our support for Adam's great work and his struggle to consistently make great, free content for us to enjoy and learn. Seriously proper kudos, Adam.

  • @LootFragg

    @LootFragg

    6 жыл бұрын

    I upvoted because I agree with the core message, not so much the intelligent viewer bit.

  • @josep43767

    @josep43767

    5 жыл бұрын

    I totally agree. the advertisement actually added content to the video, not just being a thing to sit through.

  • @noahzimmerman7913

    @noahzimmerman7913

    5 жыл бұрын

    Why would you write this much about an ad?

  • @AscensionUSA
    @AscensionUSA7 жыл бұрын

    As a bass clef player TIL i can read an alto sax part without transposing.

  • @laurierbaribeau7785

    @laurierbaribeau7785

    7 жыл бұрын

    - add 3 flats to the key (when there are sharps, negate sharps instead) - Accidentals will be wrong on B's, E's and A's (sharp->natural and natural->flat) ie. A# means A natural, since in treble that was originally an F#. You'll find you need to learn which notes have wrong accidentals or you'll forever play wrong notes. I forget if more notes have problems (maybe C's and F's, but the E's and A's you see the most) - It helps to know what key you're in as a first step, this will help with the many incorrect accidentals It is easy except for the haunting wrong notes that keep finding a way of creeping in.

  • @xSh4d0WxFoXx98

    @xSh4d0WxFoXx98

    7 жыл бұрын

    Yeah same, I'm an alto player and can play bass clef pieces on alto without transposing too

  • @nou6990

    @nou6990

    4 жыл бұрын

    JordiSax Yeah. Bari player here, very useful for playing bass parts

  • @lewisblakley8288

    @lewisblakley8288

    3 жыл бұрын

    I love using that trick.

  • @deltabilly1
    @deltabilly13 жыл бұрын

    This channel blows my mind. I’ve been a professional musicians for close to 30 years; I wish this sort of thing has been freely available in the 80s and 90s. We were just kids trying to get gigs. Such a different world. But we could have benefited from a broad resource of info like what you provide. Kudos. It’s a very very different music world today. Glad someone is making sense out of it.

  • @dabeamer42
    @dabeamer427 жыл бұрын

    Old classical musician here -- you nailed Bach in the second Q/A. Good stuff.

  • @Termsterms
    @Termsterms7 жыл бұрын

    Hey Adam. I've been watching your videos for a while, but never commented. I just wanted to take a moment to express how much I appreciate what you do, and the knowledge you share (and how clear and articulate you are). It's been of great help to me. A very sincere thank you!

  • @dannybrickwell
    @dannybrickwell7 жыл бұрын

    Classic Adam, even when he's shilling he's educating. Love your work!

  • @AdamNeely

    @AdamNeely

    7 жыл бұрын

    i aim to please!

  • @jkhan337
    @jkhan3377 жыл бұрын

    I'm an INTJ as well and I found when I was in school for audio engineering that I became extroverted around fellow musicians/engineers. It's easy for even an introvert to get excited around like minded people

  • @maldivirdragonwitch

    @maldivirdragonwitch

    3 жыл бұрын

    Agreed. As an introvert myself, I find that's what the whole problem is about: most introverts are "nichey" people who are not exposed to like-minded peers in the early stages of life (that's when we get the feeling for the world around us). That makes us not want to engage in a world that obviously doesn't understand us. Luckily, the internet is connecting us in ways that was never possible before, but that also brings the drawback of getting addicted to exclusively virtual comradery. Whoever is struggling with this - I feel you.

  • @tz4601

    @tz4601

    2 жыл бұрын

    @Mank Hobley I have heard this described as being "people-oriented" versus "object-oriented." Object here not necessarily meaning literally objects, but basically, are you someone who gets excited about other sharing experiences with other people, or are you someone who gets excited about _____ , including sharing your love of _____ with other people? The two are kinda different things. I don't think it's that introverts live in a world that doesn't understand them, and if only everyone around them were (let's say) musicians, they would become constant extroverts. I think introverts have vibrant inner lives (this is how introversion is usually described); we gain a lot of enjoyment and satisfaction from various pursuits; so yes, that excitement can definitely bleed into sharing that excitement with like-minded people. I found this when I took my hobby of programming and made it into a career; suddenly I was around other programmers and I instantly clicked with them, meaning I suddenly loved going to work. Having said that, there are definite limits. Even with music, I can really deeply enjoy playing with others for a few hours, but before long I'm drained and thinking about how nice it would be to be playing my piano alone at home instead.

  • @mharbaugh
    @mharbaugh7 жыл бұрын

    Everything you said about cruise ship work is spot on. I've been working boats for about 10 years - The music scene back home has more or less disappeared in the last couple of years, so at this point I'm all in with the cruise ship (and I'm OK with that).

  • @Nic33rd
    @Nic33rd7 жыл бұрын

    Thanks for putting these in podcast form, Adam!

  • @nick1237811
    @nick12378117 жыл бұрын

    i just realized that The Lick is played at the outro of Englishman in New York from Sting

  • @RCAvhstape

    @RCAvhstape

    7 жыл бұрын

    Ha ha thanks for ruining that song lol!

  • @GregF71

    @GregF71

    7 жыл бұрын

    Branford Marsalis (sax player on EINY) uses the lick so much (and so well) he even used it in one of his tunes' head (Doctone, from his masterpiece album Requiem)

  • @victorcercasin
    @victorcercasin7 жыл бұрын

    Hey, Adam. As a not at all musical person, I struggle coming up with smart stuff to ask. Any advice? Please note that my sole purpose is to be answered in a video and I have no intent of actualy learning anything.

  • @bobfike7231

    @bobfike7231

    6 жыл бұрын

    My best advice is to mine questions from other KZread channels that Adam has not yet addressed on his channel. The best way to mine questions is with a small, one-hand pickaxe, not the larger two-handed pickaxes known to pop culture. I prefer "Estes"-brand tools, because I find them consistently to be of high quality, and I value that they are made in the USA, but I have experience with other types that are almost as good while also being more affordable. When you begin to mine the questions, do NOT use your pickaxe to tear away more material from the bottom of the exposure, as this might lead to rockfall, which could result in humancrush. Instead, dig through the slag at the foot of the exposure, and use the pickaxe to tear into rocks that are likely to contain questions (the presence of agate veins is a dead giveaway, though pay close attention to anything containing specular hematite). Make sure to wear tough gloves and proper footwear, and happy hunting!

  • @9TheEarth7

    @9TheEarth7

    5 жыл бұрын

    Hey man, loved your writing in 'Les Misérables', it was really an epic story

  • @jacobynt6851

    @jacobynt6851

    5 жыл бұрын

    Bob fike, that was the best re troll I've ever seen.

  • @HanBurritoz
    @HanBurritoz7 жыл бұрын

    3:35 But why does Bach have self references like the B-A-C-H (or Bb-A-C-B) motive? Coincidence?

  • @milopfultz

    @milopfultz

    7 жыл бұрын

    He also made a cantata about coffee, so Adam is probably speaking mostly of his sacred music, as most of what he wrote was as the main composer of a church. The Art of Fugue, cello suites, etc., are all pieces he made in his free time, IIRC.

  • @XxAmageddonxX

    @XxAmageddonxX

    5 жыл бұрын

    it is a motive of death. because if you link the notes the right way it forms a crucifix

  • @KKIcons

    @KKIcons

    5 жыл бұрын

    Cool! A good way to see the visual patterns in Bach is watching the animated scores on Smalin's channel.

  • @federico4639

    @federico4639

    5 жыл бұрын

    It's probably more about the legacy of the Bach family than just a self reference

  • @korny92
    @korny927 жыл бұрын

    Thanks for the podcast version, so good to hear while driving!

  • @JasonGeddie
    @JasonGeddie7 жыл бұрын

    As a trumpet player, looking into the older baroque style of playing is amazing. At college this year I managed to get my hands on a Baroque Trumpet and it was a totally different beast

  • @karakhanzi
    @karakhanzi7 жыл бұрын

    That's the best sponsor insertion I've seen yet. Which is to say, I stuck around and got educated, and didn't skip it. Props man, love your work!

  • @Megatallica572
    @Megatallica5727 жыл бұрын

    Great video! I think this is the. Best use of an ad I've ever seen, keep up the awesome work!

  • @jonathanzilk6089
    @jonathanzilk60897 жыл бұрын

    I enjoyed this one more than most. I like how you had similar topics throughout.

  • @alejandronieto576
    @alejandronieto5767 жыл бұрын

    Adam, again, thank you. your videos are very enriching.

  • @nathanbraswell7673
    @nathanbraswell76737 жыл бұрын

    Thank you so much for doing podcasts

  • @nikikovacs1923
    @nikikovacs19237 жыл бұрын

    As always, your talks are highly enjoyable even for non-musicians. Thanks!

  • @nicktenwolde3154
    @nicktenwolde31547 жыл бұрын

    I've never noticed it if you've been doing in your past videos, but you use "the lick" for every transition and its awesome!

  • @jcortese3300
    @jcortese33007 жыл бұрын

    Chuckling over the Eb real book mind trick; I've recently -- like within the last day -- done the same thing with A mode plainchant. I can play it on a D Major Irish flute by pretending that the clef on the front is an alto clef, then boom. It falls into place. Neat to run into a video a day after I discovered that trick myself!

  • @travishutton9750
    @travishutton97505 жыл бұрын

    I played in the pit as a percussionist for the first time this weekend and it was very interesting. I didn’t get to practice with the rest of the orchestra as I was only a stand in. And I often got lost because this new type of performance was completely foreign to me

  • @user-ci7ue4fb5q
    @user-ci7ue4fb5q Жыл бұрын

    my trick as a producer for recording anxious musicians, first "practice it" "let's try another idea", "play again the first one" "OK, final rehearsal before we record it" and all that time the engineer...is recording..It works all the time...

  • @MrDylan1031
    @MrDylan10317 жыл бұрын

    You're the dopest Adam. Great musical food for thought!

  • @stevencleere4912
    @stevencleere49126 жыл бұрын

    I love that you actually started to answer the grapefruit cooking dream question

  • @ForcesOfRandom
    @ForcesOfRandom7 жыл бұрын

    One who thinks Bach's instrumental work doesn't contain any clear emotion should listen for commonalities in musical content to his vocal works. Take "Können Tränen meiner Wangen" from the St. Matthews Passion; clearly a tearful, grieving song. It's not far-fetched that a grieving Bach would take up his violin and improvise a similar kind of flowing melody! For other settings in the passion the music is completely different. "Sind Blitze sind Donner" invokes thunderstorm and hellfire with fast bass-runs and short staccato-riffs. Also, much of his music wasn't mostly for the glory of god! There are tons of instrumental show-off pieces in keyboard concertos and toccatas, written as a hobby besides paying church works, and musical jokes on drinking songs. Greetings from Germany! Love your videos.

  • @gracepadilla8887
    @gracepadilla88877 жыл бұрын

    I agree with you about Bach's music. I have been playing it for all of my music career and it has always been for me the most difficult to understand, compared to other music, but it has also prepared me so well, that other periods of music now seem to be much more easy to play and interpretate thanks to the complexity of Bach's music, specially for the piano, where you're supposed to be musical with each and everyone of the voices sounding at the same time, which is crazy, but is totally a challenge every musician should do. So yeah, Bach rules!

  • @grberendzenproductions312
    @grberendzenproductions3123 жыл бұрын

    I am an introvert bass player as well. I started out playing clarinet, worked my way to first chair and then wanted to spread out. Luckily, I had an instructor who saw my ability and I was at a school that had a baritone sax just sitting around. He gave me a beginner book, and tips on embouchure position and told me to learn at my own pace. I was leading the school jazz band, playing bari sax in about 4 months. The only sax I haven't played is soprano, which I despise. I also had my hand at the school's bass clarinet and played it in a few concerts. I was also taking beginning 6 string guitar at the time, basically playing cowboy chords, when I realized all the forming rock bands needed bass players. I bought a bass and amp and just started playing, by ear, without any specific bass guitar lessons. I was also acting and I eventually majored in theater, combined all my training and became a theatrical sound designer, mixing live sound, recording custom sound effects and finding period music for shows from all eras.

  • @Wheelly1
    @Wheelly17 жыл бұрын

    Thank you for this q&a session. You are keeping to amaze me by constantly delivering unusual, unpredicted opinions on all these subjects. Another words, you usually say what did not expected from reading the list of subjects before starting the video. It's supposedly one of the keys to your success here on youtube.

  • @jacobsaintjames
    @jacobsaintjames4 жыл бұрын

    For a difficult part I usually do between 6 and 12 takes. My best takes come roughly 2/3 of the way through. When you give up the idea of nailing it on the first take, you give yourself a few times through to get warmed up and comfortable in situ. When enough time has passed, you find yourself in the zone, and every little imperfection you remember for the next time around until you get it perfect. Sometimes just having this no-stress mentality will allow you to nail it in the first few takes. Worst case, you will have lots of material for comping.

  • @RCAvhstape
    @RCAvhstape7 жыл бұрын

    You actually managed to make an ad pitch into something informative. Achievement unlocked.

  • @FranLegon
    @FranLegon7 жыл бұрын

    hey Adam! I just wanted to tell you you blended that advertisement very well. That website looks very interesting and useful. I'm telling you this because you most likely struggled trying to show it's truly something you want to advertise 😀 keep these videos coming!

  • @AndrewBeals
    @AndrewBeals6 жыл бұрын

    One of my high school band teachers taught me "The Bass Clef Trick" back then, as I was playing bari sax at the time. "Imagine that it's treble clef, and add three sharps." We know that this works because the key of E-flat major has three flats (as you well know) and bass parts are written in concert pitch. Since then, I've since switched off to clarinet and have been playing just soprano and bass in B-flat, so when I was recently loaned an E-flat contra alto and tried the trick again, I was very pleasantly surprises, that not only I could still do the "bass clef trick", but that I could sight-read a bassoon part while playing in my community band.

  • @juandemeirleir6497
    @juandemeirleir64977 жыл бұрын

    Assuming you read anything else than written notes, what have been your favourite books on musicology or music theory? Love your videos, they inspire me a lot! Keep up the awesome work :)

  • @ajarofnutella
    @ajarofnutella5 жыл бұрын

    17:44 GASP IS THAT BG MUSIC BIRD ON THE WING?! *SUNGAZER VOL 2 EARLY SONG LEAK EASTER EGG*

  • @brassbandit
    @brassbandit4 жыл бұрын

    In the UK, brass band music is written in transposed pitch in treble clef, which is how I learned to play Eb Tuba, so had to use the same trick to read bass clef concert pitch parts in wind band/orchestral music. INTJ (once INTP) here.

  • @theopminer952
    @theopminer9524 жыл бұрын

    That cheat with Eb transposed treble clef is something I figured out my junior year in highschool after I took music theory and was trying to take a look at one of the saxophone parts for our marching music for the upcoming fall

  • @teistix
    @teistix5 жыл бұрын

    I don't mean to be overly critical about such a trivial matter, but this has to be said: Myers-Briggs is a pseudo-science. It can not produce reliable guidelines for which people will be compatible with one another, i.e. you can't say that an INTJ wont click with an ESFP, or that two ENTPs is one too many. I get that it's fun to find a new label to describe yourself in a sort of self-exploration kinda way, but it has, and continues to lead to, among other things, job denials. Again, it's a trivial subject, but I hear an alarm ring when you say that it might be an interesting inquiry for working with other musicians...

  • @TanisAnnicchiarico

    @TanisAnnicchiarico

    4 жыл бұрын

    As somebody studying psychology...THANK YOU! The MBTI was put together by a mother-daughter team of housewives who listened to a Freudian radio show during the day together and comprised it together. They have no scientific background at all, period. The *most* that the MBTI should be used for is part of a broad-spectrum indexing method (as in one of many tests being used).

  • @ayompedro

    @ayompedro

    4 жыл бұрын

    who sells MBTI as science for starters? Pseudo-science are things that try to fool people being sold as science. Pseudo-science is not everything that is not science.

  • @KY_100

    @KY_100

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@ayompedro yeah at the pseudoscience label fits perfectly.

  • @waterguyroks

    @waterguyroks

    4 жыл бұрын

    I mean, psychology is a pseudo-science.

  • @manan-543

    @manan-543

    4 жыл бұрын

    A personality test leads to job denial. Really? Is it actually taken seriously? Which types of jobs are they? If anyone knows it would helpful. I'm just curious. Sounds ridiculous if it's true.

  • @RCAvhstape
    @RCAvhstape7 жыл бұрын

    Adam, about the difference between what classical composers intended and what orchestras play today, there was an awesome episode of Radio Lab on public radio a while back where they talked about Beethoven's 5th being meant to have a much higher tempo than most people are used to hearing. When they played a recording of it played fast it totally changed the vibe of the piece, made it much more urgent and less overbearing. IF you search on "radiolab podcast" it's pretty easy to find.

  • @wrenclark4907
    @wrenclark49072 жыл бұрын

    hahah yep the Eb transposition trick is real useful (especially since i used to play bari sax, so whenever the band’s bassist lost his music (which admittedly, was a lot) he’d always read off of mine lmao)

  • @addyd.3140
    @addyd.31406 жыл бұрын

    Prelude in Eb Minor from WTC I is extremely emotional for me.

  • @IamUncledeuce
    @IamUncledeuce7 жыл бұрын

    After holding down the bass chair with several very accomplished pianists, horn bands, and a long stint with a 22 piece swing outfit, I can see where the Eb Real Book would be beneficial. We always had charts and many were Hal Leonard intermediate+. Nice arrangements too.

  • @33BiGBoB33
    @33BiGBoB337 жыл бұрын

    Hey Adam, I'm in a metal band and we are trying out different scales. We're tired of all this "SHRED DIS SHIEEEET" and "MORE STRING, MORE METAL" stuff and we're currently experimenting with some gypsy scales and they made metal great again. It would be awesome to get some names of artists like Django Reinhardt that was know to use those scales. Have you ever tried them in your music?

  • @LucasJKey

    @LucasJKey

    7 жыл бұрын

    33BiGBoB33 I think Al Di Meola is another great in this vain .

  • @AbigailPoirier
    @AbigailPoirier7 жыл бұрын

    Saw the title and wondered if you'd figured out the same Eb trick I did...yup! It's pretty convenient if you ever need to play along with a saxophonist and only have his book. I exercise my brain by transposing songs into multiple different keys. If it's a memorized song, I'll do all 12, if I'm reading music, I usually stay within a 4th of the original key.

  • @JacobDFerguson
    @JacobDFerguson7 жыл бұрын

    dude you have no idea how stoked i get when I see you post a new q&a's! thanks for the lovely content (:

  • @luchadorito

    @luchadorito

    7 жыл бұрын

    Jacob Ferguson I know right? Just something to look forward to listen to as soon as I get home

  • @gregariouslyme9492
    @gregariouslyme94927 жыл бұрын

    In regards to the question on recording anxiety- Another recording tip is to do pre-production/demos on your own before heading into the actual studio. That will give you an opportunity to practice your part, the process of recording, and you get to hear what you sound like so you know what you can work on before the real takes. I also like the idea of just listening to the whole song and practicing "in your head" only before doing a real take. I think Adam has mentioned the study where thinking about what you need to do in a practice and practicing in your head can be just as productive as the real, physical practice, so maybe give that a shot. Finally I'm a big believer in taking breaks - those long breaks you take can be significantly more productive that just trying to record the same thing over and over again.

  • @ruperth8902
    @ruperth89027 жыл бұрын

    The lick! I'd finally got it out if my head

  • @shcxatter2
    @shcxatter27 жыл бұрын

    hey Adam, I was just wondering if you would make a video or series of videos on the history of western music theory, I know it's a really complex topic, but it really boggles my mind how can someone think of such complicated system and organize it so well.

  • @Petrolhead99999
    @Petrolhead999995 жыл бұрын

    I'm a bari player, so I have to play tuba or bass parts frequently. The trick is: add 3 flats and skip natural to go from Eb to concert. If you're playing in concert F with 2 sharps in Eb, you will end up with 1 flat. If you're playing in Ab, you'll have 4 flats, etc.

  • @obknowles
    @obknowles7 жыл бұрын

    Adam: As a fellow INTJ, I really appreciate your comments on the need to be extroverted. As an amateur musician and a professional nurse, I find myself needing to be extroverted a lot. I find that treating these situations as a role play helps. I AM and introvert, that is who I am. I can not BE an extrovert. However, I can be extroverted when I need to be, but I find it draining. My ideal patient is one who relays information that I need and answers my questions succinctly and lets me get on with my job with no social interaction. However, most patients expect, and even need, a nurse who is socially engaging. So, to do my job well, I become extroverted. This idea, I think applies to any job in which social interaction is required (which is nearly every job). Introverts need to learn how to be extroverted if they want to succeed in life. You gave some good advice there.

  • @mitchellgeddes8829
    @mitchellgeddes88297 жыл бұрын

    Appreciate your use of 'the lick' when you introduce commenters

  • @gabriel_moulin
    @gabriel_moulin7 жыл бұрын

    Great natural lighting Adam!

  • @Primemantis108
    @Primemantis1087 жыл бұрын

    Thank you, Adam Neely. I quick did the Myers-Briggs test online and it spooky accurate. It appears that I am an INTP-T (non-planner and turbulent type), this explains a whole lifetime of bizarre behaviour. Also, explains many of my personal issues I have. Also been checking out a number of INTP personal interpretation that somehow resonates with me. So yeah, thank you, and keep up the intellectual content.

  • @monkyjamman
    @monkyjamman7 жыл бұрын

    Just further inform you with the whole Eb thing. I am an Alto Sax player and I have used this trick for a while, when people (mostly elderly guitar conducters) coulnd't figure how to transpose to Eb even on a computer i just told them to give me the same sheet music in the bass clef. What you just need to do is I add 3 sharps or go 3 steps forward in the circle of fifths. So what you do is just go three steps back, for instance if you have a sheet music in the Eb book that is in the key of A major just pretend is all in the key of C and whenever you come to an "F#" or an "C#" just remove the sharp!

  • @patrickthames8853
    @patrickthames88534 жыл бұрын

    Concerning the Bach comment... The religious aspect of Bach's music lends itself to the emotional... Bach definitely intended his music to express the beauty and majesty of God. Your comment about feeling the grief is spot on... i believe that Bach fully intended his listeners to be moved emotionally by his music. Your return comment was kind and focused in relation to the accepted academic interpretations of the Baroque period but the truth is that the music of Bach hinges on the profound, deep experience humans find when encountering the miraculous and amazing world of Deity.

  • @LuisJimenez-nd2pl
    @LuisJimenez-nd2pl7 жыл бұрын

    Hey Adam! Thanks for the videos; I learn something new every time I visit your channel. Could please talk about what subliminal Music is, and how effective it is? Thanks :)

  • @ThePianofreaky
    @ThePianofreaky7 жыл бұрын

    I play alto saxophone, and I don't have an Eb real book yet. Can you send me yours? :D

  • @coconutnut6278

    @coconutnut6278

    4 жыл бұрын

    @Gustavo Campos bought*

  • @nicktaylor1902

    @nicktaylor1902

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@coconutnut6278 thank you, 69Dead pool69

  • @ap7390

    @ap7390

    3 жыл бұрын

    @Gustavo Campos bought***

  • @autofigure00
    @autofigure005 жыл бұрын

    Heyyyyyy I'm intj, I also took it in person and I got a book with the in depth descriptions of the types and how they interact with each other which was neat. Not that I ever use it but it was a cool thing to learn and see.

  • @girlinagale
    @girlinagale4 жыл бұрын

    I'm introverted and enjoy playing a two hour live set of solo minimal techno. Afterwards I'm not interested in partying, just want to get home to chill down for a couple of hours before sleeping.

  • @MooImABunny
    @MooImABunny7 жыл бұрын

    I love how you take on the comment at 13:30 about the grapefruit XD best part of the video

  • @tasfa10
    @tasfa107 жыл бұрын

    The dream part was hilarious! xD

  • @KidnapstedGC
    @KidnapstedGC7 жыл бұрын

    There's something called "Historically Informed Performance Practice." It is the idea of performing whatever music you are playing as close as possible to how it would have been performed. These performers will do anything from changing the tuning of their instrument, to taking off certain parts of their instrument (like end pins on cello or chin rests on violins), to playing entirely different instruments. The problem with this, however, is that there is no way of knowing exactly how music before audio recording sounded. Historically Informed Performance Practice is weirdly enough, a relatively new concept, and there's a lot we don't know. The only thing we can do is search for writing that describes the performance of old, and play that. I think the idea of classical music being boring comes from modern performers playing this older music in a modern style. Go listen to Feodor Chaliapin sing "A Swan" by Grieg, then listen to Håkan Hagegård perform it. Personally, I just can't listen to the newer recording.

  • @cheeckjerokee
    @cheeckjerokee7 жыл бұрын

    I lawled so hard at the dreams bit.

  • @Phazonviper
    @Phazonviper7 жыл бұрын

    Hi, before I start this wall of text, I would like to say I enjoy the content you make and feel that it's getting better every video. I formed a "band" (idk if you can call it that) in school and we have quite a few problems. First, and most importantly, we have near to no focus when it comes to playing songs. We always start with a song we have in mind and it ends up in us just playing completely different riffs, and the drummer just being loud. How can I instill an order in this scenario? Because I hate doing nothing after we booked a school's practice room. Second, our vocals are practically non-existent. I've considered learning how to sing (I've heard It's not the norm on bass), and our drummer's our best singer. Is the effort to find a vocalist worth it? Or should I just learn to sing/let the drummer sing? Finally, and least importantly, what do you think of bands that form in schools? -------------------- Just for reference: • Me (bass): I've been playing for nearly 4 months and I can play things like 'Hysteria' etc. I don't mess around as much as the guy on guitar but I do occasionally mess around (Seinfeld theme, of course). I don't know much music theory (something I know for a fact is useful). • Guitar: He doesn't practice much, mostly plays games (I myself, can't blame him too much for that) or does other stuff. He knows a lot of his shit though, chords etc. Bit sloppy recently. •Drums: I can't blame him for not practicing much, as he doesn't own a drum-kit, but he's keen on learning. But he prefers songs less 'rock' oriented and more 'urban' (I doubt that's the correct term). •Vocals: She practically never turns up, and not too keen on actually being a part of the band. She also dislikes music theory, as she perceives it as being prescriptive :( ------------------- Thanks

  • @junglefett

    @junglefett

    3 жыл бұрын

    Hey, it's been four years, how's your band going?

  • @nicholasscott9672
    @nicholasscott96727 жыл бұрын

    I turned down a gig on a crystal cruiser because they didn't want to pay me and were going to drop me off on the other side of Australia 4000km from my home. They weren't open to any negotiation, which is a shame because I was excited when I got the call. Cruise jobs can be highly exploitative.

  • @MasterMeijer
    @MasterMeijer7 жыл бұрын

    Hey Mr. Neely, Is it possible to record and mix decent quality music if all you have is a guitar, a bass, an amp, a laptop and an interface?

  • @owendubs

    @owendubs

    7 жыл бұрын

    Of course, I do it all the time. It just depends on what your standards are on fidelity, really. Like, if you really want things to sound clean; you should either audio treat your room or go for the cheap option and just stack loads of blankets and tarps in your closet, and record there with your laptop. Personally, I'm way too lazy for that; so I just keep things lo-fi. :)

  • @SaberToothPortilla

    @SaberToothPortilla

    7 жыл бұрын

    Oh, definitely. People do it all the time. There's nothing in that scenario that's explicitly limiting your potential for fidelity, apart from your own skill and *maybe* the quality of your gear and miscellaneous mixing tools. I mean, afterall, that's sort-of the large portion of modern tracking. If you wanna get super anal about things, your next biggest factor would be your environment. Noise can be gated out, but the louder it is, the more you're cutting into your actual signal, but after that... Anything else you could add does surprisingly little to better the quality of a mix. Pick up a book or two on audio-engineering/production and start fudging around with some basic stuff as you learn (most fundamental being EQs and Compressors, after that things start to be much more creative/personal concerns). Good luck!

  • @MasterMeijer

    @MasterMeijer

    7 жыл бұрын

    SaberToothPortilla Thank you very much for your elaborated answers!

  • @ILikeFeelingElectric

    @ILikeFeelingElectric

    5 жыл бұрын

    Rene Meijer Yes. All depends on your mixing skills. With regards to recording, I’d highly recommend recording through your interface rather than through a mic if you’re on low budget

  • @jenniferwade1748
    @jenniferwade17487 жыл бұрын

    Wow! You responded to my comment! Thanks, and points taken!

  • @irishmuso7129
    @irishmuso71294 жыл бұрын

    I stumbled across the Eb shortcut when I was transposing horn section parts. The unison passages for trombone and alto occupied the same lines and spaces on the clef. However, as you point out, you have to realise there are a few issues with the key signature. Key of D in bass clef has 2 sharps whereas the equivalent alto key - it's B - has 5 sharps. So in that key you have to remember to play all G# D# and A# notes as G D and A - or just mark them in on the real book. A good exercise in itself if you are really obsessive. You could try the Bb book which would be more difficult in some ways and easier in others. Or perhaps a viola book in alto clef? Great channel - It's all good

  • @lowbrassman2000
    @lowbrassman20007 жыл бұрын

    Just recently discovered your channel and absolutely love it. I'm still going through your videos, so maybe this was addressed already, but how do you approach your live setup for your upright? I've tried many techniques for limiting extra vibrations on the bass itself as well as different amp/speaker combinations but it's always a challenge cutting frequencies for feedback vs. tone. Ideas? Thanks for all that you do!

  • @MusiCaninesTheMusicalDogs
    @MusiCaninesTheMusicalDogs7 жыл бұрын

    My tip for the first question, about focusing on what you're playing when recording. A caffeine pill. Caffeine is scientifically proven to help with concentration, among other things. I have a home studio and I always take one before recording sessions, and other non music related stuff which depends a lot on brain activity, and it helps.

  • @xXBiShOXx
    @xXBiShOXx7 жыл бұрын

    Hey Adam, been watching your videos for a while and first off thanks for all the quality content. I've been wondering for a while, what is it that draws you to the Fender P-bass over any other type of bass in the world? Is it something to do with how neutral the tone is and how that fits in the sonic context of a full band or is there something else specific about the instrument that you love? Personally I find that while I love the look of the P-bass (the pick-guard especially) the tone doesn't really stick out in a way that grabs my attention whenever I've played one and compared it to other basses I've played, however that could be because I've only played lower tier models (Squires mostly) and the pickups may not be bringing much to the table.

  • @deanfromtarget3554
    @deanfromtarget35546 жыл бұрын

    I already knew the Eb transposition thing, and it was great as a trick so that I didn't have to waste time transposing (I play bari sax, but that's not the only instrument I play)

  • @Vanamutt
    @Vanamutt7 жыл бұрын

    Bach was known to improvise in the church he played at for hours at a time, he pushed himself to be able to play 4 melodies at the same time, there are accounts of him strapping a wooden peg on his nose, so he could play an extra voice on the organ with it. Bach's compositions are filled with his personal emotion, Partita E-Major for example. His Fugue on the theme B-A-C-H (H is the German equivalent of Bb, B is Bb) is literally trying to put his name in to the composition. To me it doesn't seem like Bach did it only to praise god through music, Bach was the OG jazzman.

  • @NeilABliss
    @NeilABliss7 жыл бұрын

    Eb =Bass first trick I ever learned. Add three flats, flip the Clef. most useful use of real books for me was forcing myself to read treble clef both transposed (Bb treble) and non-transposed (C treble) As a trombonist this opened up all sorts of potential sight transposing.

  • @Erebus5620
    @Erebus56207 жыл бұрын

    Dig the podcast idea!

  • @callummoodley6311
    @callummoodley63117 жыл бұрын

    Could you do a video on harmonics? I've been listening to victor wooten and his use of harmonics just amazes me

  • @luchadorito

    @luchadorito

    7 жыл бұрын

    Particularly the constant associacion of the tonality of harmonic overtones and cleanliness, beauty. Its been bugging me for a while. For whatever reason we have learned to associate the sound of an overtone in key played by itself with cleanliness, beauty, etc. Y THO

  • @sluagh5534
    @sluagh55347 жыл бұрын

    i recall, when i was deep into my emo phase, posting in a bass group on facebook asking how to tune to drop C, to my dismay, instead of helpful advice, i received hateful comments from men in their 40s. i remember trying to argue that he can't prove that i'm trying to tune down for jazz rather than metalcore, so with this in mind i ask you, would you ever use a lower tuning/drop tuning/ five string for jazz? you personally. keep up the good stuff man, still one of my favorite youtubers!

  • @RhayneAedyth
    @RhayneAedyth7 жыл бұрын

    Its what we always do in concert band when there is no baritone sax sheet - just get the tuba sheet, change to treble clef and add three # on the circle of 5ths

  • @Ellotus13
    @Ellotus137 жыл бұрын

    Hey Adam! Love your channel in uncountable ways! A few kinda unrelated-ush questions: I really like the painting you have on the background in this (and many other) video(s). What is it? Is there a story behind it? Would love to see it upclose too, if possible! Thanks and cheers from Finland!

  • @willgaines5269
    @willgaines52696 жыл бұрын

    That shortcut you talked about is something that Bari sax players use very often when a song doesn't have a bari part. Just read the tuba part and you're pretty much 90% there.

  • @aleksasaxofonista1914
    @aleksasaxofonista19147 жыл бұрын

    You helpt me with the sax!

  • @jacksonsmith4648
    @jacksonsmith46484 жыл бұрын

    That clef-switching trick for Eb is pretty popular among bari players who need to read tuba/bass music. Bb might actually have posed more of a challenge

  • @Kingstonlomusic
    @Kingstonlomusic7 жыл бұрын

    Hi Adam, Amazing videos and I do like your way to approach different and sometimes mean questions as well. I would like to know when you are working with keyboard players (mostly in jazz scenes), what are the things that we might be annoying you but we didn't know? And what keyboard players should do or keep in mind to make bass players feel more comfortable playing together? I ask about this because as a keyboardist, I do like to improvise unexpected approach to chord playings sometimes to spice things up, but I don't want to step on any bass players toes while doing so. Cheers!

  • @joaofiorot8975
    @joaofiorot89757 жыл бұрын

    Hey, Adam! Funny thing you mentioned about podcasts soundtracks. I am a Brazilian podcaster, and I listen to a lot of podcasts from here. That said, it's very usual for Brazilian podcasts to have a soundtrack (even when it is not related to whatever people are talking about). Then, I started listening to American and British podcasts and I noticed that there was no soundtracks while people talk. That made it very difficult for me to listen foregners podcasts. This is just a random comment, I'm really enjoying the channel

  • @subbbass
    @subbbass7 жыл бұрын

    Hey Adam, i am Bandleader on a cruiseship. Here are my thoughts: Pro: you play a lot of songs (in my band 600 + Repertoire of the band + more songs when you play with guest artists) So if you come from school / college and had only played "musicians music" you get in contact with the real life. You learn how to read, you learn so many songs in all styles. Cons : As You said : the life on land goes further, you will be replaced by other players in the bands that you where in. And even if you're back home , many people think you're allways on the boat anyway and the don't need to call you. So You have to keep contact, go to sessions, call people, when you're back. after all I like playing on the ship, I can play all kinds of music every day. See the world, have great food, great weather, have summer in wintertime ...

  • @Pinko_Band
    @Pinko_Band7 жыл бұрын

    I've been to a few The Mars Volta shows where they pretty much play for 3 hours straight. It was intense af.

  • @ScottTK
    @ScottTK7 жыл бұрын

    Questionnnn and answer tiiime with Adam Neelyyyyyy... ya! I dig this intro, how did you write it?

  • 6 жыл бұрын

    Hey Adam hope this makes it to the next q&a. What are your thoughts on doing long hours of practice compared to practicing smart? Is there really like a wiser way to do things or one just really can't fake it? You just really have to take the time and all. Thanks Adam love youre videos!

  • @steveallenmashburn8815
    @steveallenmashburn88157 жыл бұрын

    Giving a baritone sax player a bass clef part is an old school band director trick. Sometimes a state teacher college teaches more than Berklee. LOL.

  • @arckanon13
    @arckanon137 жыл бұрын

    Hi Adam. Can you share some of your experiences and struggles when taking your masters degree? I'm planning to take one in the US and was wondering what advice could you give. Thanks and keep making awesome videos & grapefruit marinate lessons!

  • @MiguelMendesguitar
    @MiguelMendesguitar7 жыл бұрын

    Hey Adam, thanks for your videos (I'm a big follower!) Not related to music: I was wondering during this Q&A...do you investigate and go deep into someones question and then just talk to the camera (kind of improvising, or like normal conversation) or you have it written before shooting the video and use what you wrote as a guide for your though process during the video?

  • @AndanteSkie
    @AndanteSkie7 жыл бұрын

    Been watching your videos for a while now, and I've really enjoyed everything I've seen, from the interesting topics of music theory to the intricacies of playing bass [I'm a self taught guitarist]. As someone who lives in an area that doesn't have much of a music scene, in a financial position where moving to a place like New York isn't a viable option, I've been working towards being able to make music at home from my room, and pushing my work online. Is there anything you can suggest to an up and coming musical act to try and get myself out there? I'm not particularly familiar with the power of social media or the like, so anything you can suggest would be of great help. Thanks a bunch for your time, and keep on rocking!

  • @donald-parker
    @donald-parker4 жыл бұрын

    Re Myers Briggs (I am also an INTJ BTW) - You will never learn this unless you have a well trained facilitator, but just knowing your own comfort box is the least powerful lesson. The real power comes from knowing you can behave outside your comfort box, and your basis for choosing this is in knowing who you are trying to communicate with or influence. Your adjust your approach/style to their comfort box. Of course, it is just a model. There may actually be more than 16 types of people in the world :).

  • @brynportas5300
    @brynportas53007 жыл бұрын

    The Eb transposing trick got me through university as a UK tuba player, but the opposite way.

  • @motanium
    @motanium7 жыл бұрын

    The madlad did it! :D

  • @Ted_DiSanti
    @Ted_DiSanti7 жыл бұрын

    Yeah that whole Eb to concert pitch thing is really easy. I play both sax and bass but when I was in marching band I took the role of the tuba player as a bari saxophone player (best instrument every btw) and I read the tuba music and all I had to do was add or take away three sharps or flats. I pretended like I actually had to transpose so all the kids in my band thought I was even better than they already thought though.

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