Archive for February, 2009

Blues Guitar’s Influence on Popular Music

Posted under: Pop Music, Rock Music


There’s a line from an old blues song that says, “the blues had a baby…and they called it rock n’ roll.”

Let me tell you, there is so much truth to that line! You can listen to all the first rock n’ roll songs and hear the blues guitar riffs, chord progressions and scales being played, just in a less bluesy
kinda way.

“Johnny B. Good” is a great example of a blues guitar progression being played with a rock drum beat and a vocal melody that is different from how a blues vocal melody would sound. It doesn’t end there though. The influence on modern music is still very prevalent. We hear it in hip-hop, rock, emo, indie, reggae, r & b, funk, etc.

The ever so popular 1 – 4 – 5 chord progression (3 chords) that is used in blues is also used in practically EVERY type of music that exists. Even Mozart uses this chord progression as well as many others from the classical period. Not only do blues guitar riffs and chord progressions get used in modern music, but most guitar solos also have blues overtones in rock music as well as the other styles that I mentioned. It has been a KEY factor in forming the shape sound of modern music no matter how you look at it.

Learning how to play blues guitar should be a top priority on any guitar players ‘to-do’ list. Once you learn the ins and outs of this style, you can manipulate it to create your own modern songs, riffs and/or solos. Many guitar players that I know improvise on the blues scale to create their main riffs and super impressive leads as well as use the chord progressions to write new, more modern music.

Don’t let anybody tell you that the blues is dead!

By: Zack Roberts

About the Author:
Zack Roberts is the founder of 50 Blues. He is a professional full time musician and guitar instructor, specializing in classic blues and rock music.

Download over 50 professional blues backing tracks at 50 Blues, The #1 Secret Weapon for blues guitarists, harmonica and harp musicians.

Together with his band, he has recorded over 50 of the best Blues Backing Tracks for professional musicians. In under 3 minutes, you’ll uncover the #1 proven method of improving your blues playing.

If you are struggling with mastering the blues, these blues backing tracks will fuel your creativity and passion to inspire killer blues riffs and licks.

Just imagine having the best acoustic and electric blues bands to jam with you, anytime, anywhere!

Find Out More – 50 Blues Guitar Lessons & Jam Tracks



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Great Greek Music On The Radio.

Posted under: Uncategorized

A funny thing happened to me last year.

I was studying for my exams and decided I’d take advantage of the three weeks study leave to take my study with me on holiday to Turkey. I know, it sounds like an excuse to do absolutely no study at all, and to party for a few weeks! If I’m truthful though, I have to say that I worked really hard. I went on my own, with the notion that if I could find a nice little town with a beach, some cheap accommodation and some solitude I would actually get more done than if I stayed at home.

This turned out to be true and I was able to work harder than I ever had before. The strangest thing, though, was what motivated me to work so hard. In this town in Turkey, All I could pick up on my Radio was greek music! it didn’t matter how much I fiddled around with it, I couldn’t get anything else! The funny thing was, I actually found the music really relaxing and it got me in a perfect frame of mind to study!It turned out, that greek radio music was fantastic! One thing is for sure, something made me get the best grades I had ever had, and it wasn’t all the sangrias! I would never advocate spending a small fortune to take a holiday in order to inspire you to get great grades, but if you do, make you sure you head somewhere that is going to pipe Greek Music straight into the room!

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[HD] Lenka – Trouble Is A Friend (New Version)

Posted under: Music Videos
luvdc.blogspot.com [HD] Lenka – Trouble Is A Friend (New Version)

By: muzikfanz02

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The Early History of Sheet Music in Western Civilization

Posted under: Country & Western


Sheet music, sometimes called “score,” is the hand-written or printed form of musical notation, or the system that represents aurally perceived music via the use of written symbols. The history of musical notation, and therefore of sheet music, is a long one. There are those who hold that the earliest sheet music known is a fragment of a cuneiform tablet from Nippur, an ancient Babylonian city, and dates from approximately 2000 BCE. While this music was written on a clay tablet rather than paper, it still constitutes sheet music because the term “sheet” merely differentiates music on paper from audio presentation. So although the tablet’s notations are fragmentary and somewhat simple, it is probably safe to say that they represent the earliest recorded melodies in the world.

Anyone familiar with ancient Greek civilization will not be surprised to learn that the sheet music of those people was relatively complex. Ancient Greek musical notation was capable of representing pitch, note duration and, to a limited extent, harmony. It consisted of symbols placed above text syllables and was in use from at least the 6th century BCE until approximately the 4th century CE, a date that coincides with the fall of the Roman Empire.

Sheet music, like Europe as a whole, suffered a major blow when Rome fell. The art of writing music all but vanished during the times that followed, which are commonly referred to as the Dark Ages. However, by the middle of the 9th century, musical notation began to revive thanks to the Roman Catholic Church. The Gregorian chant was a ubiquitous form of worship in those days, and the monks performing it developed specific symbols, neumes, in order to record it on paper.

It is to another style of religious song of this period, the plainchant, that we owe our modern form of sheet music. The original system of writing plainchant did not utilize a staff. Although capable of expressing considerable musical complexity, such a system could not convey exact pitch or time. Sheet music from this genre served mainly as a reminder to a performer already familiar with the tune rather than a means by which a novice might learn a new song. To deal with the problem of exact pitch, a staff was introduced, originally consisting of a single horizontal line but eventually comprised of four parallel horizontal lines, which became the standard. The vertical position of a mark on the staff indicated the pitch at which it was to be sung or played. Anyone who looks at music from this period will easily recognize the roots of modern sheet music.

From the late Dark Ages until the 15th century, western sheet music was written by hand and generally preserved in large, bound volumes of manuscripts. The best known examples of such manuscripts are those of the previously mentioned plainchant, which is a form of monophonic chant. The advent of the printing press in the middle of the 15th century, of course, irrevocably changed how sheet music was created. However, it took several hundred years for printed sheet music to become the norm, and much music continued to exist solely in hand-written manuscripts until well into the 18th century.

By: Victor Epand

About the Author:
Victor Epand is an expert consultant for guitars, drums, keyboards, sheet music, guitar tab, and home theater audio. You can find the best marketplace at these sites for guitars, drums, keyboards, sheet music, musical notation.



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