Latch Music Blog

May 11, 2006

Self-Promotion Resources For Indie Musicians

Filed under: Music Education, Music Reviews — Dave Latchaw @ 8:50 am

One of the hardest tasks for me to do as an independent artist is to take the time to promote myself. I think most musicians rather be working on my craft than taking the time to do the bizz side of music. There comes a time though when you realize that you are in the music business and you have to make sure to educate yourself to succeed. When I make time I check out Bob Baker, who is one of my favorite music business writers. Bob is a writer, indie musician and former music magazine editor dedicated to showing musicians of all kinds how to get exposure, connect with fans, sell more CDs and increase their incomes through their artistic passions. Bob Baker’s SELF-PROMOTION RESOURCES FOR INDIE MUSICIANS is essential reading to any artist who wants to support their music habit with their music. Check out SELF-PROMOTION RESOURCES FOR INDIE MUSICIANS today.

AddThis Social Bookmark Button

Tags: , , , , , ,

May 3, 2006

To Riff Or Not To Riff

Filed under: Music Education, Music Articles — Dave Latchaw @ 9:09 am

To Riff Or Not To Riff?
by Dave Latchaw

To Riff Or Not To Riff, that is the question. Early on in my musical adventures, inspired by players that could do cartwheels up and down their ax and compose equally extreme music, so of course that was what I tried to match. I wanted every tune I soloed on or composed to have in-your-face riffage. Not that I could pull it off, but that was how I wanted to play and write. As a young player and composer I thought that music could only be valid if it is complex. Exploring simple ideas just was not part of the early routine. Like most musicians in their early development, the knowledge of what was musically suitable and hip was not always obvious to me! Fortunately, if a musician is honest and open with themselves, musical appropriateness and the diversity between simple and complex ideas can evolve, especially as one musically matures and develops their own voice.

Now, as a player, composer and music educator I have to laugh at myself when I think about those early musical days. I was keen with no clue or ability. Thankfully at some point I realized that you have to walk before you can run, which is a fundamental idea for practicing and developing interesting solos and compositions, and as well as over-all musicianship. If one doesn’t take the time to develop a good musical foundation there will be gaps in capacity and a certain instability in playing and composing. With the way society is, it is hard to be patient and take the fundamental steps to develop one’s ability.

Being pratical about your current musical skill is important. How does anyone think they are going to be able to solo over a harmonic progression with quintuplelets if they can’t do it in quarter notes? How can someone think they can solo over a tune at 300 bpm when they are not solid at 100 bpm? Younger players sometimes think they are being heavy when they go for the “sheets of sound” riffing when they solo. They mainly think they sound heavy because they are not on any one given note long enough to make it obvious to them they do not know the changes. Denial can occur in the younger musician who receives praises for being able to play many notes. There becomes a point though when the young improvisor needs to ask themself, do I know what I’m doing or am I just developing “confident jive”? When a player can analyze their capacities, growth is possible.

Learning as much as you can about harmony will make both riffing and compositions more valid. If you don’t know which notes belong to a certain set of chord changes, you are using the “search and destroy” method of improvising. Knowing about harmony makes one able to manipulate tension and release both compositionally and improvisationally. Harmonic knowledge increases development of the artistic voice. If one can walk through any set of harmonic changes it will be easier to run. There also has to be rhythmic control that goes with harmonic capacity.

With composition, if every tune you write makes the veins in the player’s head pop out like Clint Eastwood, you will reduce the effect of that intensity! Even bands like Metallica realize if there is no contrast to the fast and loud with slow and soft you are losing potential musicallity. I used to think the challenge to writing music was to make it complex enough, then it would automatically be cool. When I was in the Scottish Rock band “The Heat”, I began to realize that it is just as challenging to write music for the masses. Writing music that only other musicians can value is cool, but it becomes easy to be tragically hip. One shouldn’t dismiss the ability to write something that nonmusicians can dig also. There is an art to that too.

As a musician matures it is most important to keep finding where the gaps are in their musical foundation and fill them in. Being self-aware is essential for the growth of one’s musical ability. If we don’t try to expand our musical foundation in both complex and simple directions we will stand still in our musical lives, which is never good.

AddThis Social Bookmark Button

Tags: , , , , , , , ,

April 29, 2006

Piano Keyboard Music Education Review

Filed under: Music Education, Music Reviews — Dave Latchaw @ 4:35 pm

It does not matter what instrument you play everyone should learn piano or keyboard. I spend much of my teaching time teaching piano and keyboard lessons to people who are taking it as a second instrument. I have been planning at some point to make my own keyboard educational material on-line, until I checked out Rocket Piano. Rocket Piano does everything I would want a music education program to do. Rocket Piano comes with hundreds of sound files, pictures, diagrams, videos in step-by-step instructions training you to play by ear, read music, recognize chord shapes and more. With Rocket Piano you get 3 high quality books taking you from beginner to advanced levels in a step-by-step method. I still think one should still get private lessons but with Rocket Piano you could make real progress before you would need private instruction. Worth the time to have a look.

AddThis Social Bookmark Button

Tags: , , , , , ,

« Previous PageNext Page »

Powered by WordPress

Dave Latchaw - 3121 Hoagland Ave. Suite B Fort Wayne IN 46807 - Phone/Fax: 260-456-5255