Dude [on edit: Dudette], lighten up. I answered a specific question with advice that I know works, because it worked for me. Why don't you post your own advice that answers the poster's question, rather than complaining that the question is wrong, and crapping all over my suggestions?jancivil wrote:Still, this is a beginner - it says so in VERY LARGE TYPE. I don't get any sense that the OP has any clue what these scales mean. Or has any particular affinity for "bebop" at this point. The question I see is "how to learn to do everything I've ever heard of all at once."unpeople wrote:hosseinz started this thread by asking how someone would go about learning lots of different kinds of scales in all of the keys. Sticking to one key doesn't answer the question.jancivil wrote:WHY? Why is that better than sticking to a key until you have internalized interval relastionships? I disagree.unpeople wrote:The first thing that you need to do is learn your major scales in every key.
That's all well and good, but hosseinz was asking about Blues and Bebop scales, and there are very few jazz sitar players, so I doubt that my advice will be scuttled by the out-of-key drone of sympathetic strings. Many instruments have certain keys where the scale fingerings are easiest — like C major on a piano, or B♭ on a trumpet — but I consider it a bad habit to favor playing in one key over another. By definition, that means that your other keys are weaker, and that's no good, particularly if you're playing jazz.jancivil wrote:Master improvisers in eg., India's Hindustani or Karnatak music have 'their tonic'. Period. A sitar tends to have D as a tonic. There is no 'key of Eb' for that axe.
It's a whole lot of useless information, umpteen exotic scale types in every key. It's trying to sprint as if a tiptop athelete before learning to crawl.
My WHY really is, "why is trying to run before crawling utterly de riqeur". Learn how to get something musical out of a couple keys, one key, LOOK AT INTERVALS.
And what "jazz", in the Original Post?Hendrix? Satch? Hendrix never ran scales. Hendrix was a blues player, who at times went into MODAL playing, Hindustani influence, and he LOVED HIM SOME E. So don't tell me what I read is what you read. & AFAIK Hendrix transposed by position on the fretboard. I don't see or hear that he had to know a single thing according to your 'received as gospel' approach. I've seen him try to improvise in a pseudo-classical style, and he didn't appear to know his way around keys/formulaic changes so well. By ear, copping off records. Do you think he came up with Little Wing by roman numerals? And then applied scale theory? Shit.
When someone takes "scales" "in every key" as a de rigeur basis for study, so so so often s/he runs scales as a way around really hearing it. It's received 'wisdom' that IME is rather ill-advised. Learn music with your ear. Which in my vast experience is better done via my approach than what appears to be yours.
And for the record, despite the boast about your "vast experience," my approach works perfectly well. I play more than a dozen different instruments, many of them professionally, and all but one I taught myself. With the exception of the didgeridoo and drums, I mastered them all by first learning to play all of my scales in every key. I can also sight-transpose into any key, because at this point, I hear and think in scale degree numbers, which makes it trivial to move between keys. My method is not definitive (as I stated in my original post), but I'm proof that it works well.