For what it's worth, I remember our music teacher saying that the sharp and flat designation has to do with the key you are in and which direction a scale is moving. If I remember correctly you use sharps when writing an ascending scale and flats when writing a descending scale. You music theorists out there please correct me if I'm wrong or over simplified this. Thanks for the lesson, Nick.
I use octaves all the time…maybe too much lol. It can make things sound huge! Side note: you can use octave mapping to learn where all notes are on the fretboard really quickly.
For what it's worth, I remember our music teacher saying that the sharp and flat designation has to do with the key you are in and which direction a scale is moving. If I remember correctly you use sharps when writing an ascending scale and flats when writing a descending scale. You music theorists out there please correct me if I'm wrong or over simplified this. Thanks for the lesson, Nick.
I use octaves all the time…maybe too much lol. It can make things sound huge! Side note: you can use octave mapping to learn where all notes are on the fretboard really quickly.
That’s what this video is all about!
What is the song you played the solo over at 5:00? Nice work!
@@fredstevens129 it was the instrumental chord progression from Hosanna by Hillsong. Thanks!