Spytunes Spytunes' guitar guru blogs about acoustic and electric guitar lessons

11Jan/107

House Of Hats Against The World

Latest jam with Spytunes Guru and Miss Al Brown.

This time they are joined by Sam Murray and Rob Gigante.

Are there any more hats in the house?

-guru

1Oct/093

SpyTunes to record the history of guitar through songs

spytunes guitar guru
spytunes guitar guru

SpyTunes are on a mission: To record the history of popular music from the guitar's perspective. Starting in the 20s up til today and beyond.

We do this by recording a version of the song on one acoustic guitar and ad vocals.
By using the DIY TAB system a spytunes member/student can understand how these songs are constructed and from these conclusions create their own guitar parts, vocal melodies or whatever they wish to compose on the instrument.

This is the only known system to fully grasp musical harmony. You learn it, transcribe it and discuss it with SpyTunes Guru and other spytunes members.

So far we have recorded these tunes:

20s
Baby Won't You Please Come Home 1923

30s

Over The Rainbow 1939

Why Don't You Do Right? 1936

50s

Angel Eyes 1953

60s
A Change Is Gonna Come 1964

Blackbird 1968

Blowin In The Wind 1963

Dream A Little Dream Of Me 1968

Scarborough Fair 1966

Sunny Afternoon 1966

Sunshine Of Your Love 1967

70s

Ain't No Sunshine 1971

American Pie 1971

Angie 1973

Dreadlock Holiday 1978

Highway To Hell 1979

I Can't Stand The Rain 1973

I Shot She Sheriff 1973

I Wish 1976

One More Cup Of Coffee 1976

Parisienne Walkways 1978

Roxanne 1978

Stairway To Heaven 1971

Starman 1972

Tenderness 1973

Take Me To The River 1974

Whole Lotta Rosie 1977

Wish You Were Here 1975

80s

Arthurs Theme 1981

Fast Car 1988

Lately 1980

Mad World 1982

Redemption Song 1980

Talking About A Revolution 1988

90s

Angels 1997

Babylon 1999

Basket Case 1994

Brazen 1996

Breakfast At Tiffany's 1996

Bullet In Your Head 1992

Drugs Don't Work 1997

Hedonism 1997

Killing In The Name 1992

Kiss Me 1997

Know Your Enemy 1992

Monkey Wrench 1997

Pickin On Me 1996

Robin Hood 1996

Still Got The Blues 1990

Tears In Heaven 1992

Time Of Your Life 1997

Wonderwall 1995

Walking By Myself 1990

Weak 1996

00s

1234 2007

All My Life 2002

American Idiot 2004

Beautiful 2002

Cannonball 2002

Don't Wait Too Long 2004

Hey There Delilah 2007

I'm Yours 2008

The Pretender 2007

Whistle For The Choir 2006

Electric Lessons

Some of these tunes are recorded on the electric guitar. For these lessons we don't ad vocals, instead we look more at riff writing, sound and technique.

So far the electric section is only covering 15 tunes but more is on the way.
The other day we recorded 10 new tunes by Jimi Hendrix, Albert King, SRV, John Mayer, B.B. and Freddie King.

Minor and major pentatonic licks shall also see more of an appearance in the near future, Ben Poole has started it off very nicily indeed.

The jam track section is also seeing an overhaul with new tracks to appear soon, competitions for best solo and lots of other goodies on the way.

In the meantime, please reply with which is your favorite so far, and maybe even add some ideas for future recordings.

-guru

17Sep/090

Ain’t No Sunshine, a rhythmical deconstruction

Ain’t no Sunshine was Bill Withers first single, it quickly became a well known track.

Ain’t no sunshine is a soul classic that has become a ‘standard’ among working musicians the world over. As a guitarist you might be expected to know this tune should you ever play a cover gig with no preparation.

To understand why this was a hit we shall in this blog look at cyclic rhythmical patterns, note choices and the art of repetition. But first, let's watch the video.

Finger style Pattern

The goal is to get the III and V chord to move the vocal phrasing along.

The back beat pattern does this in a very simple way. So first try playing Ain’t no sunshine with just this basic rhythm.

gtr

The bass works against the chord in a claw comping technique, use the video, the diy tab sheet of the conspiracy and the Members TAB to fully work this piece out.

Vocal melody

vox

The rhythm is essential. The first two sixteenths start on beat 2, this immediately brings the focus of the listener to the singer because beat 2 feels more unexpected than beat 1.
The rhythm section, in this case just a guitar, plays two 8th notes over beat one, a bar earlier than the vocal, and ends on the back beat of beats 1 in bar two.

When the vocal finish its phrase on beat 1 of bar three, the guitar takes over with it’s steady 8th notes, setting us up for the next vocal phrase. This cyclic rhythmical pattern moves the track along.

As you can see in this notation, the guitar and vocal use a call and response technique where they rhythmically ‘take turns’.

gtr and vox wp

I know I know I know

After 26 'I knows' we get the picture, Bill knows that there is definitely no sunshine when she’s gone.

But how do you make 26 ‘I knows’ sound interesting?
Rhythmical placement, that’s how. And when you run out of that, add a note.

The variation Bill use is a pattern of 3, the rhythmical phrase last for 3 beats before it lands on a downbeat again.
To make things even more interesting this pattern of 3 beats use 4 ‘I knows’ each.
This type of rhythm is called a cross rhythm, a very useful musical tool.

The notes move between the b7, root and the low 5th. As soon as this becomes slightly boring Bill moves up to a min 3rd to really tell us that he knows.
This cross rhythm feast is finished by a wailing Bill seemingly loosing track of time but securely landing on beat 1 with “…but ain’t no sunshine when she’s gone”, and we’re back in with the steady 8th note pattern.

Minor pentatonic with an added 9th

As the guitar conspiracy states; you have to get to know all intervals inside every scale shape in order to become a free player. As we do this we add the 9th to the minor pentatonic, like David Gilmour of Pink Floyd often does.
This trick is what Bill Whiters use for his scalic pallete in Ain’t no sunshine as well.

A great exercise would be to take the instrumental video (clip 3 in the playlist) and play the vocal melody on electric guitar, constantly reference Bill’s phrasing in all its detail.
For maximum effect, do this in all positions of the minor pentatonic.

Next blog shall take a look at Blackbird by The Beatles.

-guru

9Sep/093

How Stairway To Heaven used modal scales to reach the top

Stairway To Heaven, a modal masterpiece.

Stairway To Heaven, the most unlikely hit of all time. No other tune has been requested more on the radio in the U.S.A. Before we dive into the modal works of this tune let’s look at all the reasons for why this shouldn’t have been a hit!

  1. The vocal starts at 0:50. Usually the cliché is that the chorus has to kick in at 0:55 latest or it won’t be played on the radio.
  2. The tune is almost 8 min long, that’s twice as long as the maximum 4 min.
  3. It was never released as single!

That’s three pretty strong reasons for not getting on the radio…

So how did this tune become so huge?

When Stairway was released Led Zeppelin was a very well established band with several world tours under their belt.

The tune was a collaboration between all band members utilizing all their strengths as a  unit.

The recorder(s) in the intro was played by John Paul Jones, who also added the ascending bass line which ties the genius modal progression together.

The odd time signatures before the solo that seem to flow so naturally shows John Bonham's genius of taking something complicated and making it sound natural purely through the way he plays it.

The lyrics were Robert Plants and the guitar chords and original concept was Jimi Page’s. The tune took well over a year to complete and Jimmy Page said in retrospect: “I have to do a lot of hard work before I can get anywhere near those stages of consistent, total brilliance.”

There was a stage of Stairways birth were it was played on piano, but this was later adapted for the guitar.

Why is Stairway To Heaven modal?

So let’s start to look at the modal works of this master piece. Before we begin, remember, No one in Led Zeppelin had any idea about this stuff, it is only in hindsight that we can see these things. But by looking at it like this, we can learn from it. Let’s begin.

Usually people refer to Stairway as: it’s in A minor. Most likely they say this because the intro starts with Am, and the solo use Am, G & F, which are classic chords to solo over in A minor. All Along The Watchtower for example use the same progression. But actually, it’s not in A minor, it’s in A minor, A Dorian and A Melodic Minor. The majority of the tune is in A Dorian and A Melodic Minor.

Using the DIY TAB in The Guitar Conspiracy 2.0 we see how two keys are notated through out: C major (A minor/Aeolian) and G major (A Dorian).

The vocal melody however never hits the 6th interval, it completely stays away from it leaving the chords to move between these two keys giving the tune several modal interchanges and by doing this drives the track forward.

The second chord, an Am with an added 9th use the ascending bass lines G# and by doing this we are either in Harmonic minor or Melodic minor. The G# acting as a major 7th in relation to A.

The third chord, a C/G could either be in the key of G, so a IV/I or in the key of C as a I/V.

The fourth chord, a D/F# or a Bm7/F# carries on the ascending bassline and indicates that we no longer can be in Am or A harmonic minor, we have to be in the key of G here due to the F#.

The fifth chord, a Fmaj7 however tells us we can’t be in G major anymore, we have to be in C, Fmaj7 acting as the IVmaj7 chord.

These chords can therefore only be seen as modal, giving us:

Chord 1, A Dorian (or A Aeolian)

Chord 2, A Melodic Minor (A Dorian with a maj7)

Chord 3, A Dorian (or A Aeolian)

Chord 4, A Dorian

Chord 5, A Aeolian

Chord 6, A Aeolian (or A Dorian)

Chord 7, A Aeolian (or A Dorian)

The tension of this progression is paired with the very simple 8th note rhythm which makes it feel less adventurous. The vocal melody avoids hitting either the b6th to indicate Aeolian (F) or the natural 6th to indicate Dorian (F#).

The next part is the chorus (which doesn’t start until 2:15!) is in A Dorian throughout, giving it a more up-feel than Aeolian would have.

These two parts keep interchanging up until the breakdown at 5:35 where we get different odd time signatures almost every bar. The reason they don’t feel strange is because of the loose and behind the beat feel Bonham provides. If you buy the sheet music for this tune you will see how it’s notated 9/8, 4/4 etc. This is very difficult to follow so the conspiracy has written this part as a constant /8 time. Simply double the time throughout as you count and things should be much easier to understand.

The solo, as previously stated is in A Aeolian due to the Fmaj7. The opening lick (one of the two licks in this solo that Jimi Page wrote before the recording) ends on an F. This is the first time the 6th is played in the melody. Giving us a familiar release after 6 minutes of modal interchange!

The solo carries on into the final vocal section which is sung an octave up, still not utilizing the 6th.

The last vocal section is then followed by a second solo that ends on the Fmaj7 chord and Plant sings the final very drawn out line now for the first time staying in Aeolian.

Stairway To Heaven can only be compared to Queens masterpiece Bohemian Rhapsody which it ironically usually competes for the #1 spot of greatest rock tunes of all time.

So if your thinking of creating the next big thing, go modal and break all the rules that the music business have laid down as criteria’s to get on the radio, it certainly worked for Led Zeppelin!

Next blog will pick Ain’t No Sunshine apart and show how a factory worker can become world famous by singing “I know” 26 times.

-Guru

7Sep/099

How to play I’m Yours by Jason Mraz SpyTunes version

This is SpyTunes first how to play blog, the aim of this blog is to explain how it is important to understand what you are doing when playing guitar, rather than memorizing a piece and repeating it using muscle memory.
Before we begin, let's have a look at SpyTunes version of this track so we know what we're talking abut here.

I’m Yours Background

Jason Mraz wrote this tune many years ago and for some reason it didn’t end up on any of his early albums. The tune caught the worlds attention by being a demo that by public demand made the radio. This is not the first time this has happened, music history is filled with hits that where never intended to be singles.

In the case of I’m Yours Jason Mraz must have been surprised when the entire audience would sing along to I’m Yours as if there was no tomorrow at his gigs all over the world.

The final recording is a pretty polished pop/reggae attempt that might not go down in the history of interesting production and passionate performance but no doubt, this tune is here to stay, it has become a modern classic.

SpyTunes Discover I'm Yours

Guru used to play this tune at gigs (found the demo years ago) and recorded it for SpyTunes 8 months before Jason Mraz finally released it commercially on his 2008 album “We Sing, We dance, We Steal Things”.

The guitar part and the arrangement is therefore based on that first, now legendary demo recording. Many people have written to SpyTunes wondering how to play this since the rhythm sounds and looks simple but is actually pretty difficult to play. This is because the placement of beat one is not as obvious as you might first think... So let's look at how the part is constructed.

Understanding Reggae Rhythms

Jason Mraz writes pop songs with a flavor of reggae, the easiest way to hint a reggae influence is to apply a back beat rhythm to a 4/4 time. See fig 1.

To vary this pattern you could use two 16ths instead of the 8th note. See fig 2.

Very often these two concepts are combined, like in fig 3.

For I’m Yours the basic rhythm, throughout the tune is as in fig 4.

To this concept a one has been added, fig 5

Finally, to incorporate the jazz guitar lick found on the recording we use the same rhythm and just adjust the notes throughout the progression, fig 6.

Putting all this together and we get the basic groove of the intro, fig 7.

All this put together means that one guitar is playing the whole arrangement of bass (beat 1), the guitar back beat (beat 2 & 3) and the leading lick (beat 4).

So that's it, the first lick starts on the second 16th of beat 4, you need to start this with an upstroke in order to get it right.


The secret to I'm Yours success

Now for the melody... So the chords are I - V - VI - IV. This is an unusual progression, it's very backwards, usually V leads to I, VI usually goes to V and IV usually comes after I...

So how does this tune sound so natural? The secret is in the melody, it follows the chords throughout. If the chord is a B major, the melody is only using that chords root, third and fifth, when moving to the next chord (V) it follows that chord.
This means that we get a very melodic effect, but since the chords are "backwards" it sounds new at the same time!

Use the DIY TAB in the guitar conspiracy to fully work this out. There is also a post in the forum that has the arrangement, but that is only the guitar, the secret is in the melody.

Next blog will analyze Stairway To Heaven by Led Zeppelin, did you know it's based on melodic minor?

-Guru

   

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