Number of dulcimers
General mountain dulcimer or music discussions
I knew that standard music notation was out for me even though originally musically trained to read it. I thought that Tab was all I would ever use for the dulcimer, but I've found a peculiar thing when it gets right down to it. I cannot read tab and play at the same time. I'm familiar with this dilemma since there is one other instrument that this situation comes into play. Self taught on the organ, but never taught to read bass clef. I just knew that a note of bass clef and what it looked like (in an all treble clef world) was actually two notes lower than what I really should be playing. In other words if I was to see what looked like an "A", then that meant I should be playing a C instead. And so on and so on. So for me to "sight read" a two part piece of music (say a hymn) I'd have to move up all the bass clef notes by two and play the treble as it reads. This is cumbersome at best and darn confusing at worst. Especially the three staff music of the music greats that some if not all specifically wrote for the organ. There is one staff of treble and then two of bass clef. That really is nasty. What I'd do is my counting exercise for a line of bass and memorize it. I'd go over and over that stretch of music until I had it down. Then I'd play that while sight reading the treble clef. I'd get pretty good at that part with my left and right hands and then I'd spend time learning the bass clef line for the pedals. Of course that involves (you hear of "finger dancing") well this was feet dancing as they old birds wanted to put more notes in there that'd take three pair of feet to do it correctly (not sure how those authors did it?). Once that was committed to memory I'd play back, still sight reading the treble all three stafs. Wow, what a work out. Well the dulcimer was no different with the tab. I'd go through the motions learning a song and its chords and when I was actually playing with the tab, the tab was only there for reference. I'd be playing the song from memory or later to be found, by ear. In fact it became so obvious that I was not reading the tab, but playing from sight and sound memory that I took to asking my wife to name a tune. She would and I'd plunk around a couple of notes and soon enough I was playing out the melody and after just a run through or two, I was adding harmonies and chords. Not knowing what the chords were or the notes for that matter, just what they looked like on the fretboard and sounded like to my ear. I still use tab now, but only to learn a tune or direct the start of said tune, then the rest is solely be ear. Not sure why that is for me, but that's surely what I caught myself doing and continue to do so. It does make it much easier to not have paper music falling all over the place and needing to turn a page and such. Kevin.
