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So I'm still pretty upset over the MPA's decision to Satanize tab communities. I don't see the point in going over it again, but I was reading on PTA's forum and came across this. It's a sad, but true fact for alot of my generation of guitarists:
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1 know a lot of you are going to hate me for even just the title but there are good things about the banning.
1) The artist will actually be getting money from what is theirs (And if you were an artist what would you do?)... If the artist wants to make their tabs available for free then they will.
2) It'll teach you all to get using your ears. Didnt any of you notice in the days before internet tabsites the music was better, Jimi Hendrix was amazing because he improvised, most awesome improv. is done by ear. _________________
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Skipping the first point (which is complete idiocy because the artist neither endorsed, much less created these community INTERPRETATIONS of tabs) I think he made alot of sense with the second.
Alot of young guitarists have been raised on one of the mixed bags of music-tabs. It's great on one hand but bad on the other. I never realized until my tab site got shut down how dependent on tabs I had become. I haven't really challenged myself in the playing-by-ear department, and I wonder how many teacher-taught guitarists suffer from the same handicap.
As I said, there's also an upside to the argument. You can use a tab to stimulate (insert joke here) creativity and give you a basis for your own rendition of songs. I've been working on Purple Haze alot lately, and the tab gave me a good frame, with all the orignaly foundation of the song laid out for me.
So for those of you that skip to the bottom of the paragraph, here's my question-Has the use of tabs, powertabs and guitar pro tabs inparticular, actually lowered the skill level of players?
I remember reading somewhere that Stevie Ray Vaughan never learned to read music. Not sure if that's true, but I know he was a true musician in that what he played came from his own head, not someone elses. So in a way the heads at the MPA have actually changed the way I play guitar-I'm going to be spending alot more time working on my ability to play by ear than in the past.
Also, a side note on one point the guy who posted this made I disagree with-Jimi Hendrix was not as awesome of an improv as he's made out to be. He was an awesome guitarist, but I think his solo abilities fell way behind the amazing way he played chords. Just my opnion.
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