There is an infinite music where sounds are played that are not struck and each note is perfect and if experienced will put you in bliss, and they are all inside of you.
I've been playing for 40 years. To me the best approach is learn the theory so well that it's subconscious. This creates a basic framework in the mind which can then be creatively worked and we don't have to consciously think about notes until we start or end a phrase. This allows us to play what our brain wants to hear instead of repeating patterns.
i dunno, i was a first chair trumpet for my school years and when i had to go to college, i decided not to go the theory route because i wanted to write from the heart i know thats lame but it worked out for me
@@beepboopbleep3695 if you spent some time playing in the school band you probably learned pretty good theory rudiments? If you add a good ear to that, you're probably good to go and are able to write from the heart.
This is one of the most important lessons about feeling. You CAN do It in a theoretical way, but in the end what's most important is how It feels to the listener. Wayne said that the 'way' of tension doesn't matter, as long as you achieve your goal. By theory or just 'playing some wrong notes'.
“You don’t need theory” - this entire discussion is about music theory. Consonance, Dissonance, Phrasing, Tension, I -V7, HW Diminished, right notes, wrong notes… all music theory.
I think what he is getting at is you shouldn't live by theory like its a rule book. You can be a great hiker, but don't necessarily need to know geography
@@ht1560 Totally. The clickbait title is what is irritating here, not what Wayne Krantz is saying (not to mention he never actually says "You don't need theory" in the video).
@ht1560 Sounds like a hiker that's going to get alot of poison ivy and stuck with prickers and attacked by bears and Mt lions... if you don't want to go through those struggles then understand the theory otherwise you're just stunting your growth
relatable perspective for life not only music , i see him talking about both at the same time , maybe at the end its all the same thing , perspectives are fascinating, theres so many ways to attack the same thing regardless the topic subject matter , thats the door ive recently gone through at 57 years old 2 months now into the guitar neck theory notes etc
Great examples from a great example of a theory laden person. Knowing the theoretical explanations he gave is good, forgetting the theory as you select good feeling notes is better.
I think one of my favourite guitar solos is Wayne's from 'The Great Pagoda of Funn' by Donald Fagen, please listen if you haven't yet, it's just astonishing
Perfect! Just play any crap you want and if it doesn't sound good, call it "tension". Music theory isn't a set of rules, it's a set of measuring tools. It's always amazing to me how much effort people put in to not learning things that can give them a much wider sonic pallet.
Great stuff, love WK’s playing… but it’s only possible what he’s discussing ‘cause he’s deeply explored the theory and music that came before and can build upon those (and developed his ear).
Right and wrong notes, some people have an ear for it from day one, and others train their ear through theory over time. Once known though, you're free to create just like the great musicians born with amazing ears. Neither path is easy though. You have to put the time in. Enjoy!
Interesting but I can't help thinking that his immersion in theory and exploration of harmony resulted in a 'hardwiring' of those sounds and how to get them. It really is hard, or even impossible, to sound musical using this in/out approach if you don't have some vocabulary ingrained in your ears and fingers.
Genius Musician (not just Guitarist, I feel he would be capable on many an instrument) Met Wayne twice (at his gigs) the most humble and approachable Musician I have ever met. Please continue to support this Man and The Musicians that are still Courageous enough to be themselves☮️✌🏻
Listen, I don’t believe in criticizing other people’s art or methods. I’ve played by ear for decades while not knowing “what” I’m doing (theory). But finally I started working from theory outward into testing the boundaries, so YOU really need theory even though you can play by ear and get a long ways toward learning without it. Just do it. There are no shortcuts.
In a way you learned theory in your own way. Maybe didnt have the "official" names for stuff (scales, chords, triads etc) but one doesnt pick up guitar every single time for like its the first time for years. Well at least if its something that makes sense musicly.
I have studied theory forever. I think it's important to know it, and I use it constantly. It made me a better musician than I was, that's for sure. In terms of actually using it or not in improvising it really depends IMHO on the material you are trying to improvise over. If it's a simple vamp, one two chord vamp, yeah sure you can avoid it to some extent and find your ways to create tension and release (which is a gold concept in all music of course). But if you're playing more "complex" things harmonically, with changes etc like bebop etc, you have to know theory to sound legit. At the end of the day it's all about the material you play and the effect you want to create. But I think a little knowledge is a dangerous thing, so my advice is, well, learn theory, then decide with your ear if you want to use it or not. Wayne in any case is a fab musician that I greatly admire.
One of the advantages of going through the theory is to make sure that you are exploring more possibilities than you personally would have invented. It also ensures that your exploration of the instrument isn't based around the unconscious preferences you have in the movement of your hands, for example the tendency some have to avoid using one of their fingers. Finally, I agree that we shouldn't be a slave to theory, but identifying particular sounds by ear and knowing their names helps us communicate with our fellow musicians.
If all the possible note choices were a jungle full of beautiful plants and trees with delicious fruits (resolution) on the one hand and dangerous creatures on the other (tension), it would be of help to have wandered the area many times making a map with paths. It can lead to going the same path over and over again … or it can transform into an intuitive general sense of orientation, like a place becomes your home once you live there long enough. You can’t get lost anymore, so you can get lost in the moment.
Thanks for sharing, refreshing view , never heard this take on notes and music. As a mostly self taught player will just keep noodling. Thank you! Wayne Hi, I am looking forward to the next post.
Says the guy who is intimately familiar with theory. :) Theory is an incredibly useful way of making sense out of what you hear. It can also be handy if you've got to play but aren't quite feeling inspired. But of course you don't "need" theory. But then again, you don't need a car or email. You could just walk or send a postcard. You'll eventually get there. -Huge Krantz Fan
I don’t hear this angle enough but personally I look at theory as a ‘musicians language’. Recording, rehearsing and playing out are much easier if you can communicate in the dialect of the experience.
It is actually an old style, Fado/Sailor/Brothel blues. It is said to be the very root to jazz, blues, country a lot of styles until the music industry sat an comb to it and divided it to separate genres. My granfather a hired gun mastering many instrument he liked to play this style jaming on electric guitar, long sessions. I could not get my head around it as I seensed flavours from around the whole world like eating a spicey meal cooked by an maniac but also as something pretty appealing. No one did as people used to leave but it was and it is something very impressive.
Of course you need theory….. it’s just a must. Not everyone is a gifted musician. But even if you are, if you want to develop your gift. There is no way around……. Music Theory, is the key…….
Great lesson ! I am a painter (between figurative and abstract) and I am a guitarist. I am finally realizing after years of playing guitar that there are ultimately 12 notes that will sound more or less good depending on the context and that theorizing all of this is like trying to make sense of an abstract painting. Most of the time, an abstract painting is born from an emotion rather than a rational thought, for music I am beginning to understand that it is the same... Afterwards we can justify everything by theory and if the theory does not, then we will then say that the guitarist uses symmetrical patterns or such 😄
I'm just hearing lots of short phrases 'motif' practised patterns put together with that 7/8 kind of Stravinsky 'Right of spring' Genesis foxtrot 'Supers ready' rhythm played underneath. Dissonance is there for a reason it's not just placed anywhere for the sake of it!
I like Guthrie Govan's approach: There are no right or wrong notes, there are just degrees of consonance and disonnance and the skill is in how you use them. Mr Krantz kinda does the same, except his description is more binary - this is in/this is out.
@@LilOlFunnyBoy My point is that we need some kind of theoretical basis for either method. Saying "play wrong notes" assumes you have a collection of notes labelled "right notes". There is no escaping theory. Only variations on how to systematize it.
@@georgechristiansen6785 But theory *is* the "systematizing". Right notes and wrong notes are incredibly easy to find. They're whatever sounds good and whatever sounds bad. That's how you know.
He's still just talking about theory. Every guitarist I see saying you don't need theory, just talks about theory. Sometimes they even make up new words for the theory they are talking about.
I just love his approach and way of thinking about playing - this is revelatory for many and brings joy by simplifying the whole universe of jazz music theory to the absolute essence of creating tension and release - I just ❤❤❤it - thanks for sharing
V7 defines the key. The key gives you the list of options by various tensions. But you hear the tension and release and feel it. Do you need theory? Yes and no. It's there whether you want it or not.
Some have forgotten that the roots of rock music grow from jazz and blues, and in these styles a lot of things are deliberately done wrong so that the melody sounds like a live one.
The foods that we eat and enjoy are based on what's available to us. If we lived on a planet that only gave us acidic foods we'd like that. In music we are used to a certain flavor based on where we are on the planet (eastern versus western music in a very basic way). If you change up what we're offered musically we'll eventually get used to it and enjoy it.
Krantz transcends again! My teacher showed me Wayne two decades ago and he said ''He understands my approach ''Learn, forget and play'' ". Now Wayne gives even deeper level of that.
Musicians! This post is rather interesting and informative! Pay very close attention to improve your improvisation skills vastly as this instructor knows of that which he posts ! 🎸
The big misunderstanding is that every good player eventually develops a vocabulary of ideas. Lots of great players HAVE that vocabulary they just dont assign "verbal" names to them. So they know the sound of a Major 9 arpeggio but they couldnt tell you what it actually is. They just know they like the sound of the notes. Then they say, you dont need theory. Well no you dont really, but you DO need a vocabulary of ideas. Its just a form of ear training. Theres a argument to be made that maybe all music "theory" should just be taught by ear. Once someone can hear an idea in their head before they play then they know it. You don need to be able to name it. But if you dont have any ideas in your head then you just making up shit as you go along and sometimes will just play terrible stuff.
If it was almost anyone but WK saying this I’d be turned off, but I love his stuff. Ironically I’ve been digging his Signals album which seems more structured than his later work. I think it’s difficult to minimize the importance of a thing like theory once you’ve learned it. Hard to subtract it from your mind. Maybe impossible?
@@paulmitchell5349 Well, no, music is all about theory, its mathmatics, 2+2 really does equal 4. There is nothing enjoyable in playing the "wrong note" unless you are a jazz player then it makes no difference! I once attended a "no theory" jam session and was kicked out because what was being played sounded "like music"! To me, says it all!
@@paulmitchell5349 lol. Final note of your solo, you gonna just feel around and find one that works? Like.. this method doesn’t even sound great over static changes (subjective, I know) Why would you stumble in the dark when you can just turn the fucking light on? The light being on or off doesn’t change the contents of the room. Just the simplicity in finding what you need. Stop making excuses for yourself and turn the light on.
@@akwamarsunzal I’d like to add that even in jazz/country etc, the “wrong notes” are (meant to be) used in such a way that keeps your lines from sounding like a total mess (you can literally swing your way through the entire fretboard chromatically just by being intentional with when/where you place the notes that are full of tension. Try landing on Bb while the band plays a GM7. It doesn’t matter if you immediately hear that you sound trash, maybe you even quickly adjust the pitch… but it’s already out there, and it was all preventable.
@@RaineyDaysStudio I think my point was that, unless you know music theory, you wont know what the wrong notes are. However, I have watched a lot of live jazz and, those "wrong notes" CAN fit, if the player is skilled enough to turn it around. Have you ever been to a "free music jam" session? Its just a noise! I went once, managed to stay for 9 minutes, then left!
Wayne has some of the best, in the pocket playing which makes his wrong notes sound good, theory or not and is why he can sound awesome either by himself or in a trio. Having good time is just as if not more important than how much or how little theory you know or don't know when it comes to playing.
In this day and age it is very fashionable to be anti institution. But to be able to meaningfully flick your middle finger to the rule book, it is best to have read the book first. Then and only then have you risen above it.
Many beginning guitarists want a 'shortcut' to avoid having to learn all the theory. What they don't realise is - theory IS the shortcut. Without it you've got an expanse of fingerboard with no map as for what to play. Sure, play anything you like...and watch your audience disappear out the exit.
"Tension" here is just another word for "dissonance." What's dissonant now is far different from what was dissonant 100 years ago, because music keeps evolving. Our ears have become so accustomed to harmonic chaos that it's hard to play a "wrong" note. Like playing tennis without a net.
Alex Lifeson is decades ahead of this he’s the quintessential instinctive player. His solo in Tom Sawyer, for example, shouldn’t make sense theoretically but it does.
So glad to hear this . I am utterly bored of people who want to sound predictable and conventional. Tension, release, unpredictable phrasing and dissonance are so important. Music has to be both a emotional release and and an emotional message. When we speak we don't think about how grammar is formed. Thought straight to the mouth and vocal chords. Music should be more like that than some awful stagnating morass of should I /shouldn't I theoretical anxiety.
To be honest he wouldn't have a musical opinion about any of those notes if he hadn't practiced scales and theory for aaaaages. The difference between him and somebody that is playing random notes is that he feels the musical context of every note and has a bunch of musical instinct to take him to the next. That comes through reflective practice, using theory as a scaffold.
so wayne krantz can afford to move away from theory just because he learned it so much . the quintessence of assimilation of theory occurs when you can forget it while enjoying the worlds it has opened up to you
There is an infinite music where sounds are played that are not struck and each note is perfect and if experienced will put you in bliss, and they are all inside of you.
Once you know Guitar Chords and you have a good ear
and you listen and feel the
music you don't need theory
the unstuck sound, the shabd, the logos, Nada Brahma
@@alchemyst2000 Also the unstruck sound. anhad śabad.
I've been playing for 40 years. To me the best approach is learn the theory so well that it's subconscious. This creates a basic framework in the mind which can then be creatively worked and we don't have to consciously think about notes until we start or end a phrase. This allows us to play what our brain wants to hear instead of repeating patterns.
it's probably the idea being communicated here but they needed a clickbait thumbnail.
i dunno, i was a first chair trumpet for my school years and when i had to go to college, i decided not to go the theory route because i wanted to write from the heart
i know thats lame but it worked out for me
@@beepboopbleep3695 if you spent some time playing in the school band you probably learned pretty good theory rudiments? If you add a good ear to that, you're probably good to go and are able to write from the heart.
@@beepboopbleep3695to play trumpet you need rhythm and an understanding of scales. That is music theory
"Learn all the theory you can, then forget it." - one of the jazz greats
This is the lesson I needed, after 36 years of playing.
This is one of the most important lessons about feeling. You CAN do It in a theoretical way, but in the end what's most important is how It feels to the listener. Wayne said that the 'way' of tension doesn't matter, as long as you achieve your goal. By theory or just 'playing some wrong notes'.
Genius! one of my favorite guitar players off all times
“You don’t need theory” - this entire discussion is about music theory. Consonance, Dissonance, Phrasing, Tension, I -V7, HW Diminished, right notes, wrong notes… all music theory.
I think what he is getting at is you shouldn't live by theory like its a rule book. You can be a great hiker, but don't necessarily need to know geography
@@ht1560 Totally. The clickbait title is what is irritating here, not what Wayne Krantz is saying (not to mention he never actually says "You don't need theory" in the video).
@@steellemonstudiosyou irritate and drift off topic easily
@ht1560
Sounds like a hiker that's going to get alot of poison ivy and stuck with prickers and attacked by bears and Mt lions... if you don't want to go through those struggles then understand the theory otherwise you're just stunting your growth
@@LordButterstotch 🤣 Yup. Well played.
relatable perspective for life not only music , i see him talking about both at the same time , maybe at the end its all the same thing , perspectives are fascinating, theres so many ways to attack the same thing regardless the topic subject matter , thats the door ive recently gone through at 57 years old 2 months now into the guitar neck theory notes etc
Great examples from a great example of a theory laden person. Knowing the theoretical explanations he gave is good, forgetting the theory as you select good feeling notes is better.
I think one of my favourite guitar solos is Wayne's from 'The Great Pagoda of Funn' by Donald Fagen, please listen if you haven't yet, it's just astonishing
the whole album is awsome and Sunken condos too. Wayne is incredible and I true gentleman.
Perfect! Just play any crap you want and if it doesn't sound good, call it "tension". Music theory isn't a set of rules, it's a set of measuring tools. It's always amazing to me how much effort people put in to not learning things that can give them a much wider sonic pallet.
Great stuff, love WK’s playing… but it’s only possible what he’s discussing
‘cause he’s deeply explored the theory and music that came before and can build upon those (and developed his ear).
Right and wrong notes, some people have an ear for it from day one, and others train their ear through theory over time. Once known though, you're free to create just like the great musicians born with amazing ears. Neither path is easy though. You have to put the time in. Enjoy!
Interesting but I can't help thinking that his immersion in theory and exploration of harmony resulted in a 'hardwiring' of those sounds and how to get them. It really is hard, or even impossible, to sound musical using this in/out approach if you don't have some vocabulary ingrained in your ears and fingers.
I feel like some of it is based in having a good feel of time also. Jeff Schneider has a video here about it.
Genius Musician (not just Guitarist, I feel he would be capable on many an instrument)
Met Wayne twice (at his gigs) the most humble and approachable Musician I have ever met.
Please continue to support this Man and The Musicians that are still Courageous enough to be themselves☮️✌🏻
Merciii de confirmer cette pensée 👍👍👍
Listen, I don’t believe in criticizing other people’s art or methods. I’ve played by ear for decades while not knowing “what” I’m doing (theory). But finally I started working from theory outward into testing the boundaries, so YOU really need theory even though you can play by ear and get a long ways toward learning without it. Just do it. There are no shortcuts.
Could not agree more
In a way you learned theory in your own way. Maybe didnt have the "official" names for stuff (scales, chords, triads etc) but one doesnt pick up guitar every single time for like its the first time for years. Well at least if its something that makes sense musicly.
Well said. But will they listen?
@@pipkingdomwho are "they "
I didn’t know this Wayne Krantz. Fascinating. 🙏
This man is expounding on his opinion. Learn theory people!!!!
I believe that you have to learn all so you can forget a about it. He has a point on what makes a good player though.
I saw him live about six years ago in Seattle. It was good but I really did not know what was going on, so he must be a genius!
or you cant listen because he is very straightforward and does't complicate his words.
🤣
so he must be a genius?
I have studied theory forever. I think it's important to know it, and I use it constantly. It made me a better musician than I was, that's for sure. In terms of actually using it or not in improvising it really depends IMHO on the material you are trying to improvise over. If it's a simple vamp, one two chord vamp, yeah sure you can avoid it to some extent and find your ways to create tension and release (which is a gold concept in all music of course). But if you're playing more "complex" things harmonically, with changes etc like bebop etc, you have to know theory to sound legit. At the end of the day it's all about the material you play and the effect you want to create. But I think a little knowledge is a dangerous thing, so my advice is, well, learn theory, then decide with your ear if you want to use it or not. Wayne in any case is a fab musician that I greatly admire.
Love this guy. He completey changed the way I chose to play guitar. Opened up a whole new world. Total genius.
One of the advantages of going through the theory is to make sure that you are exploring more possibilities than you personally would have invented. It also ensures that your exploration of the instrument isn't based around the unconscious preferences you have in the movement of your hands, for example the tendency some have to avoid using one of their fingers. Finally, I agree that we shouldn't be a slave to theory, but identifying particular sounds by ear and knowing their names helps us communicate with our fellow musicians.
He speaks wisdom of life in general
If all the possible note choices were a jungle full of beautiful plants and trees with delicious fruits (resolution) on the one hand and dangerous creatures on the other (tension), it would be of help to have wandered the area many times making a map with paths. It can lead to going the same path over and over again … or it can transform into an intuitive general sense of orientation, like a place becomes your home once you live there long enough. You can’t get lost anymore, so you can get lost in the moment.
Thanks for sharing, refreshing view , never heard this take on notes and music. As a mostly self taught player will just keep noodling. Thank you! Wayne Hi, I am looking forward to the next post.
Great musician, and great video! thank you very much
I couldn't understand a theoretical word of what he said but I loved everything he played.
Lol, i feel the complete opposite. Understood what he was talking about, byt thought the music was uninspired and muddy.
Really interesting. Thanks.
Sensational !
Can you explain what it meant when you said there are 2048 tonalities in the chromatic scale?
In a 12 note system, you can only have 2048, or 2 to the 11th power, number of note combinations. Most harmony is mathematical.
Pure wisdom.
Wayne Krantz a true musical treasure.
Proud to have you explain7ng that
Says the guy who is intimately familiar with theory. :)
Theory is an incredibly useful way of making sense out of what you hear.
It can also be handy if you've got to play but aren't quite feeling inspired.
But of course you don't "need" theory.
But then again, you don't need a car or email. You could just walk or send a postcard. You'll eventually get there.
-Huge Krantz Fan
thank you very much
improvising gives the best ideas
I don’t hear this angle enough but personally I look at theory as a ‘musicians language’. Recording, rehearsing and playing out are much easier if you can communicate in the dialect of the experience.
Thank you!
Recomiendo su libro An Improviser's OS (Book) I recomend this book, unico en su estilo. One of a kind
I appreciate you sir 🙏
Muito bom. Perfeito!!!!!
Love it!
It is actually an old style, Fado/Sailor/Brothel blues.
It is said to be the very root to jazz, blues, country a lot of styles until the music industry sat an comb to it and divided it to separate genres.
My granfather a hired gun mastering many instrument he liked to play this style jaming on electric guitar, long sessions.
I could not get my head around it as I seensed flavours from around the whole world like eating a spicey meal cooked by an maniac but also as something pretty appealing.
No one did as people used to leave but it was and it is something very impressive.
I like Wayne’s playing. It doesn’t sound like it is guided by his ears, unless he has huge ears…he might.
I like the way this guy thinks.
Jazz, Nice!
Just came here to say that this guy is almost 70y'old. Cheers
If you don’t know theory how do you apply everything he’s talking about?
You can't. The reality is that you do need basic theory
Of course you need theory…..
it’s just a must. Not everyone is
a gifted musician. But even if you are,
if you want to develop your gift.
There is no way around…….
Music Theory, is the key…….
Great lesson ! I am a painter (between figurative and abstract) and I am a guitarist. I am finally realizing after years of playing guitar that there are ultimately 12 notes that will sound more or less good depending on the context and that theorizing all of this is like trying to make sense of an abstract painting. Most of the time, an abstract painting is born from an emotion rather than a rational thought, for music I am beginning to understand that it is the same... Afterwards we can justify everything by theory and if the theory does not, then we will then say that the guitarist uses symmetrical patterns or such 😄
Theory is how we communicate ideas.
I'm just hearing lots of short phrases 'motif' practised patterns put together with that 7/8 kind of Stravinsky 'Right of spring' Genesis foxtrot 'Supers ready' rhythm played underneath. Dissonance is there for a reason it's not just placed anywhere for the sake of it!
How do we know what the "wrong" notes are?
True 😂
I like Guthrie Govan's approach: There are no right or wrong notes, there are just degrees of consonance and disonnance and the skill is in how you use them.
Mr Krantz kinda does the same, except his description is more binary - this is in/this is out.
@@LilOlFunnyBoy My point is that we need some kind of theoretical basis for either method.
Saying "play wrong notes" assumes you have a collection of notes labelled "right notes".
There is no escaping theory.
Only variations on how to systematize it.
@@georgechristiansen6785 But theory *is* the "systematizing". Right notes and wrong notes are incredibly easy to find. They're whatever sounds good and whatever sounds bad. That's how you know.
I will argue that many amazing jazz lines can sound "bad" to the uninitiated.
@@heatherperleberg7816
He's still just talking about theory. Every guitarist I see saying you don't need theory, just talks about theory. Sometimes they even make up new words for the theory they are talking about.
ALL of them do it. its baffling lol...
Haha true. Very true
This is super awesome
Only works if you know the way home. Getting lost is the easy part. Encouraging content, though!
guitar genius
I just love his approach and way of thinking about playing - this is revelatory for many and brings joy by simplifying the whole universe of jazz music theory to the absolute essence of creating tension and release - I just ❤❤❤it - thanks for sharing
We're glad you enjoyed it :)
V7 defines the key. The key gives you the list of options by various tensions. But you hear the tension and release and feel it. Do you need theory? Yes and no. It's there whether you want it or not.
You don't know how to break the rules unless you know the rules. There's a reason no one listens to this very long.
Some have forgotten that the roots of rock music grow from jazz and blues, and in these styles a lot of things are deliberately done wrong so that the melody sounds like a live one.
The foods that we eat and enjoy are based on what's available to us. If we lived on a planet that only gave us acidic foods we'd like that. In music we are used to a certain flavor based on where we are on the planet (eastern versus western music in a very basic way). If you change up what we're offered musically we'll eventually get used to it and enjoy it.
You dont need to name everything as long as you hear where you are (and like it ).
Krantz transcends again! My teacher showed me Wayne two decades ago and he said ''He understands my approach ''Learn, forget and play'' ". Now Wayne gives even deeper level of that.
this is gold!
"You don't need theory" says someone who surely knows his stuff pretty well.
Theory, particularly harmony, is the language of music. How does a musician communicate without knowing theory?
Musicians!
This post is rather interesting and informative! Pay very close attention to improve your improvisation skills vastly as this instructor knows of that which he posts ! 🎸
Is there a way to get the rest?
We have another video from this Masterclass on our channel! Stay tuned for more in the future.
problem is that you basically don't play wrong notes at all
We need John to do another updated rig run down of Wayne
Don't listen to people who tell you not to learn
The big misunderstanding is that every good player eventually develops a vocabulary of ideas. Lots of great players HAVE that vocabulary they just dont assign "verbal" names to them. So they know the sound of a Major 9 arpeggio but they couldnt tell you what it actually is. They just know they like the sound of the notes. Then they say, you dont need theory. Well no you dont really, but you DO need a vocabulary of ideas. Its just a form of ear training. Theres a argument to be made that maybe all music "theory" should just be taught by ear. Once someone can hear an idea in their head before they play then they know it. You don need to be able to name it. But if you dont have any ideas in your head then you just making up shit as you go along and sometimes will just play terrible stuff.
Wayne did a class last year, is this the same post ?
Absolute genius.
Agree
Why?
@@thestonedandstripped bc he’s doing something that seems unattainable to someone who hasn’t tried, and he speaks with conviction. Lol
@@RaineyDaysStudioright!! I was thinking the same thing looking at these comments lmao
Imho, he is
If it was almost anyone but WK saying this I’d be turned off, but I love his stuff. Ironically I’ve been digging his Signals album which seems more structured than his later work. I think it’s difficult to minimize the importance of a thing like theory once you’ve learned it. Hard to subtract it from your mind. Maybe impossible?
If you don´tknow theory how do you know what are the "wrong notes"? 🤔
Your ear tells you. What is the theory of the enjoyment of any one particular note ? You either enjoy it or you do not.
@@paulmitchell5349 Well, no, music is all about theory, its mathmatics, 2+2 really does equal 4. There is nothing enjoyable in playing the "wrong note" unless you are a jazz player then it makes no difference! I once attended a "no theory" jam session and was kicked out because what was being played sounded "like music"! To me, says it all!
@@paulmitchell5349 lol. Final note of your solo, you gonna just feel around and find one that works? Like.. this method doesn’t even sound great over static changes (subjective, I know)
Why would you stumble in the dark when you can just turn the fucking light on? The light being on or off doesn’t change the contents of the room. Just the simplicity in finding what you need.
Stop making excuses for yourself and turn the light on.
@@akwamarsunzal I’d like to add that even in jazz/country etc, the “wrong notes” are (meant to be) used in such a way that keeps your lines from sounding like a total mess (you can literally swing your way through the entire fretboard chromatically just by being intentional with when/where you place the notes that are full of tension. Try landing on Bb while the band plays a GM7. It doesn’t matter if you immediately hear that you sound trash, maybe you even quickly adjust the pitch… but it’s already out there, and it was all preventable.
@@RaineyDaysStudio I think my point was that, unless you know music theory, you wont know what the wrong notes are. However, I have watched a lot of live jazz and, those "wrong notes" CAN fit, if the player is skilled enough to turn it around. Have you ever been to a "free music jam" session? Its just a noise! I went once, managed to stay for 9 minutes, then left!
This!!!!
It’s cool to do this for about two songs. Not more.
His songs are in a constant search of tension. It doesn’t sound like music after a while.
You do realize that you just wrote a comment that you like his playing in this video LOL
He’s just giving examples of one note compared to another..
@@tylerbehrends3304
This is how he actually plays lately
@@Pastas666
Yes I like his old playing 🤷♂️
Now his music sounds like practice
Case and point -- groove and phrasing is more important than the notes you play. However, note choice causes tension.
Wayne has some of the best, in the pocket playing which makes his wrong notes sound good, theory or not and is why he can sound awesome either by himself or in a trio. Having good time is just as if not more important than how much or how little theory you know or don't know when it comes to playing.
I have tension trying to follow this.
In this day and age it is very fashionable to be anti institution. But to be able to meaningfully flick your middle finger to the rule book, it is best to have read the book first. Then and only then have you risen above it.
To quote Eric Morecambe playing Rachmaninoff piano concerto - "I'm playing all the right notes, just not necessarily in the right order."
Many beginning guitarists want a 'shortcut' to avoid having to learn all the theory. What they don't realise is - theory IS the shortcut. Without it you've got an expanse of fingerboard with no map as for what to play.
Sure, play anything you like...and watch your audience disappear out the exit.
"Tension" here is just another word for "dissonance." What's dissonant now is far different from what was dissonant 100 years ago, because music keeps evolving. Our ears have become so accustomed to harmonic chaos that it's hard to play a "wrong" note. Like playing tennis without a net.
Any additional Theory knowledge is helpful but overwhelmingly ones focus should be on playing in the key of awesome.
I think theory, and perfection, can destroy tension and feeling.
I had always been told that you should know all of the rules but to then go and break them.
Watch this one right to the end, if you got pulled in by the "theory doesn't matter" clickbait.
Alex Lifeson is decades ahead of this he’s the quintessential instinctive player. His solo in Tom Sawyer, for example, shouldn’t make sense theoretically but it does.
You don't need a theory... if you know it and hear it. It's like the rules of the language you speak.
7:32 the lick appears
Hes the best at being the worst KIDDING KIDDING ! love this guy ill buy him a beer ANYDAY
so this is the guitar player for south park?
So glad to hear this . I am utterly bored of people who want to sound predictable and conventional. Tension, release, unpredictable phrasing and dissonance are so important. Music has to be both a emotional release and and an emotional message. When we speak we don't think about how grammar is formed. Thought straight to the mouth and vocal chords. Music should be more like that than some awful stagnating morass of should I /shouldn't I theoretical anxiety.
“Theoretical anxiety” is for sure a phrase uttered by someone who doesn’t know what they’re talking about.
@@eflatmac1 dying to know!
He seems to say that he got deeply into theory and now doesn’t use it. I think of the expression, do what I do or did, not what I say.
To be honest he wouldn't have a musical opinion about any of those notes if he hadn't practiced scales and theory for aaaaages. The difference between him and somebody that is playing random notes is that he feels the musical context of every note and has a bunch of musical instinct to take him to the next. That comes through reflective practice, using theory as a scaffold.
he the brother of Lenny?
The theory about theory, theoretically, is just a theory of theological things. I,ll show myself out ... Great lesson and inspiration! Thank cue.
so wayne krantz can afford to move away from theory just because he learned it so much .
the quintessence of assimilation of theory occurs when you can forget it while enjoying the worlds it has opened up to you