As for learning the notes of each key, go back to playing scales and say them out loud as you're playing. So that as you go around to the right you add a sharp for each note and around to the left you add a flat for each note Circle of fourths/fifths for bass players i love teaching and would be happy to make videos about, well, anything music related that you're curious about
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I'm happy to actually record audio into a daw as well, this was an off the cuff kinda thing!
I recently discovered this exercise and i'm working it I figured it would be posted here several times, but i didn't find it, so i though i'd post It's a chromatic exercise that james jamerson used to run Is there a good one that rolls through the entire circle of fifths in a single exercise
The circle of 5ths is an attempt to explain and organize the music that people were already playing In other words, music comes first, music theory comes later. What the hells the circle of fourths lol, and how do you practise scale using it Click to expand.it is the same circle as the circle of fifths, only in the opposite direction
If you move in a clockwise direction, you are moving by fifths
If you move in a counterclockwise direction, you are moving by fourths. Does it matter in which direction the circle is learned I am into classic rock, so would learning the sharp keys first be more efficient (going in fifths) rather than going in the opposite direction and starting with the flat keys I guess once you complete the circle it doesn't matter ???
The circle of fifths is good for this because if you play the different keys in the order according to the circle of fifths it sounds really good, nothing really sounds out of place, and your fingers are moving in larger steps, which will make you think more and improve quicker, than going through the keys like c, c#, d, d#, e, f, etc. Circle of fifths the circle of fifths, to put simply, is a sequence of major keys, ascending in intervals of fifths Every time we change key, we add a new sharp The order of keys for the circle of fifths is
C g d a e b f# remember of course that c contains only natural notes, so there are no sharps
The next key in the sequence is of course. This kind of ruins the whole point of the circle of fifths The circle of fifths is a way to organize key signature in tonal music