The best way I can describe it is that if you only learn what you want to learn, then you will be extremely limited in your abilities. If you learn and expand on the basics over time, then you'll be much more versatile in what you're able to do with that instrument.AnarchistFish said:Any reason why?onewheeled999 said:I learned pretty much everything on my own from tablature, without bothering to learn chords, theory, scales, and hell, I didn't even know the notes on a guitar fretboard until I took lessons a year or so into my playing. I beg of you, please don't try to get out of learning the basics just so you can play the specific things you want to play, like I did.
It exists, it just goes under another name, I usually hear it called a baritone. My sister plays one.J03bot said:The euphonium, which as far as I can tell, doesn't exist in the US - it's kind of a halfway stage between a tuba and a trumpet.
they are similar, but slightly different. i played euphonium in concert band, but used a marching baritone in marching band.TheYellowCellPhone said:I played alto saxophone for around three years, switched to tuba for almost a year now. Never going to back to alto.
It exists, it just goes under another name, I usually hear it called a baritone. My sister plays one.J03bot said:The euphonium, which as far as I can tell, doesn't exist in the US - it's kind of a halfway stage between a tuba and a trumpet.
you play violin AND violin? now that is interestingskizoman333 said:I play guitar, violin and violin