[MusicTlk] MusicTlk Digest, Vol 170, Issue 3

Ella Yu ellaxyu at gmail.com
Sat Oct 6 17:04:21 UTC 2018


I can't think of any tricks, really.  I think slow practice would 
help.

 ----- Original Message -----
From: Kociaba Fitness via MusicTlk <musictlk at nfbnet.org
To: "'Music Talk Mailing List for Blind Musicians'" 
<musictlk at nfbnet.org
Date sent: Sat, 6 Oct 2018 13:01:02 -0400
Subject: Re: [MusicTlk] MusicTlk Digest, Vol 170, Issue 3

Hay Peter,
Great to hear from you.  Hope you are doing well.
  Its been a long time.Trust me I know when I land in the wrong 
place and you are right its only a fret off one way or the other.  
The difference in the neck of my acoustic and the electric I used 
to play is not helping matters as the space between frets seems 
greater than I remember.  I was just hoping someone out there 
might have a short cut or little trick to help.  As you say with 
time I am sure I will get better at it.
Get in touch off list if you want.
Bill

Bill Kociaba
www.kociaba-fitness.com
"Building Better Bodies Since 1981"


-----Original Message-----
From: MusicTlk [mailto:musictlk-bounces at nfbnet.org] On Behalf Of 
peter acosta via MusicTlk
Sent: Saturday, October 06, 2018 11:46 AM
To: musictlk at nfbnet.org
Cc: peter acosta
Subject: Re: [MusicTlk] MusicTlk Digest, Vol 170, Issue 3

Hi Bill,
As an accomplished saxophone player you have an advantage because 
you have a trained ear.
It’s simply takes practice to land on the right fret.
Usually you will find that you are only off a fret or so.


 Once you realize this with a quick adjustment you can move up or 
down to where you need to be.

   This was a mystery two me until I lost my site



More information about the MusicTlk mailing list