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Post by NASH7777 on Apr 4, 2006 18:32:28 GMT -5
I just spent 100 dollars on sheet music... I couldn't help myself. I bought the complete works for Final Fantasy 7 and Final Fantasy 9. All the piano sheet music. I have a ton of it illegally already so I figured I better support the creators plus there's tons of song that aren't out on the net for sheet music. BUT if ANYONE wants a few songs I would be happy to send ya some scanned copies to your email if ya think of any songs ya want. I already play a pretty good Vivi's Theme from 9. The music should arrive in 3-4 business days. So Friday if I'm lucky!!!
Still can't believe I spent that much though
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Post by The Smurf on Apr 4, 2006 20:48:49 GMT -5
i just get all of my video game music from here... www.mxtabs.net/songs.php?path=Guitar,t,5190,Theme+Music i can play Clock Town on guitar really fast now...wow, i have no life... but video game music is really addicting sometimes, y'know? ;D -the smurf
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Post by NASH7777 on Apr 5, 2006 7:23:03 GMT -5
Yeah, I don't play guitar, only piano and percussion(set etc.) but from looking at the guitar tabs for mario, it seems easier than piano haha. Maybe I should try to pull out my dad's guitar and give her a shot.
In case I do, please correct me if I'm wrong as I have no background in gtabs and am completely guessing how to do this. eBGDAE represent the strings you pluck from top to bottom and the #'s are what you hold at the top of the piano while you play those. Play from left to right with that in mind and as I was looking at mario's theme I'm sure if I keep it's rythm I'll be ok, ?!?!?
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Post by The Smurf on Apr 5, 2006 14:11:56 GMT -5
In case I do, please correct me if I'm wrong as I have no background in gtabs and am completely guessing how to do this. eBGDAE represent the strings you pluck from top to bottom and the #'s are what you hold at the top of the piano while you play those. Play from left to right with that in mind and as I was looking at mario's theme I'm sure if I keep it's rythm I'll be ok, ?!?!? it depends on what you consider the top. e is the thinnest string, b is the next thinnest, g is after that, d is after that, a is quite thicker, and low e is the thickest. when held in "play position", the top is the thick e, but high e (thinnest) is considered the first string...dunno why. the numbers are the fret on the neck. so if it had a number 3 on the top line, you would play high e on the third fret. fret one is the furthest from the base, and the lowest in pitch other than open. the closer you get to the base, the higher the number, the higher the pitch. hope that helped... -the smurf
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Post by NASH7777 on Apr 8, 2006 18:22:52 GMT -5
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