![]() ![]() Pretty cool! If you want to randomly shuffle the licks in the song, go down to the bottom toolbar and click on Shuffle Licks. You can basically create your own arrangement of the song, depending on what you want to learn. Want to learn how to improvise over Cripple Creek on mandolin? Use the Tunefox Lick Switcher to change some of the measures into different style licks. ![]() Use the "Memory Train" tool to hide more and more notes each time you play through the song. You can also activate the "Speed Up" tool to speed up isolated measures each time they loop. Use the tempo control slider to slow down the whole song, or isolate problematic measures. There are a ton of tools in the Tunefox app that will help you learn Cripple Creek tabs more efficiently and effectively. Intermediate arrangement features more 16th note up and down strokes than the beginner version and Advanced version adds some tasty melodic flare. The moral of this story boils down to simply taking advantage of the amazingly handy tools of Tabledit and it’s FREE sister program TEFView to help demonstrate the tablature’d arrangements to you visually and audibly.The Tunefox Beginner tab is focusing on accenting the melody notes of the vocal line. “Oh my!” responds the young man, “I never would have known!”… “Son, the car has a motor and a key to start it… It’s SELF-PROPELLED!”… “Pushing the car!”… responds the young man… “What are you doing?” cries the salesman… The young man and the salesman go out to the car and the young man puts it in neutral and starts pushing the car… “Please show me what you’re talking about, let’s go look at the car”, responds the salesman… “Wow”, the young man tells the salesman, “I had really hoped I’d be tooling down the roads in this beauty, but it turns out to be more trouble than it’s worth!” They come to an agreement and the young man gets the car.Ģ days later, the young man brings the car back to return it. This reminds me of a joke that hopefully will help drive the point of this post home:Ī young fellow goes into a car dealership and talks to a salesman about his first car purchase. When we can’t play by ear, we depend on our eyes and (tab) or (standard music notation) to help our fingers find the right path. ![]() Most of us, me included, prefer to play by ear. I’m not scolding anyone, just pointing out that Tabledit and TEFView (FREE) are magnificent programs and to use the PDFs (INSTEAD OF) Tabledit and TEFView is counter-intuitive when you’ve got all the power of the programs to help you. They could have listened to the MIDI playback via TEFView (FREE) or Tabledit and their questions would have been answered quickly…Įxplaining quarter notes, strum styles, correct fingering, etc., is nearly instantaneous when you let the program play it for you to hear… You also see the tab as it is being played, so that offers even more information.Īnd my explanations written out, in my own opinion, are nowhere near as good as you listening to the tab get played through TEFView or Tabledit… The questions asked could all have been explained had the individual downloaded the FREE version of Tabledit, which is TEFView from the Tabledit site. ![]() I’m not here to teach or explain, just arrange and present… I got an e-mailed request for a detailed explanation of a tab he/she purchased… So, if an individual downloads or buys tabs on this site and doesn’t use Tabledit to listen to the arrangement (MIDI), they are greatly defeating the purpose of this site for themselves. Get Tabledit or TEFView (It’s FREE sister program) – CLICK HERE… However, PDFs are secondary to Tabledit files where this site is concerned… I also post PDFs of most of the Tabledit (TEF) files because some folks find them useful… In other words, ALL tabs were worked out in Tabledit and are presented in Tabledit. This site is exclusively a Tabledit site. ![]()
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