Hello everyone and welcome to my transcriptions exercises and lessons page for guitar and bass.

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I am a pro player and teacher so this stuff is as accurate as you will find anywhere on the net, however the work is limited by time available and the usual software frustrations. If you find an error or omission please let me know as I'm keen that this stuff should be as accurate as possible. There's a lot of bad tab out there, especially the bass transcriptions, so we could all pull together to make this site the one to use. Similarly if you have any accurate transcriptions please let me know and we'll share them. You may freely use this stuff, but remember that it is not available for profit as this would infringe copyright in many cases. Those looking for a workout should start with some left hand ex's, then right hand stuff, then scales and arpeggios. Finally, I insist that all my students make time for some MUSIC. This should include studying the works of others-your peers- such as other guitar pieces, and the truly smart player studies music from whatever source possible. I have applied violin, cello, piano, sax, trumpet and whatever else to guitar and bass. For an example of how this broadens a musicians approach, consider Allan Holdsworth-plays lead like a sax or violin (which he also has studied) and plays chords like a pianist would. Also check out Dick Dale playing guitar as if it were a mandolin or bouzouki! Your practise time should also make room for some improvisation-always more fun with a friend!


A home for some considered, accurate and useful stuff for people who play fretted lumps of wood with wire attached.

Wednesday, April 30, 2008

King Crimson "In The Court Of The Crimson King"










Can't say with 100% conviction that the chord voicings are correct here, so these are my best guess-they're definitely in the ball park, but I'd welcome any informed comment which might get at the truth.

5 comments:

Anonymous said...

Hello From France

This is one of the first time I can see the chords voices right in the harmony. Very good stuff. I've read (not played) the arpegios sequences and you seem to be prety good. It's curious since I'm trying to play that song with human choir. I have to arrange the voices.

Hope to see some Genesis (from Peter Gabriel Area)12 strings arpegios some day.

Christophe Coutant

Unknown said...

You're very kind Christophe. I'd love to give the Geneisis stuff a go. Now, does anyone know what tunings they used?

Anonymous said...

Hello Paul,

I know that Michael Rutherford had several weird tunings (even the small strings of its twelve strings were sometimes not the same). It seems to me that Steve Hackett used standard tunings but I might be wrong. Those old songs contains a lot of crossed arpegios so it's very difficult to separate one guitar from another. If you add the different tunings then you've got something quite difficult to transcribe.

Christophe Coutant

Anonymous said...

A good one to transcribe would be "entangled" from Trick of the tail album. Great great arpegios.

More difficult would be "the musical box" from Nursery Crime and the long last song from Selling England album because of the tunings of the twelve strings. First song should be with F sharp on bass and the last contains the double strings of the electric 12 strings not tuned in octave. Can't remember the trick.

Unknown said...

Agreed. Entangled is beautiful!