Feelin' Alright?
Hello,
Does anyone know where I can get an interactive score for electric bass guitar for Joe Cocker's version of "Feelin' Alright"? I have looked in SheetMusic.com, Musescore, and Jellynote.com but the only copies I can find appear to be bass clef for piano. I must be overlooking it somehow because it was a big hit in the 70s.
Please let me know.
Thanks,
Ed
Comments
What's wrong with those in bass clef for piano?
In reply to What's wrong with those in… by Jojo-Schmitz
Jojo,
Would that work? Will it sound OK to play electric bass guitar with a score that was written for piano?
Thanks,
Ed
In reply to Jojo, Would that work? Will… by ekenn003
It'd be am octave apart, but would work
Also you can just take such a score and change instrument to bass guitar and change pitches down an octave
In reply to It'd be am octave apart, but… by Jojo-Schmitz
Jojo,
Thank you, I think it will work. I'm also learning how to play the piano so I can practice the bass clef on the piano with this score.
Please see attached. How do I add a staccato dot above the eighth notes and how do delete the 1/8th and 1/16th rests and replace them with quarter rests?
Thanks,
Ed
In reply to Jojo, Thank you, I think it… by ekenn003
To add staccato, use the Articulations palette or the shortcut "Shift+S". See the Handbook under Articulations for more info. To enter quester rests (no need to erease what's there already first), just select a rest you want to change and click the desired new duration. Except, there isn't room for a quarter rest there, you probably want to shorten the second eighth note of the group to a sixteenth first. Again, see the Handbook for much, much, much more information on note input and editing.