FAQ

Q1. My download doesn't work! What do I do?!

A1. This happens to me sometimes. This can be an issue especially on my phone.
Try renaming the file name.

For example:
Ave-Maria-Bach-Gounod-Backing-Track-C-major-66-bpm-mp3
becomes:
Ave-Maria-Bach-Gounod-Backing-Track-C-major-66-bpm-mp3.mp3

Sometimes files don't open unless they end with (.mp3) or (.pdf)
Make sure that in the (phone) "Downloads" folder or (Computer) "Properties" the correct "Type of File" is selected (.mp3) or (.pdf)

For Audio files: "MP3 File" (.mp3)
For documents: PDF Document (.pdf)

Make sure you that the audio file "Opens with" an audio app that plays mp3 files (usually all of them do).

Q2. The download link in my email says it has expired and I can't get my purchased files?!

A2. The Download Link expires after a week and you waited too long to download it. Shoot me an email at:
admin@allthingscello.org
and I will work with you to get your downloads.

Q3. Why is my sheet music in treble clef?!

A3. Firstly, As a cellist you should be first familiar with the bass clef of course. Later as you progress, you will learn tenor clef and treble clef. During my quartet ensemble years at the university, I played some of the craziest clefs that I had never seen or heard of before.

All my jazz sheet music is written in jazz chart form (treble clef). It is how I wished the jazz "Real Book" were written. (ie. easy to read, simple melody with lyrics with easy to read chords to accompaniment and basic guide for solo choice.) These jazz charts were also inspired by the "Fake Books."

In Jazz, we read charts and thus my charts (jazz sheet music) are written in treble clef. It is your job to transform the music into your interpretation. This goes for adding notes and changing rhythms, as well as playing the chords the way that you hear them.

So...Be versatile and learn the universal, melodic treble clef and play the music as written...
OR!
Develop the skill to transpose the music to any octave on the cello fingerboard that fancies your interpretation.
I highly discourage playing the music as written. I myself don't even play the sheet music exactly as I wrote it. It is not the way (jazz discipline). If the note is "C", you have the complete freedom to play any "C" on the fingerboard. This gives you the complete freedom to play the music in the low bass voice, mid tenor voice, or screaming high soprano octaves toward the bridge.
I will not be bound to only reading and playing in the bass clef! The cello is a 4 octave instrument. Be free!

If the above answers didn't help, please send an email to admin@allthingscello.org