
Sublime Chord 3.5 Handbook
Dec 16, 2017 This is the final song on Sublime's third album, and it was their commercial breakthrough. It became a hit shortly after Sublime lead singer Brad Nowell died of a drug overdose. 'Doin' Time' was originally in the lyrics but was replaced by 'Summertime' at the last minute.
SUBLIME- BadfishSam Elderfieldrobbinthehood@hotmail.comThere's two guitars in this song, the 2nd plays little fills. This tab is only for one guitar,but pretty damn good for one.INTRO.k, im sure many of you are like. I know it sounds like hes playingmore than just the chords in the intro. (the acoustic bit) well he is,obviously. Here's what i play it osunds 10000X better than just playingthe chords and pretty close to what brad plays.=transitional scratch/mute (listen to the track to try and figure out what i mean)Okay, for the parts where i've got just single notes played at a time,the chord is still echoing right? So you're not gonna get a single notesound it will just be more distinct from the chord which is fading out.You have to be prettttty fluid to play this and make it sound good,but if you wanna learn it this is a great way.
I've been putting together a build I'm calling the “Disney Princess”, inspired by the classic archetype — friend to all living things, sings to inspire their companions, can accomplish mundane tasks in a musical montage featuring adorable woodland creatures.The build I've come up with is:. Bard 1. Druid 3. Bard 1. Green Whisperer 2 (Dragon 311 p.69).
Arcane Hierophant 3. Sublime Chord 1. Arcane Hierophant 7. Green Whisperer 2This is an actual character I intend to play, if I can get it all to work correctly.
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(I'm planning to deliberately drop a couple of power tiers by trading away Wild Shape, picking on-theme spells, and writing a massive personal ban list.)Anyway, as I understand it, I'd end up with a Bard caster level of 7 (Bard 2 + Green Whisperer 2 + Arcane Hierophant 3) and a Sublime Chord caster level of 17 (everything but Druid). I would like to take Practiced Spellcaster to improve this.If I take Practiced Spellcaster (Bard), then I would end up with a Bard caster level of 11. If I take Practiced Spellcaster (Sublime Chord), then I would eventually have a Sublime Chord caster level of 20. Download yeh ladka hay allah song mp3 free. But would Practiced Spellcaster (Bard) also improve my Sublime Chord caster level?I've seen a dozen contradictory interpretations of how Sublime Chord combines with other things and all of them make my head hurt (and with the build I'm looking at, I probably deserve it).
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In the end, I might just propose a simplified rewrite to the DM. But if there is a clear-cut answer by the rules as written, then at the very least I would like to use that as a starting point.
$begingroup$ I agree that the class would be totally fair without the requirement, but it does seem to me to be deliberately (if needlessly) intended as an awkward cost. And in general, I wouldn't let a player of mine use an ability granted by an item or temporary spell(-ish) effect to meet a prerequisite. If it were my game, I'd waive the prerequisite in a heartbeat - but I'm hesitant to impose further upon a new DM for a character who's already a total snowflake. Maybe I'll change my mind. It really does fit the character perfectly, and ditching Arcane Hierophant avoids some awkward interpretations. $endgroup$–Jul 17 '17 at 19:53. Unfortunately, sublime chord awkwardly based your caster level on your level in a chosen arcane spellcasting class—not your caster level in that class.
Then other prestige classes claim to stack with some class for the purposes of determining caster level.I think the easiest way to understand this is to imagine that sublime chord actually just stacks with some arcane spellcasting class for caster level, as a more normal prestige class does (but only for caster level), and then uses that class’s caster level for its own spells. If you think of things that way, the basic result is unchanged, and it allows for clear, reasonable adjudication of corner cases like Practiced Spellcaster.Under this interpretation, your first level of sublime chord would bump your bard caster level up to 8th (2 from bard levels, 2 from green whisperer levels, 3 from arcane hierophant levels, 1 from the sublime chord level). Your sublime chord spells would also use your bard caster level, so those are also cast at caster level 8th. You could take Practiced Spellcaster (bard) to bump this up—for both classes—to 11th.This “interpretation” of sublime chord, though, is really not technically accurate. Sublime chord does have a separate caster level of its own. However, there are interpretations of sublime chord caster level that work out mathematically-identical to this, and this interpretation is much easier to understand and reason about.On the other hand, though, you could argue all sorts of other interpretations that would change things. You could argue that sublime chord specifies class levels, not caster levels, so your other prestige classes before sublime chord don't count—not even for that class, since sublime chord redefines how that class does its caster level.
Bonuses may or may not even be applicable under such an interpretation. On the other hand, you could (and people have) argue crazy double-dipping, particularly with other things that mess with how caster level is determined (e.g. Nar demonbinder, Master Spellthief). I don’t think any of these is particularly helpful for practical play, however.