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Articles, music tips and advice
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Guitar
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I am convinced one
can become a great player with a limited knowledge
of harmony, theory and technique. Now, before
you jump down my throat and say "Why
on earth would you recommend that?!"
Well - I'm not recommending that you stop
learning these invaluable aspects of music.
I am saying that there is a great deal one
can do with just a little. Of course, the
more you know about music theory, the easier
it will be to continue to learn and absorb
information. The more you know about harmony,
the easier it will be to understand new music
and give you access to harmonic reinvention.
The more you know about technique, the easier
it will be to execute things you hear in your
head. There is never a reason to stop learning
these things. But there is so much that can
be said with just a little. I will try to
explain...
Once you have a basic knowledge of guitar
playing it is important to live with your
guitar, you know, develop a relationship with
it. What I mean by this is that all the things
you practice have a need to be absorbed into
your playing. You need to have patience and
know that things aren't necessarily going
to happen overnight. Some things kick in after
a while and when you least expect them to.
I can remember a time at my classical music
college in London. I was studying solo classical
guitar and in my own spare time having a fascination
with jazz. But I had some problems with right
hand technique, and frankly I had a ton of
jazz vocabulary to learn, not to mention sight-reading
and everything else that was on my musical
plate at the time. So I studied and studied
and my friends at college rarely saw me as
I stayed at home all week shedding. I was
pretty obsessed. Eight hour days of focused
practice ensued and I watched the results,
which of course fueled me to practice even
more.
But then I left music college and I was presented
with the daunting task of making a living
in my chosen profession, and so my practice
hours gradually lessened. I even remember
stopping scheduled practice completely for
several months and I just played. And you
know what?... this is when things really
kicked in. My playing took on a huge leap.
Why? because I stopped forcing things and
let things naturally absorb.....or not. Some
things didn't get into my playing that I practiced
(Some quite difficult Wynton Kelly licks I
seem to remember!) but a great deal of what
I practiced did get absorbed. The point
is I let things breathe a while and things
took on a natural course of their own. It
was an incredible epiphany for me. That whole
process of practicing and then just living.
It seemed right.
And then I realized something equally interesting,
to me at least. That whatever I played on
the guitar had to really come from my fingers
and not the guitar. Every note on the guitar,
across the entire fretboard, had a completely
different feel, sound and requirement. Not
only did I have to learn how to play a musical
piece but I had to learn that each individual
note had its own set of technical and musical
problems.
Let me try to explain this a little simpler.
Play the note F on the top E string, first
fret, and just sit on it and wait for the
note to die away. Now play an F on the 2nd
string at the 6th fret. Listen again for the
note to die away. Do the same thing on the
G string, then the D string and finally the
A string, probably about as high as you can
go. You will find that the top string F note
sustains less than the B string and maybe
more or less than the G string but probably
more than the D string and for sure more than
the A string. Now, take in to account that
every guitar feels and sounds different and
the results may be slightly different again.
Now, each note also requires that we sustain
it for as long as our musical piece requires
us to, or for as long as our ear tells us
we want to at that split second, if we are
improvising. Bare in mind that there are other
technical issues like the top string and bottom
string being close to the edge of the fretboard,
each string is a different thickness and we
have other things to accommodate.
And with all these things, what results is
that every single note on the fretboard is
unique and we need to build a subconscious
relationship with every note over time. I
say 'subconsciously' because it is not practical
to theorize or be vocally academic while we
are playing. It has to be inherent. And the
only way to do that is to live and build a
relationship with your guitar. In other words,
get the music inside us.
Another way to explain this is is to talk
about bending notes and position playing.
Every player will feel and bend notes on the
guitar in their favorite places. Over time
we know that a note can be bent upwards on
the G string and will sustain differently
according to which key we are playing in.
Some notes, according to Nigel Tufnell of
Spinal Tap, will "ring on forever!"
But some notes won't. Other notes you might
need to dig in a little harder to say what
you need to say, others may respond more easily.
But they are all subtly different. Some not
so subtly.
This observation is immediately apparent when
you hear a lesser experienced player who is
starting to get some vocabulary and beginning
to get around the fretboard. But there is
something lacking. Usually it is that the
player isn't fully aware of each individual's
physical note requirements. It's not just
a technical thing - it's a "feel"
thing.
And I think this is what people really mean
when they talk about having a great "feel".
A great player understands their instrument
and has a grasp on how each note needs to
be treated. And it's all in the fingers. And
I fully believe that one important thing you
must do to improve this aspect of your playing
is to just live with your instrument, get
to know it - all the notes - everywhere on
the fretboard. Have a relationship with your
guitar. Play it. And of course listen to other
great players that have already mastered it.
With a wonderful command of the guitar you
can say a great deal with just a little, because
it means that two or three notes sound amazing
when they are stated with passion and conviction.
This is truly great playing.
Practice and live. Command over your instrument
takes time. But it's the one thing I believe
separates the good players from the truly
great players.
About
the author
Chris Standring is a contemporary jazz recording
artist who performs throughout the USA and
Europe regularly. He has enjoyed much radio
airplay with several albums, opening up
a busy touring schedule. His music appears
on many compilation CDs also. For more info
on Chris' recording artist career go to
www.chrisstandring.com |
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