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Guitar
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Moving
Fingers Or Making Music?
Recently, I had the very common experience of
sitting with a student in a lesson, and instructing
him in the painstaking process of turning the
unfocused and meandering movements of his fingers
into the music they were intending to create.
The issues raised which were preventing the music
from emerging are so pervasive amongst the student
population that I feel it is very worthwhile to
cover this subject.
The situation was this: student wants to learn
a real live rock solo, the student gets the tab
off the internet, then the student looks at the
series of "numbers" on the tab sheet and dutifully
attempts to turn each number into a "note". Unfortunate,
the student is not really listening to the sounds
which are the result of these efforts, and is
certainly not comparing them to the original solo.
The result will be that said student will move
their fingers around, chasing the numbers on the
tab sheet until they get bored, at which point
they will dive back into one of the infinite tab
collections on the net, pick another solo, and
be off and running full speed ahead in order to
stay in exactly the same place as a player! This
is a summary description of what I have termed
"horizontal growth", learning more stuff and playing
it as badly as all the old stuff!
I would like to go through the various necessary
procedures that enable one to escape this cycle
of mediocrity.
Understanding The Situation
First of all, we must have the basics of practice
approach down, and a proper foundation to our
technique. If we do not know how to teach our
fingers anything, and as a result, all of our
past efforts in practice have given us a tension
filled and handicapped pair of hands, then we
are like crippled people trying to run a marathon.
If we are in this condition, we had better be
smart enough to begin to travel the road to basic
"guitar playing health", and that means beginning
to study "The Principles". If you are fortunate
enough to be reading this newsletter, you have
only yourself to blame if you do not avail yourself
of the cure for that condition.
Once we do have the necessary foundation, we are
in a position to learn whatever we want, if we
can fulfill the two conditions of practice
"know the right thing to do, and make sure you
do it.". It is important to understand that the
first requirement "knowing the right thing to
do" is very complex, and different for each style
of guitar. While knowing how to practice is something
that all players, regardless of style, must know,
when it comes to specific techniques, a classical
player does not have to know many of the things
that a blues or rock player must know, and vice
versa. So, whatever style we play, we must first
of all identify the specific techniques needed
for the style, and then strive to gain an understanding
of how those techniques are done.
What We Need To Know For Electric Leads
In the lesson I am referring to, the student did
not have this requirement fulfilled. We were working
on the wonderful solo from "Black Magic Woman"
by Carlos Santana. It is not a "difficult" solo,
but you certainly need to have the basics down!
Those basics are
- string bending in all its
variations, such as pre-bending, done with each
finger ·
- vibrato on plain notes and
bent notes ·
- string raking and string
muting
We had to work on all these
techniques, getting down to their essentials (this
student has had many teachers and lessons through
the years, had worked through lots of books, but
could not properly bend a string!). The lack of
knowing the right way to do these things was making
it impossible to achieve the goal of making the
music emerge.
The next obstacle to deal with was the lack of understanding
of the specific practice approach necessary to use
for learning electric guitar solos. This student
was completely violating the principle of "knowledge
of results" (fully explained in "The Deeper I Go
The Deeper It Gets"). The essence of this principle
is that we cannot acquire and improve a motor skill
if we do not receive some kind of feedback that
gives us an awareness of how close our efforts are
to the model we are attempting to copy. If we are
shooting a basketball we cannot improve if we can't
see the hoop, evaluate our effort, and make corrections
for the next attempt.
We must respect this fundamental law when we practice,
especially electric leads. The right sound is much
more elusive in this here than in other styles,
because of the highly individual nature of a player's
style and sound, and the actual manner of producing
sound in this style, which leaves more room for
error. By this I mean string bending. The infinite
variety of sounds made possible by the technique
of bending strings makes it imperative for students
to be constantly comparing their efforts during
practice to the solo they are learning. It may sound
obvious, but I am constantly meeting students who
don't do this!
Your Practice Setup
When you sit for practice, you must have far more
than the tab to the solo you are working on in front
of you. The most important thing to have is some
kind of recording of the solo you are working on,
so that you can listen to it, bit by bit, as you
work on each lick in the solo. The best thing is
if it is on some kind of player that will also play
it half speed, so you can switch back and forth
between the actual speed and half speed. There are
many computer programs that will do this (even free
ones, such as WinAmp). That is fine if you don't
mind practicing in front of your computer. But even
a simple micro-cassette player will do, they all
have 2 speed recording, so you can record at the
higher speed and play back at the lower. It plays
back an octave lower, and many people assume that
is a bad thing, but I don't think it is. It still
allows you to hear each note with its rhythmic placement,
and that is the most important thing.
Whatever the means, have a full speed and a half
speed version of the solo available. You can even
slow it down with software, and then simply record
it on to a cassette that you use in lessons.
Taking It Apart However you do it, arrange
to be able to listen to any part of the solo you
are working on while you practice. After that, you
need something to record your playing. Again, a
simple cassette recorder will do. I keep two recorders
near me, one to play the solo, and one to record
myself. I play the original, and then I compare
mine; back and forth, I "a-b" it, listen to one,
immediately followed by the other. And I don't mean
the whole solo, I mean lick by lick. Take a little
piece of the solo, study it, make sure you are sure
of all the notes, fingering, picking, techniques
involved, and have gone over the basic movements
(using the Basic Practice Approach if you are using
The Principles). Then, listen to the original solo,
and record yourself playing the same fragment of
the solo. Now, listen back and forth from the original,
to yours, noticing every detail.
Ask yourself "does my playing sound like the original"?
If not (and the answer usually starts out as "NO
WAY!"), your job is to close the gap between the
two. You must discover exactly how yours is falling
short, and then figure out how to fix it. Are the
bends in tune? Is the vibrato even? Is the rhythm
correct, and how about articulation? Your goal is
to sound as good, as polished and professional as
the original.
Putting It Together
After working on the solo in small pieces, and you
feel your playing is reasonably close to the original
in quality, it is time to start putting it together.
You must do this by actually playing the solo to
the rhythm background. This is something most students
do not do, and it will prevent you from ever approaching
a professional level of ability. You should never
consider that you know a solo unless you have listened
back to yourself playing it to the recorded rhythm
background. For any solo you are working on, you
should learn the rhythm as well, and record it at
various tempos. Master the whole thing at a slow
tempo first, maybe playing it to the background
chords played at half tempo. The best idea is to
make 4 or 5 versions of the rhythm part at different
tempos for your practice sessions.
These days all students should avail themselves
of the tremendous resources for study that are available;
everyone should have some kind of multi-tracking
software available (which can be found for as low
as 20 or 30 dollars), and begin their own collection
of recorded solos. You will experience great growth
as a player if you do.
I am not saying that everything you practice must
be swallowed whole, and mastered in its entirety.
Sometimes you just might like a small part of a
solo, or one lick perhaps. There is nothing wrong
with just sitting down and copying a fragment of
something you like, but you should still use the
same approach of coma paring it, in recorded form,
to the original. But along the way, you should master
some whole songs, or whole solos, and prove yourself
on tape. The next step, of course, is to prove yourself
in a live situation by finding people to play with
(of course, that means dealing with other real live
human beings, and brings about challenges far beyond
the scope of what I wish to talk about here!).
At the beginning of this essay, I described the
process of nailing a solo as "painstaking". That
is a very accurate word, because to go through all
the trouble that I am saying is necessary will seem
like a real pain when you begin to do it. That is
why so many people don't bother. Those people are
called "bad players". If you adopt the practice
approaches I have described, and hold yourself to
these standards as a player, you will rise above
the great majority of "players" who surf around
the net, hacking their way through the ocean of
tabs, and drifting from one mediocre result to the
next. You will become a real guitar player.
About
the author
Guitar virtuoso, recording artist, composer,
and teacher of 30 years, Jamie is recognized
by music experts around the globe for her major
contribution to the advancement of guitar education.
With a straight forward writing style, her tried
and true, result-oriented guitar book, "The
Principles of Correct Practice For Guitar",
powerfully reveals the correct practice methods
that no other book has revealed
taking
the student from the beginning stages all the
way to the highest levels of virtuosity. Learn
more at www.guitarprinciples.com
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