For all the words of encouragement
you have ever heard pertaining to picking up the
guitar and practicing, either from me or your own
sources, this article may come as a bit of a surprise
to you. For once I am going to tell you to put the
guitar down!
A little confused? Don't be, I'll
try to explain. And the best way I can get my point
across is by sharing an experience I personally
had some time ago.
Back in the 80's, I went to music
college in London. I feverishly studied classical
guitar for 3 years. Practiced for hours each day.
During this time I really developed some good disciplinary
skills as far as practice was concerned. I would
split up the day. Morning playing Bach fugues or
whatever torturous classical guitar piece that had
enslaved me at the time. A break for lunch, and
in the afternoon I would pick up my electric guitar
and plough through violin and flute music, which
I'd rented from the music school library, to get
my sight-reading together. Reading jazz and pop
music is very different from classical music because
phrasing interpretation is relative to the genre
being played. So it is as much about listening to
the band as it is reading the note values. So I
wanted to get that together. Finally I worked on
jazz harmony, specifically vocabulary for playing
over changes. The Charlie Parker Omnibook was my
bible, but I would also listen to be-bop players
and steal their phrases and try to figure out how
I should work them into my own playing. I remember
stealing from Cannonball Adderly, Miles Davis, Mike
Brecker, and I fell in love with the swinging styles
of pianists Red Garland and Wynton Kelly, both of
whom played on Miles Davis' album "Milestones",
a record that had a profound effect on me. Just
as importantly, I listened to the way these musicians
would feel the music. It wasn't just about the notes.
Wynton Kelly in particular had
a certain thing about playing over altered chords.
He would play 4 note phrases that would be repeated
in thirds going down. Sometimes in whole tones.
In fact many jazz guys I knew at the time would
make fun of his style a little bit by singing his
name as they played those motifs, going "Wyn-ton-Kell-ey-Wyn-ton-Kell-ey"
and so on. After I got the hang of his ideas I would
find myself sitting at the guitar and working out
my own variations of those ideas. Pretty soon I
had a whole bag of Wynton style 'tricks".
And then something interesting
happened...
I would practice and practice
these new motifs and melodic ideas and really try
to work them into my playing. Pretty soon I had
a pretty broad library of resources I could draw
from. And I would practice them over Jamie Abersold
records and so on. The woodshedding continued. Over
time, I realized that some of those phrases were
technically difficult to play on guitar (at least
for me) and when I tried to pull them off, half
the time I messed up. Other times I managed to pull
them off but because I was really having to concentrate,
the 'technicality' of it all would take me out of
the moment and I didn't like it. I wanted to improvise
without thinking after all. So some stuff stayed
with me, some stuff didn't.
About three years after I left
music school I felt completely 'educated out'. I
was by no means at the level where I could rest
on my laurels. Absolutely not. But I had had enough
for the time being. I needed to get out of my little
London flat and live life a little. Communicate
with people. Maybe learn some social skills! :)
I had been locked up in the woodshed for too long.
And so I took a break as I slowly joined the professional
world of music which, as I soon found out, involved
much more than pulling off Wynton Kelly licks! I
simply let things go. I went with the flow for a
while.
Now don't get me wrong, I wasn't
giving up on practice, I was breathing in air, allowing
nature to take it's course, that's all. I concentrated
on 'playing' rather than practicing. I would do
gigs around town and simply just play. I stopped
worrying about whether the hip notes were going
to come out. I just wanted to play and enjoy playing
without competetiveness, whether it was with myself
or others on the bandstand.
And a fascinating thing happened.
Fascinating! During those three years my guitar
playing took on a new life! I improved in leaps
and bounds and in ways I couldn't have done had
I continued practicing the way I had. Phrases that
wanted to remain with me did, phrases that didn't
want to didn't, and it was all OK with me. I simply
stopped forcing things and allowed nature to take
its course. And as far as I can remember, this was
the best thing that I could have done at the time
to grow as a musician. I even started to get a style
of my own because I had stopped trying to force
my heroes into my playing.
Now I am happy to say that from
that time I have gone through many periods of practicing
and letting go, practicing and letting go. Personally
I like music to breathe, I don't like it cluttered,
so if I want the music to breathe I feel it is necessary
for me to also. It's as simple as that.
But everyone is on a different
path so you must assess whether this pertains to
you at this time in your journey or not.
Finally, I do want to point one
thing out and I have thought about this a great
deal. Jazz musicians can be intense and insular.
They can get lost in their own bubble because they
spend so much time thinking about music, practicing
and so on. This intensity can, and often does, come
out in a musician's playing and makes it hard or
uncomfortable to listen to. I have always thought
that jazz musicians should spend more time socializing
with non-musicians to really open themselves up.
Opening the mind opens up the soul and the soul
is what needs to be bared if we want to really communicate
the music.
And I am not saying I am
right, by any means. All I know is that putting
the guitar down once in a while really worked for
me!