i.e classical i hate: greensleeves (ugh)
classical i liked:
leo brouwer etude simples VI
romanza
(jerry's breakdown fuck yeah)
any suggestions?
Blogs > ella_guru |
BrTarolg
United Kingdom3574 Posts
i.e classical i hate: greensleeves (ugh) classical i liked: leo brouwer etude simples VI romanza (jerry's breakdown fuck yeah) any suggestions? | ||
anatem
Romania1369 Posts
On April 12 2011 09:06 BrTarolg wrote: I'm looking for more classical /classical style stuff to play, but the thing is most classical stuff doesn't sound very interesting to me i.e classical i hate: greensleeves (ugh) classical i liked: leo brouwer etude simples VI romanza (jerry's breakdown fuck yeah) any suggestions? if you got an interest in classical guitar, you need to spend a bit of time around here http://www.delcamp.us/ also, what is your level, there's a wide range of music you can play that grows exponentially with your playing experience. the classical guitar music usually gets to the real awesomesauce level once you got a few years of playing under your belt, unlike say an acoustic where you can pick it up now and be jamming your favorite rock ballads in a year. | ||
Tippany
United States765 Posts
| ||
ella_guru
Canada1741 Posts
On April 12 2011 03:09 dartoo wrote: Hey, I've been trying to play for about 3-4 years now, but I think I lack a proper practice structure, which then leads to boredom cause I cant get better..and lets to me dropping off the instrument..only to come back to it 4 months later. I started playing songs..I could play a few songs nearly completely save for the faster solo bits ( got to half the first solo and half the second solo on iron man). Should I work on pure exercises , or just continue to play the solos slower till I get better, or is there something else I should do to improve? I've been thinking about dividing my time out, for example out of two hours, half an hour of stretches ,then some scales, and some exercises and then finally play a song. Would that be good? Okay I think there are a lot of questions in here, but would like get a guitar teachers perspective on things. + Show Spoiler + Ahh. Ok, we will do one hour together a day. 10 minutes of small warm ups - Alternate pick the open strings, 4 times each, the switch strings, slow and in even tempo. 1 E A U 2 E A U etc etc. These 10 minutes here are about re teaching yourself the basics of guitar here. So, play single notes with the left hand. Picture the energy flowing to the tip of your finger. Try this: We know what a clean note sounds like, we know what a buzzed note sounds like. Make a buzzed note on purpose. Say, 3rd fret of the low E string. Buzz the note so you hear a bit of the actual note and some buzz. Ok good, now press just a hair harder. You get the clean note. Guitar is a lot more about finesse than strength. Do this every day to remind yourself that you should NEVER struggle with the instrument. Also in these 10 minutes, review note names. Do the 1st 3 frets on your first and second day the next two days do the next 3 frets, etc. , 20 minutes on scales. Start with two octave scales. What is most important here is that you pay attention to proper left hand technique, and apply STRICT alternate picking, not going fast at all. Make sure everynote is clear, and occurs with VERY LITTLE EFFORT. TOTAL RELAXATION!! then 30 minutes on songs. Take your iron man solo , lets learn the rest of it. Here's the catch, spen 15 minutes on just 4 bars of the solo, and divide that further by 7 minutes on each 2 bar sets. TAKE THIS SHIT SLOW. The goal here isn't to just learn the notes, its to be patient , be relaxed, and play cleanly. AVOID TEMPTATION TO PLAY FAST Then the other 15 minutes is the same thing but on a different song or section. This should get you on a track which will bring up more questions soon enough. Please ask if you have any questions or ideas about this schedule!! On April 12 2011 06:28 sMi.EternaL wrote: I guess overall i'm lacking pretty seriously in the music department. i have no idea about music theory, how chord progressions work, how to read music etc. I just play by ear currently which is tedious when trying to figure out a new song. (I know barely any songs, just a lot of small parts in a lot of diff songs.) I think a goal of mine would be to be able to go into a jam, sit down and be able to follow along when people are like "Ok this one is in C and goes 1 5 3 2b then switches to X after X time and does XXXX" I see you guys talking about the numbers but I only have a very vague idea of what that is (it's chord progressions with 1 being the base key and then moving up?) Hope the wall of text isn't too bad, thanks again! + Show Spoiler + Ok, so you gotta go in on the WHY of music. LOADS OF FUN MAN. The rewards are infinite and forever. Here's your task. This week, twice a day for 2 minutes, you will review your note names. A A# B C C# D D# E F F# G G# The week after that, apply this to your first string, all frets up to twelve So your e string is like this fret 1 = F 2 = F# 3 = G etc etc. For every fret you go up, you advance one note , starting on E as the OPEN string. For each week after, you will do the next string as well as all previous. In about a month from now you will know all the note names down cold and be ready for the nitty gritty of it all . A month? That doesnt add up you say. Well I trust you will get carried away by your progress once you start to see the patterns. Plus you get a freebie cuz two strings are the same. Let me know if ANY of this is unclear but trust me when I say YOU MUST KNOW THE NOTE NAMES COLD. Or youll just be stuck as shit again. Do this then lets talk. On April 12 2011 07:07 caruso wrote: Major - 1 3 5 Minor - 1b3 5 Maj7- 1 3 5 7 min7 - 1 b3 5 b7 Dom7 - 1 3 5 b7 EXACTLY the writeup i wanted. Thanks mate, I can clearly see the pattern now and it becomes pretty obvious. + Show Spoiler + Ok , get good at making chords, Learn these types so you can play them rooted on the 4th, 5th, and 6th. Then lets talk more... On April 12 2011 07:11 Dalguno wrote: I've been playing my classical a lot lately. I'm getting into playing without a pick, just fingerstyle. Do you have any good drills to do? How freaking hard is flamenco to learn? + Show Spoiler + AWESOME The classical is SO great for teaching us about music and ourselves.. Ok, the right hand we label P = Thumb (pulgar) I = index M = Middle A = Ring finger (annular) put the I M A fingers on strings 3 2 1 respectively. P will go on string 5 for now First arpeggio P I M So just pluck P, then I, then M, even tempo, one after the other, over N over. then when you feel good P I M I so up and back again P I M A all fingers P I M A M I all up and down DO THESE SLOWLY . DO NOT RUSH. REMAIN FUCKING CALM haha. Now, the right hand is a very important force in the classical style. Close your first. Open it. Watch again this time, close it, open it. - THATS how you will pluck the strings. Many people try and get underneath and pull. This gives a harsh tone. PUSH through the stings as if they werent there, just as if you were closing one finger on your hand, then reset comfortably. Let me know if this makes sense. It's not easy to have good right hand technique. Flamenco? Do you mean like, real flamenco stylez? The hardest part is getting it in your ear, the rhythms are very foreign to us and grouped in ways that are uncommon. Maybe you could link me to a youtube of what you mean by flamenco, there are many definitions this days. What part of it do you like? On April 12 2011 09:00 Fulgrim wrote: Hey i read the blog on the first go around and loved it. I'm a bit further along on guitar playing now (been playing for 9 months). I was wondering if there was anything you could tell me that could help me improve my strumming and rhythm. I can do basic strums when listening, watching people do it and practicing for a bit, but is there anything in general i should be doing? As for rhythm is there anything I can do to practice that will help me? Thanks. + Show Spoiler + Thanks man I appreciate it. Good job stickin to it BOSS HYPE SWAG SHIT MAAAAN!! Here's something you can practice - Can you count? 1 2 3 4 with a down strum on each count. EZ PZ 1 + 2 + 3 + 4 + Now we do twice as many strums. Say "1 AND 2 AND 3 AND" and you are going Down Up Down up. EZ PZ Now to divide a beat further 1 E A U 2 E A U etc "One EEE AND UH two EE AND UH etc" So now we have a way to count four strums to a beat. So, grab a piece of paper write 1 2 3 4 1 2 3 4 and at your whim, write Es As Us (not too many to start! very few..) and assign a direction to strum above each . Try and land on the number counts with a downstrum. With this method you can expose yourself to new strums, while writing them in a way that is logical and can be dissected instead of having to rewind a tape over and over. Let me know how this goes, or if it doesnt make sense. On April 12 2011 09:06 BrTarolg wrote: I'm looking for more classical /classical style stuff to play, but the thing is most classical stuff doesn't sound very interesting to me i.e classical i hate: greensleeves (ugh) classical i liked: leo brouwer etude simples VI romanza (jerry's breakdown fuck yeah) any suggestions? + Show Spoiler + Can you read sheet music? Do you have desire to? On April 12 2011 10:06 moose162 wrote: Can you offer any advice to someone who's been playing for a few months and struggles with the basic F chord? I'm referring to the one where you only use the first finger on strings 1/2 as opposed to the full bar chord. People always tell me to turn the finger inward and use the bony part but then I can't press down on fingers 2 and 3. + Show Spoiler + Ok here we go, BARRREE CHORDDSS Before you fuck with that, this excersize is needed. 5th fret. Barre two strings. Finger nice and straight, dont strain, only apply whats needed. Can you do this confidently? Ok Move on. Barre three strangs, Same applies. Keep adding strings until it gets a bit messy. We need to identify what the problem is. Are you pushing hard enough ? Are you nice and tight behind the fret? Try rolling your finger different sides to see if the strings are getting stuck in your knuckle creases. As you progress at this, go back to barring just two strings. heres the rub - WHILE barring , use finger two to play the 6th fret of your first string. NOW see if your barre is still working. Good? Ok, move over a string so its on the 6th fret of the 2nd string. Both notes sounding clean? Then add a string to the barre. Keep going. After you get good at this, do the same, but with your 3rd finger reaching for the 7th fret, then repeat the process. Do this for 5 minutes a day for about a week. Hey, thats not too much to ask right? Let me know how it goes . | ||
Dalguno
United States2446 Posts
Now, the right hand is a very important force in the classical style. Close your first. Open it. Watch again this time, close it, open it. - THATS how you will pluck the strings. Many people try and get underneath and pull. This gives a harsh tone. PUSH through the stings as if they werent there, just as if you were closing one finger on your hand, then reset comfortably. Let me know if this makes sense. It's not easy to have good right hand technique. That kinda makes it sound like you should be strumming while opening your hand. I really hope I'm misunderstanding. I'll try to post a video on youtube to show how I do it, to see if I'm doing it right. Flamenco? Do you mean like, real flamenco stylez? The hardest part is getting it in your ear, the rhythms are very foreign to us and grouped in ways that are uncommon. Maybe you could link me to a youtube of what you mean by flamenco, there are many definitions this days. What part of it do you like? I guess I'l have to do a little more research on this. I've just seen the whole insane using-your-pinky-to-strum-one-million-times-a-second type stuff, and was inspired. I'll see what I mean more later. | ||
h3r1n6
Iceland2039 Posts
I do play guitar (mostly electric, mostly interested in metal) a bit on and off for 3 years now. Most of the time practicing is when I watch seriess or starcraft or something else, where I just play scales, sometimes songs that I know or just randomly putting together a riff. That means I am quite fast, but lack a lot in everything else. Well, I can read sheet music and have a good sense of rhythm from playing trumpet as a kid and teenager. So I do know the common chords and can play them, but am not very far. And I pretty much only play with a pick or do tapping. Also, I am shit at transcribing stuff. That leaves me to ask, where do I go from here? I somehow want to broaden my skill and learn fingerstyle, but I don't know how to really get into that. And do you have any recommendation on how to get myself to practice transcribing by ear, instead of just getting the tabs? It's just so much more convinient. | ||
ella_guru
Canada1741 Posts
The technique you are referring to is Rasgueado. Look it up. There is literally manuals on how to do it . I can link you if need be. | ||
ella_guru
Canada1741 Posts
On April 12 2011 12:55 h3r1n6 wrote: That leaves me to ask, where do I go from here? I somehow want to broaden my skill and learn fingerstyle, but I don't know how to really get into that. And do you have any recommendation on how to get myself to practice transcribing by ear, instead of just getting the tabs? It's just so much more convinient. + Show Spoiler + Do you know any thing about keys, and what chords go in what key and why? Knowing a bit of how music works can REALLY save time transcribing since you have thoughts on how the music is likely to be moving, even if your ear is having troubles. Learn your major scale if you dont know it, because EVERYTHING relates back to it. then boot up this app: http://www.good-ear.com/servlet/EarTrainer Or if you are willing to do a small download, this program is VERY comprehensive and highly reccomended as it charts your progress and has little lesson plans http://www.earmaster.com/ Just get the trial. Take it slow. At first, your ear can take only so much training. Dont do more than 5-10 minutes. Dont move on until you you are scoring upwards of 80 percent. WHILE using one of those programs, take REALLY small melodies and figure them out. BEFORE you aim to play them on your guitar, sing them out loud. You HAVE to sing , even if you dont like your voice get over yourself, just sing. We want to connect what we hear to our hands, and singing is the connecting force in that. So take Eleanor Rigby by the beatles say, and just get the first part of the vocal melody "IIIIiiiiii look at all the lonely people!" . Just figure that out. Look how it relates back to the key. If you dont know how to do that, ask me more questions and we can learn. The mistake to make here is to bite big pieces. NO NO NO . Just a measure here, a measure there. Dont worry about doing more than 2 measures of fresh material a day. Take it slow, enjoy it. You are basically training a magical skill, its pretty fuckin cool to slowly take stuff out of the air and make it real. Wow. Let me know if you need more on this or I'm unclear on what you should do. Ear training tools Real Life transcribing (SHORT MELODIC FRAGMENTS) How does it relate to a scale oh shit, just saw you are interesting in fingerstyle. I'm going to draw from an earlier answer I gave **** Fingerstyle shit is really great and enables your guitar to sound more like a piano, very full even when playing alone. First things first the right hand we label P = Thumb (pulgar) I = index M = Middle A = Ring finger (annular) put the I M A fingers on strings 3 2 1 respectively. P will go on string 5 for now Do the following two arpeggios for a week to ten days before advancing. DO THEM SLOWLY and relaxed. *** First arpeggio P I M So just pluck P, then I, then M, even tempo, one after the other, over N over. then when you feel good P I M I so up and back again Then move onto these for two weeks while playing the old ones. ****** P I M A all fingers P I M A M I all up and down DO THESE SLOWLY . DO NOT RUSH. REMAIN FUCKING CALM haha. Now, the right hand is a very important force in the classical style. Close your first. Open it. Watch again this time, close it, open it. - THATS how you will pluck the strings. Many people try and get underneath and pull. This gives a harsh tone. PUSH through the strings as if they werent there, just as if you were closing one finger on your hand, then reset comfortably. Let me know if this makes sense. It's not easy to have good right hand technique. This can be hard to explain over text but I'm on the slow process to get equipped to put up videos for all yall. | ||
Zlasher
United States9129 Posts
| ||
h3r1n6
Iceland2039 Posts
On April 13 2011 00:10 ella_guru wrote: Show nested quote + On April 12 2011 12:55 h3r1n6 wrote: That leaves me to ask, where do I go from here? I somehow want to broaden my skill and learn fingerstyle, but I don't know how to really get into that. And do you have any recommendation on how to get myself to practice transcribing by ear, instead of just getting the tabs? It's just so much more convinient. + Show Spoiler + Do you know any thing about keys, and what chords go in what key and why? Knowing a bit of how music works can REALLY save time transcribing since you have thoughts on how the music is likely to be moving, even if your ear is having troubles. Learn your major scale if you dont know it, because EVERYTHING relates back to it. then boot up this app: http://www.good-ear.com/servlet/EarTrainer Or if you are willing to do a small download, this program is VERY comprehensive and highly reccomended as it charts your progress and has little lesson plans http://www.earmaster.com/ Just get the trial. Take it slow. At first, your ear can take only so much training. Dont do more than 5-10 minutes. Dont move on until you you are scoring upwards of 80 percent. WHILE using one of those programs, take REALLY small melodies and figure them out. BEFORE you aim to play them on your guitar, sing them out loud. You HAVE to sing , even if you dont like your voice get over yourself, just sing. We want to connect what we hear to our hands, and singing is the connecting force in that. So take Eleanor Rigby by the beatles say, and just get the first part of the vocal melody "IIIIiiiiii look at all the lonely people!" . Just figure that out. Look how it relates back to the key. If you dont know how to do that, ask me more questions and we can learn. The mistake to make here is to bite big pieces. NO NO NO . Just a measure here, a measure there. Dont worry about doing more than 2 measures of fresh material a day. Take it slow, enjoy it. You are basically training a magical skill, its pretty fuckin cool to slowly take stuff out of the air and make it real. Wow. Let me know if you need more on this or I'm unclear on what you should do. Ear training tools Real Life transcribing (SHORT MELODIC FRAGMENTS) How does it relate to a scale oh shit, just saw you are interesting in fingerstyle. I'm going to draw from an earlier answer I gave **** Fingerstyle shit is really great and enables your guitar to sound more like a piano, very full even when playing alone. First things first the right hand we label P = Thumb (pulgar) I = index M = Middle A = Ring finger (annular) put the I M A fingers on strings 3 2 1 respectively. P will go on string 5 for now Do the following two arpeggios for a week to ten days before advancing. DO THEM SLOWLY and relaxed. *** First arpeggio P I M So just pluck P, then I, then M, even tempo, one after the other, over N over. then when you feel good P I M I so up and back again Then move onto these for two weeks while playing the old ones. ****** P I M A all fingers P I M A M I all up and down DO THESE SLOWLY . DO NOT RUSH. REMAIN FUCKING CALM haha. Now, the right hand is a very important force in the classical style. Close your first. Open it. Watch again this time, close it, open it. - THATS how you will pluck the strings. Many people try and get underneath and pull. This gives a harsh tone. PUSH through the strings as if they werent there, just as if you were closing one finger on your hand, then reset comfortably. Let me know if this makes sense. It's not easy to have good right hand technique. This can be hard to explain over text but I'm on the slow process to get equipped to put up videos for all yall. That hugely helps for transcribing, thanks. For fingerstyle, I guess my wording was a bit off, sorry for that. I can do those mechanical exercises pretty easily actualy (or so I would think :D). I actualy don't really know what I want here, I guess I just don't have much of an access to the not rock/metal playing styles. | ||
ella_guru
Canada1741 Posts
On April 13 2011 01:12 Zlasher wrote: No guitar questions but hi :o long time nochat Haha yea I'm back hoping to help some people out with the things I'm best at. Givin shortcuts where I can, from transformice to guitar. GURUVATOR//ELLAVATOR On April 13 2011 06:17 h3r1n6 wrote: That hugely helps for transcribing, thanks. For fingerstyle, I guess my wording was a bit off, sorry for that. I can do those mechanical exercises pretty easily actualy (or so I would think :D). I actualy don't really know what I want here, I guess I just don't have much of an access to the not rock/metal playing styles. + Show Spoiler + http://www.stormthecastle.com/classical_guitar/Collection/120studies-for-right-hand.pdf Even if you can't read sheet music , I can still explain how to use those to understand the information. IF you can play 120 of those cleanly at a decent tempo, you are doing well. There are a lot of cool right hand things you can do that dont come up in the regular rock ballad dust in the wind type thing Do you like this piece at all? It's fairly aggressive and prettty cool, maybe you'd like to learn something like this | ||
hugman
Sweden4644 Posts
I've been messing around with electric guitar for a few years, just learning on my own (usually in spurts) and usually learning songs by ear. I guess I'm decent, personally I think I suck because I want to be much better, but the hardest stuff that I can play is maybe Holy Wars (megadeth) and 5150 (van halen), not super cleanly though. The problem is that I feel really stuck, I want to be able to play more solos and I don't think I'm going to improve much more without deliberate practice. I don't know if I should just start over, learn scales properly, play super slowly until I get a clean technique etc, or if I should pay for lessons or whatever. Any tips would be appreciated. I have played cello since I was super young so I can read sheet music, but I never took the time to learn much music theory. I did record myself once so you can judge my playing + Show Spoiler + Also, regarding guitars, I have decent guitar (Ibanez RG320) and it has a Floyd Rose, but tuning it's a bitch. Or rather, switching tuning is, because if I tune down half a step it just wants to go back up, and I need to undo the bolts and then lock them again over and over, it takes days for it to adjust to a tuning. I wonder if anything can be done about that as it really discourages me from using different tunings (no Van Halen for me =( ) | ||
h3r1n6
Iceland2039 Posts
On April 13 2011 08:51 ella_guru wrote: Show nested quote + On April 13 2011 01:12 Zlasher wrote: No guitar questions but hi :o long time nochat Haha yea I'm back hoping to help some people out with the things I'm best at. Givin shortcuts where I can, from transformice to guitar. GURUVATOR//ELLAVATOR Show nested quote + On April 13 2011 06:17 h3r1n6 wrote: That hugely helps for transcribing, thanks. For fingerstyle, I guess my wording was a bit off, sorry for that. I can do those mechanical exercises pretty easily actualy (or so I would think :D). I actualy don't really know what I want here, I guess I just don't have much of an access to the not rock/metal playing styles. + Show Spoiler + http://www.stormthecastle.com/classical_guitar/Collection/120studies-for-right-hand.pdf Even if you can't read sheet music , I can still explain how to use those to understand the information. IF you can play 120 of those cleanly at a decent tempo, you are doing well. There are a lot of cool right hand things you can do that dont come up in the regular rock ballad dust in the wind type thing Do you like this piece at all? It's fairly aggressive and prettty cool, maybe you'd like to learn something like this http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YRK3NE-5OOg I can read sheets (from playing trumpet for around 6 years), but it takes me some time to read it and translate it onto the guitar, because no practice in it. And since you explained the PIMA earlier, I can read that too now . However, on thing I am kind of clueless about is how to approach finding the 'right' way to do it (which finger does what on the left hand mainly, or rather which chord). I do know what the notes are and where they are on the neck, but not how to play them properly. In any case, the exercises will keep me busy for a while on that front. Edit: And the piece in that video sounds interesting. I love complex music. | ||
ella_guru
Canada1741 Posts
On April 13 2011 09:26 hugman wrote: Yay, I have some questions. I've been messing around with electric guitar for a few years, just learning on my own (usually in spurts) and usually learning songs by ear. I guess I'm decent, personally I think I suck because I want to be much better, but the hardest stuff that I can play is maybe Holy Wars (megadeth) and 5150 (van halen), not super cleanly though. The problem is that I feel really stuck, I want to be able to play more solos and I don't think I'm going to improve much more without deliberate practice. I don't know if I should just start over, learn scales properly, play super slowly until I get a clean technique etc, or if I should pay for lessons or whatever. Any tips would be appreciated. I have played cello since I was super young so I can read sheet music, but I never took the time to learn much music theory. I did record myself once so you can judge my playing + Show Spoiler + http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ihyzw2ryVEU Also, regarding guitars, I have decent guitar (Ibanez RG320) and it has a Floyd Rose, but tuning it's a bitch. Or rather, switching tuning is, because if I tune down half a step it just wants to go back up, and I need to undo the bolts and then lock them again over and over, it takes days for it to adjust to a tuning. I wonder if anything can be done about that as it really discourages me from using different tunings (no Van Halen for me =( ) + Show Spoiler + Ok gonna talk a bit about your left hand here. I'm seeing your 4th finger (pinky) is completely stiff about half the time. Worse yet, look at say about 16 seconds, and even more so at about 29 seconds. Where are your 3rd and 4th fingers going? The guitar is over that way >>>!!! hah. Seriously though, what in your head you might be thinking "I cant go faster, I need to practice going faster" is actually "I need to make my fingers have less work to do for every note" . One way to do that is to minimize the distance, which right now in your technique is a decent amount. Even if you are thinking "my pinky? I dont use it much anyway!" Well, while I think if you want to have the skills you seek you have to, there's another thing with the pinky sticking out like that. That means you are tense. That little bit of energy that is required to pick the pinky up is just adding up, fatiguing the hand when it shouldnt be. It's like walking around with your arm all day. RELAX.... Here's how Here's two things I see that beginners rarely get taught with / without a teacher , they both pertain to the left hand. Dont squeeze to hard ** guitar is a finesse instrument, rarely a strength thing, like golf, say. Here's how we want our left hand technique to go. Imagine you are crushing a can. Open, close, open , close. That's the sort of muscle group we want to engage while using our left hand. Imagine the energy going to the finger tips. Use the finger TIPS not the PADS to press down on the strings. always come DOWN on the strings as best you can, behind the fret nice and close. Now to the squeezing thing, how hard is too hard? Well try this, play a single note on the low E string (the big boy). Ok, nice and clean. Now, release pressure and pluck until you get a bit of a crunch sound , but can still hear a bit of the actual note. It'll take a second to find this sweet spot. Ok, now, push just a HAIR BIT MORE in pressure. THATS what it takes to press a string down. Just a bit more then pushing down a key on your keyboard. The problem is, people get exciting and CRUSH the fuck out of their guitar. Plz dont ; ) . The first thing you do when playing is start with about 30 seconds of this buzz technique, to remind yourself that its a relaxed pursuit, not one of strength. fewf, ok good. The other thing? Space Case Left Hand Syndrome wtf? Well basically you'll be playing something and have the left hand just flyin off the fretboard, ESPECIALLY FINGERS 3 AND 4 (ring and pinky) . This is the cause of so much inaccurace because the fingers have to travel so far to get to the next note. No we dont want this. Here is your drill to be done after the above: Play the chromatic scalenow, DO NOT LIFT A FINGER UNTIL IT IS NEEDED AGAIN. So, I play finger 1 2 3 4 , then as i switch strings to place finger 1, I will not lift fingers 2 3 4. finger 1 lands, then finger 2 has permission to leave since it is needed else where. I call this THE STICKY FINGERS DRILL.. It's not how you ACTUALLY play, but it will fuck with your head and teach your fingers not to stray far from home. Fewf. Let me know if this doesnt make sense. I'm working on some videos once I get equipped. GL HF As for your tuning thing well.... dont use a floyd rose >_< On April 13 2011 10:59 h3r1n6 wrote: I can read sheets (from playing trumpet for around 6 years), but it takes me some time to read it and translate it onto the guitar, because no practice in it. And since you explained the PIMA earlier, I can read that too now . However, on thing I am kind of clueless about is how to approach finding the 'right' way to do it (which finger does what on the left hand mainly, or rather which chord). I do know what the notes are and where they are on the neck, but not how to play them properly. In any case, the exercises will keep me busy for a while on that front. Edit: And the piece in that video sounds interesting. I love complex music. + Show Spoiler + For some left hand ideas, read my above response. Here's some things to keep in mind with left hand technique Your hand should curve nicely, as if you were holding something like a can, or something phallic or whatever hhaaha. You want the fingers to come straight down on the strings , so that you play with your finger tips, and not the finger pads. RELAX! Relaxtion is speed and comfort. Let me know if you want more music ideas, you should be able to find the sheet music for that piece with not too much effort. | ||
h3r1n6
Iceland2039 Posts
On April 14 2011 02:09 ella_guru wrote: For some left hand ideas, read my above response. Here's some things to keep in mind with left hand technique Your hand should curve nicely, as if you were holding something like a can, or something phallic or whatever hhaaha. You want the fingers to come straight down on the strings , so that you play with your finger tips, and not the finger pads. RELAX! Relaxtion is speed and comfort. Let me know if you want more music ideas, you should be able to find the sheet music for that piece with not too much effort. Hmm, not really what I meant. I'd like to think I have my finger movement decently clean, don't know for sure and can't really show you a video though. What I meant was knowing how I approach playing it. Let's take what you posted: http://www.stormthecastle.com/classical_guitar/Collection/120studies-for-right-hand.pdf On the first one. The c would be 3rd fret 5th string. c' to be played with index finger is then 5th fret on 3rd string and e' then on 5th fret 2nd string. (or would I do 1st fret 2nd string and open 1st string?) Index would play the c, ring and pinky do the c' and e', or should I barre those two? Is finding a way of playing it just up to me or is there a right way to approach this? | ||
hugman
Sweden4644 Posts
You're right, I am tense. I actually stopped playing cello because I got pains in my hand and I think it was because I was tense. I'll try to work on it | ||
Jeremyy
Canada182 Posts
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ella_guru
Canada1741 Posts
What sort of stuff do you get into, Jeremyy? What uni? | ||
MaRiNe23
United States747 Posts
14 13 13 13 14 14 and I been doing that up and down using alternate picking on and off for about a year now but... like what do u do after u learn that. It's boring just constantly going up and down the same sounds over and over. I can't get faster at it for some reason either. This is where I hit a brick wall. I can play all these chords and be able to play all of today's pop songs with it and learned the pentatonic scales but I don't know wtf to do with it and here's where I'm getting stuck at and can't move forward and thought I needed a guitar teacher or something to help me learn how to improvise the scale and make my own stuff with it. I don't know.. So basically my question is a continuation of PetiteCrabe's. What steps come after the last thing you said for PetiteCrabe's question(after the pentatonic scales). | ||
hellsan631
United States695 Posts
On April 12 2011 01:50 AdamBanks wrote: Here's my problem. I start with a note, make some chords, then pick some scale that fits. Then when i want to connect this awsome riff/melody with another awsome riff i have no idea what goes with what and end up droning the same root over and over and over. As soon as i pick a scale it seems to box me into a corner where I can only seem to fit 5-6 notes. Also I find when i write im constantly trapped or drawn back to the 1-4-5 progression. Any tips? Perhaps i can help with this one. When creating the backing, it helps in the beginning to associate a meaning to the chords. The progression and tone of a piece of music tells a story. Mr Satriani goes over it a little bit in this video. When you start piecing together a song, there are several ways of doing it. Starting with a note can help, but when you do that, ask youself, where do i want this song to go? If you give meaning to a song, after a while of playing it, it starts to play itself. @ about 3 min. I've always been huge fan of satch, and going over his stuff has taught me gallons about composing music and the thought process behind it. It seems you have come theory background. I would recommend taking some compositional courses some where, as they go over a bunch of how to write music. But either way, if you don't find that key motivation, to connect your music to emotion, then the problem of what your having won't go away so easily. Here are some more vids that i picked up, that go over parts of the song writing process for some of the best technical and compositional guitar players. Paul Gilbert breaks down his method of song writing. Goes over examining some other music. Joe Satriani goes over one of his more complex pieces. Using Rhythm to write music. | ||
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