Monday, April 30, 2007

iBreatheMusic.com - The Secret of Speed by Jamie Andreas

iBreatheMusic.com - The Secret of Speed by Jamie Andreas is an article about how to lighten up playing technique, so that the fingers can breeze as they play. I know that I have an issue in this regard.

Lessons?

Yeah, I'm starting to think that lessons are in order.

I can probably wait perhaps as long as a year, but I'll need lessons in order to really break through with my playing. I can have fun instructing myself, but to burst through and be a guitar player (instead of someone who plays a little guitar), I'm going to need to do some serious study under someone who can play like a mofo.

One problem I forsee is that I'm a good bassist, and I'm worried that an instructor might try to rope me into playing bass again. That wouldn't be horrible, but it's not really where I want to be.

Now that's better...

Today I slowed down and played through the outstanding pieces using my amp, rather than through headphones. It really did make a difference, although I didn't think it would. It was really cool to get such a totally different sound and vibe from playing.

I'm still going to spend the whole week in review; I've got a really long way to go before I'm done learning how to play the guitar. It's important for me to remember that I don't really need special gear or anything like that. All I need is my guitar, and my learning materials.

Sunday, April 29, 2007

disappointing review

I'm pretty unhappy about my progress this past week. I spent a lto of time playing, and on those days I should have played only after practicing.

There are four pieces I've selected that I will hold myself back on for next week. I'll spend this week really tightening up on those few pieces, getting tempos solid and tone as well. I really bet that I'll be able to lock them in with just a little extra work, and that will leave me in a better position for next week's work. I didn't want to add new things to my plate without the old material being really solid.

I've been thinking a lot about what I'm going to do gear-wise in the medium term. I plan to slowly build a rig from what I have now, not making any major moves in my equipment. I'll replace things like my RP300 with a 350, but I'm also not going to buy any more gear that I wouldn't consider taking to any gig I might land. All amps, all guitars, all effects have to be gig-worthy.

Not that there are any gigs coming soon. I'm keeping myself out of that possibility until I really ramp up my playing.

Friday, April 27, 2007

Getting blue

So far today, I've been more interested in playing (again) rather than going straight to my method work. Today I picked out some blues from Band in a Box and just turned up my tube amp. Very nice. I got a great tone with no effort from my tube amp + dot. One thing that did, though, was to make me question my desires to play jazz music. I enjoy jazz, but it was really something else to kick into the blues.

Of course, living in Texas, it's pretty darn easy to find excuses to play the blues and country music, and rather harder to find outlets for Jazz. This does make me think about rewinding to some of my earlier desires-- I wanted primarily to become a better player, not specifically in one mode or another.

Wednesday, April 25, 2007

Just playin'

Tonight I took a break from the regular method book and just had some fun playing. I broke out BIAB, and pulled up a chart for All of Me. I turned off the built-in melody, and took the head and 2 improv choruses myself.

Not bad for as short a time as I've been trying to make this guitar thing work.

I also tried out the "essential jazz lick #1" from the included 101 jazz licks. I couldn't get anywhere near the established tempo of 200bpm, but I had no problems up to around 140. After 10 minutes, at 110, I was completely locked in.

I think it's going to take a loooong time before I'm really ready. Thankfully, I indeed have that time.

Tuesday, April 24, 2007

Influences

A lot of guitarists (and other musicians, and artists) will discuss who their influences are, especially when starting a new band.

I'm having trouble defining my musical influences right now. I know who I like to listen to, but I don't know if they're really the people that I want to play like. There's a huge difference between the two. I really love listening to the grateful dead, but I'm not sure that I really want to try to play like Jerry or Bobby. The two of them work really well within their own musical genre, but their playing isn't transcendent. I'd like to play in a way that goes beyond any particular style or genre.

If I could knock that out, it'd be a huge win.

The value of recording

Today I recorded myself playing the first three Leavitt etudes, using a combination of the GuitarPort and GarageBand.

I listened to the recordings only enough to make sure that they worked. I intend to pull them out for a serious listening in a month or two. This is something that should help me get a good feel for my improvements.

It used to be that recording yourself in this manner was a complicated setup. Not any more. One inexpensive recording device ($100), and GarageBand came with my Macintosh. PC users could use something like FL Studio, I imagine. I recommend against audacity, because it doesn't automatically compensate for latency. Whatever tools you use, if you can set them up for recording, you're going to advance your playing by great leaps and bounds. Listening, as always, is the key. How is your intonation-- REALLY. How is your note duration? How is your sense of rhythm?

The tape (or hard disk recording) tells all.

Monday, April 23, 2007

No compromises

One thing that I've decided is that I won't compromise anymore when it comes to deciding what music I will play. I won't compromise when it comes to my sound. I won't compromise when it comes to my skill.

I've made compromises before to be "acceptable", or to get a gig, or whatever. No more. I'm going to get good, and I'm going to get good the way I want to.

This is really an important decision. I'm not young enough any more to harbor illusions about my playing abilities. I also don't need to play in public anymore; I've already done that. Now it's just about doing what I want to do.

This is really liberating, because I'm setting my sights as high as I possibly can. This doesn't mean I'll hold my nose and refuse to play for other people, but when I do, it needs to be an incidental thing, not a regular event.

Sunday, April 22, 2007

About soloing

On Soloing is a great article from Jazz Guitar magazine. Really, these principles are true for any type of guitar playing. Most importantly: don't mess around with your sound. Find one or two tones that work for you, and stop.

This is something that I've been looking at. Yes, I'm enamored of the fact that my guitar has a lot of different tones available just by varying the volume control, but they're all very similar at their core. I've been laying into just one or two sounds with my practice gear, and it makes it much easier for me to focus on practicing, instead of constantly twiddling knobs.

Get a good sound, and stay there.

Saturday, April 21, 2007

Setting goals

I'm starting (finally) to get my goals in shape.

10 years: I want to lead a guitar-focused jazz combo that performs locally for coffee shops and wine bars.

5 years: I want to be a strong enough guitarist to help my sons learn to play very well.

2 years: I want to show enough progress in learning guitar that buying a "pro" guitar does not seem like a preposterous idea.

1 year: I want to complete the Leavitt Method volume 1.

3 months: I want to complete the first half of the Leavitt Method volume 1.

Friday, April 20, 2007

Take a pick

Lots of picks, and some of them are really interesting. Of particular note are the Jerry Garcia handprint and monster face picks. Also, they have really good prices on wooden picks.

Of course, Brossard picks look fabulous as well.

Thursday, April 19, 2007

Little brother


Little brother
Originally uploaded by h0ss.
I took the plunge and picked up the extremely reasonably priced Epiphone Dot Studio with a worn brown finish. For $200, this guitar can't be beat. I don't know if it can be beat at 2-3 times the price.

The natural finish is gorgeous, and the lack of inlays makes the neck look amazing. There are a huge number of tones in this thing, too.

Monday, April 16, 2007

Practicing is different from playing

I need to spend time tomorrow night working on the solo piece that is giving me such trouble. I played through everything else without incident tonight, which means that I've really got just one thing to focus on.

I'll probably warm up by running through the eighth-note exercises at a quick pace (120-140), then run through some chordal bits, and then settle into actually learning the solo piece.

It's the first thing in this method that I've needed to actually work at, so it's taking some getting used to, idea-wise.

The new week is... a bear.

Yeah, I thought I was going to have an easy time of this. No such luck.

Most of the new material is relatively simple. I'm not having a significant number of problems. However, the solo piece that's part of this week's work is very challenging.

I'm not so good at playing a melody and chords simultaneously. Of course, this is what my practicing and learning is supposed to be teaching-- the things I can't already do. I'm a little concerned that I'm already hitting difficult material, though.

Friday, April 13, 2007

Week in Review

This week, I practiced the first 10 pages of Leavitt's Modern Method for guitar. At my end-of-week self review, I first played the exercises at 90bpm, making sure that I was getting a good tone throughout. Then I played the final two exercises at increasing tempos, finally ending at 186bpm. I don't think that I could have played these exercises quite that fast at the beginning of the week (particularly the chords), so I'm happy with my progress.

Tomorrow will begin a new week's set of exercises, so I'll be picking out somewhere between 5 and 10 more pages to learn.

I also realized that I can live without buying a new Les Paul just for learning. However, it does seem that I'll buy a new guitar next week anyhow; I'll scale back from the Les Paul to an Epiphone Dot Studio. They look pretty clean and simple, and the feel and acoustic tone are simply grand. I didn't play a studio model, I played the full model, but I can infer from that what a decent Dot Studio will feel like. The guitar center near my work will be getting 4 in sometime next week, and I'll get the one that feels the best.

This was a really good week of practice. I know that some weeks won't be anywhere near this good. For now, I'm very happy with the decisions that I've made about my learning and the progress that I've made along those routes.

I'm still not sure what my goal is in all of this. I know that I want to play guitar better, but I'm not 100% sure of why. Perhaps I'll learn that while I'm learning to play.

Thursday, April 12, 2007

Playing with the older stuff

Since I decided I would try to resist the lure of "the shiny", I pulled my homemade strat out of the closet for my practice session last night.

I've been staying with the same set of excercises in the Modern Method for Guitar book, slowly increasing the tempo that I'm working at, and also working on getting cleaner. I'm working through the first 10 pages this week, starting at 120 bpm and moving up by 4 bpm each night. This means that I'll be at 140 bpm on Saturday, when I'll move to the next set of exercises.

I'm really pleased with my progress so far, though I realize that I won't be able to keep up this accelerated pace forever; at some point, maybe in two weeks, maybe in two months, I'm going to hit a wall. Once I hit that wall, I'll need to slow down a whole bunch.

The strat experiment worked out well. I'm still not pleased with the intonation on that guitar, and it's just a bear to tune. However, it was pretty easy to play, and had a brighter, cleaner tone than my Gibson.

If I do indeed succumb to The Shiny, then I'll need to make sure that it has a good clean sound as well as crunchy sounds. I really liked working with that clean sound, especially in terms of figuring out how close I was to the written exercises. Sure, playing a distorted guitar is fun-- if it wasn't, maybe I'd be playing acoustic guitar instead of electric guitar. But to know if you're playing right, a clean tone is darned helpful.

Wednesday, April 11, 2007

Putting something in words clarifies

I noticed a slight change in my attitudes yesterday after putting into words my desire for a new guitar. It's no longer such an overwhelming "want".

Simply writing down in this blog that I wanted the guitar, but it wasn't for a really good reason, has dispelled about half of the "jones". There's still some more distance to cover in resisting the urges, but at least I've made a start.

The more I can resist the "new guitar jones", the more I can focus on the playing. And playing, as Shakespeare sort of said, is the thing.

Tuesday, April 10, 2007

The Jonesing For A New Guitar Blues

One of the harshest parts of starting up on this quest of learning to play guitar again is the "need a new guitar" jones. I really don't need a new guitar. I have two guitars, one of which is completely playable, and one of which is mostly playable.

The thing is, I kind of want a new guitar. Part of this is the standard "Got to have more toys" desire, and part of it is that I know that neither of my guitars are great. I'd like to get a guitar that's closer to great (it won't be quite there, but it'll be closer). This will give me (I think) some more inspiration to practice. It would also be great to have another instrument for my sons to choose from when they come of age.

But really, I just want the shiny shiny. Is that a problem? Yes, if I allow that to distract me from what my real goal is, which is to become a more proficient guitar player. Any time that I allow myself to focus on the gear, instead of the fingers, is time that is wasted vis-a-vis my goal.

[fretmaster.com] About a simple tool to aid you in learning the fingerboard.

[fretmaster.com] About a simple tool to aid you in learning the fingerboard.

This is a pretty cool tool pointed out to me by a co-worker. It's a reinforcement of fretboard mastery, which is one of those really important things when learning to read.

Nighttime routine

As I've got 2 young kids (age 3 and 6), I have to sneak my practice time in whenever I can get it. That pretty much means that I'm practicing late at night.

I'm committing right now to 30 minutes a day, which turns into an hour most nights. I've started working through A Modern Method For Guitar, which focuses on correctly learning to read. I'm able to read music fluently, but rarely on guitar. This is one of those things I really wanted to "correct" about my playing, so this book is invaluable. I'm not using the linked volume exactly; I'm using a standalone volume 1 that has been typeset in a more modern style. At the rate I'm progressing through the book, it should take me around 3 months to complete it (I'm already pretty solid, as I've mentioned).

edit: 3 months later, I see that this was a ridiculous objective. The Leavitt method is not a 3-month workout. This is a serious book for college-level players; a textbook, if you will. I'll be fortunate to finish in a year. When I'm done, though, my chops will be lightyears away from where I started.

Soon I'll pick up the companion book on sight-reading, so that I can go even farther. Most guitar tutors tend to encourage students to work exclusively on scales. Scale-work is only one part of the battle, however. For me to get where I really want to be, I need to be able to read stuff cold.

Monday, April 09, 2007

Introduction

I decided to re-learn how to play guitar.

This wasn't an easy decision. I'm a pretty competent guitar player, having played in several bands, as worship leader, and even having taught some lessons. I'm a rather skilled bassist as well, and on that instrument I'm able to walk in for pretty much any reasonable gig and sight-read my way through it.

I don't have the same skill level on guitar. I'd like to get to that skill level, and beyond.

In this blog, I'll be documenting the gear that I'm using, the methods I'm using, and my general practice thoughts. When I moved my bass playing from "I can kind of play" to "I can play whatever you want me to play", it took a year to get pretty good, and three more years to get really good. I imagine that I'm looking at the same kind of learning curve for the guitar. I can currently play for fun, but I no longer believe that I'm competent enough to play in public. I want to fix that.