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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! |
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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
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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.
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