Eric
Well-known member
K, I'll be honest here: I really really really wish I could play fast. I'm OK, and I can play a lead or two and some solos, but I usually have to work up to playing faster parts, and there are many guitar lines I simply cannot play due to lack of speed on my part. There is some element of musicality in my desire to play fast, but it's mostly just because I find it impressive.
So last night I got together with my drummer and bassist friends for our now-regular music night. I had invited the drummer's brother-in-law too, who I knew had some crazy-good chops and is 19 years old or something. I think he spends most of his time practicing shred lines and jamming with his friends.
So we start playing a few of the songs we've been working on, and to make a long story short, it was kind of annoying having this guy there. He didn't know any of our songs, which isn't surprising given my luck with overlapping tastes in the past, but moreover the skillz got in the way. I mean, he almost couldn't play the guitar without tons of distortion, pinch harmonics, and flurries of notes, and his timing was...underdeveloped, shall we say?
I know this seems like a ***** session about shredding guitarists, but that wasn't my original intent. The point of this thread was to say that the whole night was kind of an epiphany. It seems like in some cases, the ability to play blindingly fast is actually a handicap, because it means you either won't fit with the music or will be bored with what you are playing.
This is honestly something that had never occurred to me, but I can absolutely see myself doing something similar to what he was doing if I did have better chops. It would be really hard to calm down and play normal pop music if you could set the room on fire with your playing, which is probably why lots of shredders let loose on their albums. The problem for me is that I don't want to sound like that -- it's not music I care to listen to.
I think this was just more of a random musing than anything else, but to maybe wring some usefulness from this thread, is there anything I can do in the future to help integrate this guy into the music, provided he decides to come back? He is everything I'm not when it comes to guitar playing, so I'd like to involve him to help flesh out what we can do, but I don't want him to be bored and I don't want him to walk all over every song.
So last night I got together with my drummer and bassist friends for our now-regular music night. I had invited the drummer's brother-in-law too, who I knew had some crazy-good chops and is 19 years old or something. I think he spends most of his time practicing shred lines and jamming with his friends.
So we start playing a few of the songs we've been working on, and to make a long story short, it was kind of annoying having this guy there. He didn't know any of our songs, which isn't surprising given my luck with overlapping tastes in the past, but moreover the skillz got in the way. I mean, he almost couldn't play the guitar without tons of distortion, pinch harmonics, and flurries of notes, and his timing was...underdeveloped, shall we say?
I know this seems like a ***** session about shredding guitarists, but that wasn't my original intent. The point of this thread was to say that the whole night was kind of an epiphany. It seems like in some cases, the ability to play blindingly fast is actually a handicap, because it means you either won't fit with the music or will be bored with what you are playing.
This is honestly something that had never occurred to me, but I can absolutely see myself doing something similar to what he was doing if I did have better chops. It would be really hard to calm down and play normal pop music if you could set the room on fire with your playing, which is probably why lots of shredders let loose on their albums. The problem for me is that I don't want to sound like that -- it's not music I care to listen to.
I think this was just more of a random musing than anything else, but to maybe wring some usefulness from this thread, is there anything I can do in the future to help integrate this guy into the music, provided he decides to come back? He is everything I'm not when it comes to guitar playing, so I'd like to involve him to help flesh out what we can do, but I don't want him to be bored and I don't want him to walk all over every song.