Robert
Oranges and lemons, say the bells of St. Clements.
- Joined
- Sep 8, 2005
- Messages
- 12,699
- Reaction score
- 12
- City & State/Province
- Camrose, Alberta, Canada - used to be Umea Sweden.
How you approach practicing guitar? What works well for you and what do you want to expand upon?
As for me, I tend to not practice :nono: because of lack of time and other distractions, but when I do practice, I focus on learning some musical idea so that it will stick.
By this I mean, I practice a lick, chord, whatever it maybe enough times that it becomes part of my vocabulary. For example, I love the Diminished scale. It has a million uses really, and I'm often exploring. I came up with a really cool, far-out sounding lick the other day (video lesson probably coming...). Problem was, I would not remember it the next day... So, I just spent more time with it. I played it in and out, in different keys, in different musical contexts. I worked it through enough that now, I don't have to think when I use it. This sometimes takes time, but it is well worth it. What's the point of "learning" something if you don't remember it the next day. Nada.
From doing this, I learned more than that. I can take this lick and change it around and make something new out of it, because I have learned it so well, that I would be comfortable to use some or any part of this diminished idea and apply to a new situation. :AOK:
What I would like to expand upon is getting better at creating advanced chord progressions. I know a lot of chords, but the trick is putting them together in a way that sounds interesting and appealing, while being able to play strong melodies over them. It's not easy for me.
As for me, I tend to not practice :nono: because of lack of time and other distractions, but when I do practice, I focus on learning some musical idea so that it will stick.
By this I mean, I practice a lick, chord, whatever it maybe enough times that it becomes part of my vocabulary. For example, I love the Diminished scale. It has a million uses really, and I'm often exploring. I came up with a really cool, far-out sounding lick the other day (video lesson probably coming...). Problem was, I would not remember it the next day... So, I just spent more time with it. I played it in and out, in different keys, in different musical contexts. I worked it through enough that now, I don't have to think when I use it. This sometimes takes time, but it is well worth it. What's the point of "learning" something if you don't remember it the next day. Nada.
From doing this, I learned more than that. I can take this lick and change it around and make something new out of it, because I have learned it so well, that I would be comfortable to use some or any part of this diminished idea and apply to a new situation. :AOK:
What I would like to expand upon is getting better at creating advanced chord progressions. I know a lot of chords, but the trick is putting them together in a way that sounds interesting and appealing, while being able to play strong melodies over them. It's not easy for me.
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