-
Originally Posted by matt.guitarteacher
Tell me about it. I play a little classical guitar as a sideline and run through 30-80 studies at a time (easy ones that is) and i'm not doin' analysis on any of 'em!
then when i get with my teacher, he asks me all kinds of questions (what about the form, this phrase, that cadence, that chord, how shall we emphasize this line, fingering, etc. etc. the whole damn thing. yes, he's a composer and college educator too)
-
12-24-2014 04:24 PM
-
Originally Posted by fumblefingers
If you were famliar with Conti's material, you would know that he says repeatedly, "Experiment with this, play it the way that sounds good to you. You don't have to play it like I play it. Just keep playing and learn good tunes." (He says that was the advice Wes gave him when he--Conti--was a kid. "Play the guitar as much as you can and learn good tunes." That's still good advice.
-
i understand what everybody is saying here. for example, i'm a big Berklee and Leavitt fan. i think Berklee's library just keeps getting better and better. i'll recommend Leavitt to anybody, and yet i don' analyze those chord melodies either, i just play them. you do have to get things under your hands.
but if one is really desiring to become a great chord melody player - and - get beyond playing others' arrangements, they will have to know harmony and arranging too. a little helps a lot. more is better. put another way - how does one become like Leavitt or Conti themselves? education, whether formal or informal, is the key. or so it seems to me.
-
Originally Posted by MarkRhodes
yeah i know all of that. that's the "street" way, the historical way, almost the only way for many if not most legendary jazz masters. (although I think you skimmed over the "assimilate" part - severely).
but today? it's a choice. jazz pedagogy has exploded since the 1970s. today one has to practically hide from information, and with it, the ability to build knowledge.
i know of another self taught master who admitted that one could go to a school and learn it all faster than he did. he's right, they can. but its even better than that - they don't have to go to a school (college) if they don't want to.Last edited by fumblefingers; 12-24-2014 at 04:56 PM.
It all begins with “Preparations”
Today, 06:49 PM in Improvisation