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A nice easy three note tune to practice 'true' legato, which literally means smooth and connected.
Play the tune on one string using slurs, swells, vibrato............
Last edited by GuyBoden; 01-30-2024 at 08:07 AM.
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01-30-2024 07:49 AM
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Hmm … I’m not 100% sure what the utility of this is to a guitarist.
Originally Posted by GuyBoden
Swells being the obvious example. Guitar doesn’t swell. Slurs are also tricky.
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Legato is achieved by making sure there's no gap between the notes
Originally Posted by GuyBoden
So that means you have to very precise with your timing and technique
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Yeah, when I’m teaching kind of later beginners, I use “legato” as an aural cue for “using proper technique.”
Originally Posted by Christian Miller
I think because there are a bananas number of ways to disrupt legato on guitar — a cracked slur, planting the pick or right hand finger too early, slipping too far from the fret, inactive left hand finger brushes the string, and on and on.
Once folks have most of those basic technique things down, “legato” is a single affirmative thing they can strive for to make sure they’re not doing all that other junk.
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Smooth and connected, the video is using 'Legato' for expression, holding a note, so that it connects with the next note. (Legato being smooth and connected with no gaps.)
Originally Posted by pamosmusic
For swells, you can obviously use your volume pot or even a foot pedal, I do. (Swells are slower changes in volume, similar to Tremolo, but slower.)
Yes, slurs are tricky, especially when changing string. (Slurs are Hammer on's and Pull off's)
I find that good Vibrato is the most difficult on guitar. (Vibrato is slight changes in pitch.)
I've deliberately put my definitions in brackets to avoid confusion.
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Right. Many of those things actually make legato somewhat harder on a guitar though, because it’s quite different than a saxophone.
Originally Posted by GuyBoden
The swells for example: most volume pots are logarithmic rather than linear, so you don’t get the same response you would from natural breath (and almost no response at all for about half a turn). And there is high end tone loss with a volume pot as well. So I guess I’m not 100% convinced that swells are aiding with actual legato on a saxophone, but on guitar they can actually disrupt the smooth connectedness.
Vibrato and slurs are just a tricky techniques. Vibrato might kind of give the impression of sustain on a longer note, I guess, but not really the same thing as actual sustain. And it can make movement from one finger to the next a bit tougher.
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You know I said that once and got poo pooed on this very forum haha
Originally Posted by pamosmusic
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Well.
Originally Posted by Christian Miller
The world is wrong. We are right.
But for real … if I had a dollar for every time my classical teacher said “lovely, now let’s hear that passage again … but … (scratches chin pensively) … more legato.”
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And I guess to sum up all these random quibbles … i think there’s a lot to learn from trying to emulate other instruments, but there’s also this way in which going down the rabbit hole a bit too far can start to separate a person from the technical realities of their own instrument.
Originally Posted by pamosmusic
the way that focusing on a saxophone-like legato and these other techniques might actual disrupt an otherwise smooth sound produce by good guitar playing.
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It’s money for old rope
Originally Posted by pamosmusic
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Or control over that contrast.
Originally Posted by djg
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Show some emotion, put expression in your lines, light up if you're feeling happy, but if it's sad then let those tears roll down.
Originally Posted by djg
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close enough?
Originally Posted by GuyBoden




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