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Originally Posted by markerhodes
When I create music in my head or otherwise, I know what is happening ahead of time. I'm going in a direction. I may repeat, I might respond, I might do something out of the ordinary, but almost always I'm at least half a step ahead, if not more. There's no latency.Last edited by henryrobinett; 06-15-2012 at 09:38 AM.
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06-15-2012 01:59 AM
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Originally Posted by henryrobinett
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Originally Posted by henryrobinett
I think what we hear in our heads is shaped by what our fingers are doing. We think the hearing moves the fingers but the fingers react more quickly than our, um, hummers can hum! (This is why we can all play some things faster than we can sing them, if we can sing them at all.)
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Originally Posted by paynow
But at least as important is I understand the fretboard pretty well, so what I hear bares a resemblance and understanding of what I'm seeing on the fretboard. They go together, like a hand in a glove.
Thanks again for listening and responding!Last edited by henryrobinett; 06-15-2012 at 10:15 AM.
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Originally Posted by Spook410
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Originally Posted by markerhodes
I mean look, you're playing in a group and doing fours with the drummer. You KNOW what's going to happen. Fours. The drummer plays a cool little pattern. You respond in kind. But you can't THINK too much. You're reacting. In the moment. And if you are listening to much to what YOU JUST DID you're going to play stiff and have terrible time.
I know what you're saying by being shaped by what our fingers are doing. But this is the challenge: to TELL our fingers what to play and not be held captive by what the are doing. We aren't slaves to our fingers. It's the other way around. Our fingers do what we tell them to do. Yes, we can set up an autonomic system where they can just go along on their merry way, but who wants to do that? It does come in handy when drunk, but not much otherwise. It doesn't REALY take a lot of attention, once you do it enough.
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Originally Posted by GodinFan
Notes formed on the sax are made not only by pressing keys, but *you* are integral to forming the note (embouchure, breath), so if you aren't hearing what that note should be *dead on*, you will sound like dooky.
From day one, a sax player never sees his fingers! So they never have to cross the hurdle of "stop looking at your fretboard", which is also huge in making the instrument "part of you".
The very act of playing the sax promotes ear growth, more so than guitar.
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Originally Posted by henryrobinett
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Originally Posted by Spirit59
I'm a professional woodwind player. I've been playing saxes, clarinet, flute and bassoon for 30 years.
There is a consistency to guitar technique that makes it easier to play what you hear.
On guitar if you want to play a B then play a note a whole step higher, you know it can always be found two frets higher. You have a choice of fingers, but you always know that going up the neck two frets will raise the pitch by a tone.
On saxophone, things are a lot less consistent. On a tenor sax, that B is now a C# on the instrument (Bb transposition). C# is a nice easy note. No fingers! However, if you want to go up a tone, you have to add your thumb, 3 LH fingers, and 4 RH fingers.
For the sake of argument, let's say I just decided to play a B on saxophone and go up a whole step. It's played with the LH first finger. If I go up a whole step from there, I remove that finger.
Saxophone does not have consistent movement of fingers, guitar does.
I dispute the relative ease of playing what's in your head on saxophone over guitar.
I've made much more rapid progress playing jazz on guitar because of the relative simplicity in finger technique.
As for the saxophonist not seeing their fingers, it's not really a big deal. Most of the fingers on the saxophone keys do one thing; they don't have to move around. Saxophonists tend to learn to read quicker because they don't have to visually ascertain whether they're in the right place on the keyboard.Last edited by GodinFan; 06-15-2012 at 02:11 PM.
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This thread is really interesting. I like to scat while improvising and i can pretty much sing what i play. A lot of times when i improvise by singing (without the guitar in my hands) I will need to move my fingers like I'm playing the guitar. Its like my singing improvisation is wired to my fingers. So my singing has some kind of a visual reference to the different fingerings and positions.
I hope this makes sense
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Originally Posted by markerhodes
Obviously I train my hands and spend my life training my hands to do what I want them to do. I resist training my hand does to me. That's why I practice: to undo habits my hands want to do all on their own.
That's like an author giving credit to his hand for writing a novel or poem. He used his hand to write it, but his mind and imagination wrote it. I see no difference here. I play the guitar. I use my hands to realize what I imagine. Not the other way around.
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Originally Posted by jayx123
Have you ever recorded yourself singing a solo without your guitar. If so, is it basically the same as the notes you use when playing?
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Originally Posted by GodinFan
Relative to this discussion, saxophone is so very different than guitar when it comes to just doing what your brain wants. For me, it was always much easier. Your hands are always in position. There are only two and a half octaves. It's not polyphonic. Usually only one way to get to where you're going. I never thought about what my hands were doing. You talked about going from C# to D (fingers off vs fingers on) but who really thinks about that? By the time you're up there soloing your muscle memory has that down to the point where it's like breathing.Last edited by Spook410; 06-15-2012 at 03:44 PM.
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Yes your voice is most probably more closely linked to the part of your brain responsible for your perception of sound than your fingers are, so if you sing while you play or sing then try to play what you just sang you are bridging the gap between your fingers and that part of the brain.
2 important things for me are that connection and my imagination, if you can get to the point of aural fret-board awareness where the only thing to work on is your imagination then as an improvisor I think you are looking at a wide open space in front of you of musical freedom and potential.
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Originally Posted by fep
It was a slow melody so I don't know how if this would be true on faster songs.
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If I find myself just playing way too much, I sometimes will start to sing along with my soloing. The lines then become more focused and melodic, and less abstract and diarrhetic. The other thing singing does is it forces you to breathe, like a horn player, where phrasing becomes more natural because of it.
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Originally Posted by GodinFan
I'm referring to the effect that playing / learning the sax has on one's ear and "oneness" with the music, thus facilitating playing the music in your head. The guitar doesn't require that you hear *anything* in order to play it - as long as your instrument is intonated correctly, and you fret the note correctly, the resulting note will be in tune whether you hear it or not.
I wasn't addressing any issues that could impede a connection to the music such as not being able to play in all keys. Of course you're going to have some problems playing what you hear in your head if you don't have instant access to at least all major scales, triads, extensions etc.
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Hm. I think any musical instrument, including guitar, requires that you hear it "in your head." I don't know what to make of the people who claim not to be able to. I think maybe they're not knowing what is meant by "hearing it in your head" or just haven't gotten to the stage of being able to play fluidly.
I could always hear music in my head. Interestingly I never particularly heard, or hear, the GUITAR. I heard lines that were more associated with an instrument like a piano or tenor sax, even as I played the guitar.
I think I know what you mean though. The sax or trumpet resonates in your head, unlike a guitar or piano or bass. But unless you're playing those instruments completely mechanically, I think you hear the guitar in your mind's imagination.
I wear out my throat sometimes, not because I'm singing, but because the sound (I think) is emanating from my throat and then through my fingers. OK, OK. What I mean is I IMAGINE I'm singing while playing guitar. Not REALLY, but in effect. I don't have a picture of myself on stage like Sinatra belting one out while playing it all on guitar. Yet I'm not making a sound. It's weird. I'm not aware of it consciously, but I don't imagine the sound is coming from my fingers. My musical awareness is in my throat.
For instance when I transcribe something or try to play back a phrase, I FIRST get the sound in my throat - I DUPLICATE, the sound in my throat or inner voice, then my hand, whether I'm holding a guitar or not, fingers an imaginary fretboard. I'm not saying I'm always correct, but I have an approximation. I do this just listening to music. I see a fretboard in my mind, whether I'm listening to Brad Mehldau or Coltrane, but I hear the note in my throat.
Strange I know. I'm just realizing this.Last edited by henryrobinett; 06-15-2012 at 07:43 PM.
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So this is me playing what I sing or singing what I play, how the heck do I know. (I know my pitch isn't very good, this is technically beyond my vocal abilities, maybe if I did it more often).
I sight-sing a lot and I know that if you transcribed this and asked me to sight-read it, I'd have to really labor thru it and couldn't do it anywhere near this tempo.
If you put your guitar down, in the case, in the next room, would you be able to sight-sing this at tempo if it was transcribed?
If not, why not?
This is what I don't understand. If you can play what you hear, then why wouldn't sight-singing be equally easy.
Last edited by fep; 06-15-2012 at 08:13 PM.
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Cool. No, I couldn't. Because it's a different process. Reading presents it's own problems and issues. Taking a sound, or notes from your mind, is a creative process of invention. Putting that on an instrument, if you are a good, capable musician, is an entirely different process than reading and sight-singing a score.
Plus some people can't sing. I had my thyroid removed two months ago and I still can't sing. I was never a singer, but I could find the pitch reasonably well. Now I can't even do that! My vocal cords deceive me. But I can still hear the pitches in my head.
I do have to often, with some of my more beginner students, get them to HEAR pitches. This is why I really try to force them to tune the guitar with their ears and not with the electronic tuner. Some students can't hear rhythms well either. But I believe everything can be taught, when you debug it and find out what they're doing wrong. And it's always some misunderstood concept. I test them to see what they're hearing and get them to try to hear something else.
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Originally Posted by henryrobinett
I think fep had the best question (-which I quoting from memory; check his previous post for accuracy): If you can do that, why can't you immediately play anything you hear someone *else* play???????
Now, some people may be able to do that. My mother plays piano by ear and could always play any tune she wanted from memory. (Curiously, she's never come up with a tune on her own.)
My suspicion is that the lines we hear in our head (-when improvising) are the types of things we've played a lot and that our awareness of them is not their *source*: we know how what our fingers are about to do will sound because we've played it before, usually lots of times before. Sometimes we have a novel idea. (Though in my case, I come up with most of my cool licks when I'm noodling, and when I hear something cool, I go, 'whoa! Where'd that come from? Who cares, finder's keepers!")
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Originally Posted by fep
Almost like thinking of words to say and uttering them at the same time. Is there a lag between the thought and the utterance? How long? Or can they happen together.
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Originally Posted by fep
I think we want to think that your minds know more than our hands, but it's our hands on the guitars for hours a day. They don't follow direct orders. ("Play a C note, okay, cool, now a D, and then we'll play the E next, very good!" That's how kids think when they first learn to drive and it's why they're so dangerous on the road! They think so much they can get themselves killed.)
Even when we use a lick--how many jazz players have started a chorus of blues in F with Charlie Parker's opening phrase from his famous "Now's the Time" solo?--you don't hear the lick in your head--it's really a two-measure lick--and THEN play it. You just know you want to play that lick and then you are playing it. Your fingers were probably ahead of you but you weren't conscious of that. Our conscious thoughts are so often 'just-so stories' told about things we did without thinking about them at all.
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Though there may be no definitive consensus as to what "playing what's in your head" is, I don't think it fair to claim that you can do so if everything that comes out is comprised of "licks" that you've play a million times before. I always thought the term was referring more to music that you come up with in your head, away from the guitar, something not necessarily guitaristic in origin....
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I took it form the OP that he was talking about hearing it in your head. If you can sing the solo over changes in your head, that's what I take it to mean.
Originally Posted by AlsoRan
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