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That guitar.....!
Is it your fingers giving that nice bell-like, popping tone or is it the guitar?
Regardless, another nice Vid.
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02-05-2014 09:52 PM
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Thanks guys! Happy to see that there is still interest in the book. Love to see your videos too!
I do feel that the work on the book has paid off to some extent. It is still not anywhere near spontaneous, but when a new tune comes up it takes less time finding chord tones and connecting them. I hope a few years down the road it becomes so much of second nature that I don't have to scratch my head and count on my fingers all the time.
I can only speculate AlsoRan. I don't think it is my fingers as I don't have great technique and other guitar/amp combinations don't have that tone when I play them. I really do think that it is largely inherent in that magic guitar. Also, the tube amp is a part of the equation as it sounds different with a solid state amp (also good of course, but les 'lifely'). The excellent reverb pedal (mad professor silver spring) does some too. Finally - it was relatively loud in the room (my neighbour hates me ...) and I could feel the tubes pushing some air and the top of the guitar vibrating close to feeding back - the carved top indeed is much more susceptible to do that. I also found out by trial and error that having the amp relatively loud and rolling back the volume on the guitar tends to give nice jazz tones.
Happy practicing everybody!
cheers
Frank
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I am currently in the lick writing process.
What do you think of this one?
arpeggio substituion on the IInd chord, altered scale then resolving to the 3rd of the I chord.
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Originally Posted by znerken
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Originally Posted by fep
Thanks
I find lick writing in situation #5 to be very hard!
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In this phase, did you spend a lot of time on the connecting game as well, or did you devote all the time to writing licks?
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I wish I continued doing the connecting game every day as a warm up, I'm now not as fluent as I was. I'm going to start using it as a warm up.
And another warm up I think is good, have your licks written out and use some ofthem as part of your warm up.
Both are much better than practicing scales.
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Originally Posted by fep
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This whole lick writing makes me want to kill myself....So angry.
I wrote some licks, sent them to the author, who is super helpful and always answer emails. He recommended me to learn the MM arpeggios, cause my licks weren't really doing it. So I have learned the maj7#5, and I try to write licks, but they just sound so awful all of them...
Sounds like someone who picked up the guitar for the first time..:
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Gm7 C7alt Fmaj7.. is that the progression?
I think the lines okay, I think if you improved your phrasing it would sound much better.
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Originally Posted by fep
How exactly would you go by improving the phrasing?
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I just did a quick recording of your lick. Phrasing comes together over time and becomes part of your playing personality. Not saying mine is great, it's an evolving thing.
Box
Edit: Just listened back, I added an F note at the end of your phrase. It's not necessary but I couldn't help myself. And you can ignore the fills I put in over the Fmaj7, those are not the point.Last edited by fep; 01-24-2019 at 09:27 AM.
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Originally Posted by fep
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By the way, it says in the book, and the author was very strict about this when I talked to him, that all licks should be written with eight notes throughout the bars. He says that you will probably modify them when you play them in actual situations, but the lick should always have simple rhythms. So for two bars there should be 16 notes.
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Originally Posted by znerken
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