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Originally Posted by bediles
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06-04-2023 03:01 AM
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Different instruments are different in different ways.
One of the more interesting differences; "sharability".
Imagine ranking instruments by how much permission is assumed needed before playing it
The piano is the least; except for something like a Bösendorfer grand on a concert stage between just being tuned and the subsequent concert, all pianos are basically "public". Anyone can go directly over to one and play it without permission
Next would be drum kits at clubs
Next would be instruments played by mouth
Guitars seem to be near the extreme, along with old orchestra instruments by fine makers, so "private" can't even touch them without permission
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Originally Posted by Christian Miller
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Originally Posted by pauln
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Guitarists are wonderful, they can play things that nobody can.
Especially blues in G#, D#, A# and E# !
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I enjoyed your vid Christian! Over the course of my guitar life, I've referred to it at various times as a contraption, a jerry rig, a Rube Goldberg device, and an instrument designed by the Devil himself.
I also find it a marvellous thing to work with. I've been deeply obsessed for a very long time.
(I really should work more on playing the chord tones...)
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Originally Posted by Christian Miller
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Originally Posted by GuyBoden
I very seriously doubt any instrument really thinks about notes while they’re playing, anyway. I think the frustration for reformed horn players is that on guitar you can play a note without ever learning what the name of it is.
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Originally Posted by pamosmusic
I know someone you play a three row diatonic accordion (GCF) despite this limitation he can play something in every key (a lot of limitations) because he knows how his instrument works.
What you describe can be called the E# blues syndrome.
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Originally Posted by Lionelsax
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Originally Posted by pamosmusic
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It's easier to talk about the guitar than to play the guitar.
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Originally Posted by kris
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Originally Posted by AllanAllen
you know Jamie gets a bit of flack in some circles, but from what I remember his advice is generally sound imo if one takes the time to read it.
Jamie is also a sax player - which means you have to do this stuff as well. Sax players often play piano to help them map it all out, and I think that’s a good idea for guitar too.
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Originally Posted by pamosmusic
I’ve heard some players saying the imagine the piano keyboard when soloing on a horn, which is visual too, but just in a way that connects more to notation too. Notation itself is of course visual.
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Originally Posted by frabarmus
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Originally Posted by kris
Also, someone like Wes, for instance... for him it must have been much easier to play the guitar than to talk about it; or, I imagine, he was more interested in playing than talking about it. But ok... for us "ordinary mortals" it's a different story, I suppose
Having said that, "talking about it" is a skill in itself and might be helpful aswell... cause, let's face it: we've got to know/learn our stuff, whether or not we're also able to explain it. A teacher, of course, needs to be good at talking, aswell.Last edited by frabarmus; 06-05-2023 at 07:07 AM.
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Well I find it quite hard to explain what I'm doing. TBH if I'm thinking about it while I play it, it doesn't come out on the gig.
I learned it in quite a step by step way so I can break it down, but in the moment? Of course not.
I doubt anyone else is any different. We are all running the same hardware (mostly)
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Originally Posted by Christian Miller
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Originally Posted by Christian Miller
Whats worse, I have the “For Alice” subvariant.
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Originally Posted by Christian Miller
People who play with positions and formulas get lost very quickly.
Two things changed my guitar playing, the melodica (I didn't play melodies on the keyboard before that) and the looper.
Although I'm still a shit on guitar and all instruments, people now trust me when I'm playing the guitar because I don't think of positions and formulas anymore.
I know what I'm playing, even if it can sound like shit, I'm not lost.
You understand it very well, I see notes and chords, maybe a keyboard but I'm not sure. I wish I could see rhythm the same way too.
I figured out I was able to sing a bit what I want to play before playing it.
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Originally Posted by Lionelsax
(Of course the looper is a wonderful practice-tool, I use it, too).
Thanks
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Originally Posted by frabarmus
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I would love to play tight chord voicings like you could in M3. And learn everything in 3 fingerings instead 9.
Yet... once it is "done" with guitar on standard tuning, all those craziness with fingerings. It is done. It takes stupidly long time but
maybe I'm stupid. Anyway - piano is a brilliant instrument but guitar feels like honey.
The thing in the OP - yeah! I remeber finding it out in 2nd year in jazz school by myself - left hand plays chords
and right hand starts automatically "dancing around" those chord notes - at the time when all I could play on guitar was
pentatonic scale on Blue Bossa or something. Felt like life is unfair for guitar players.
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Hey Christian.
I watched the video and I’m wondering why one should learn arpeggios for Dm G7 CM7 when the C major scale covers it all.
I know it’s standard advice, but understanding the ii V I is based off the I simplifies things.
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