Happy
New Year everyone! 2015 is upon us – as everyone who grewup with
the “Back To The Future” franchise knows, this is the year we
were promised flying cars and a hoverboard in every home. Instead we
just have this rubbishy thing called the Internet, where we can read
articles composed entirely of light that whine about how we don't
have hoverboards and flying cars yet. And smartphones which allow us
to access basically all of the combined knowledge of two thousand-odd
years of human history in the palm of our hand, as well as letting us
share really cute pictures of cats...
Anyway,
new year means a chance to regroup and refocus on your musical goals
for the year. Most people stumble and slow their progress because
they get distracted and try and move in too many different, disparate
directions at once. Result – they get nowhere, and they get
frustrated. And with the frustration comes a decrease in motivation,
and then we're into the vicious cycle of decreasing returns leading
to decreasing effort.
So,
let's take the opportunity afforded us by the new year to define
three musical goals – no more, no less - to have fulfilled
by the end of this year. For some of you, that will be grades –
Rockschool's excellent syllabus has pivotal points at grades 3, 5 and
8, and preparing for these exams will improve your core skills no
end.
For
some, it could be mastering a new technique – slide guitar, hybrid
picking, or those faithful shred standbys tapping and sweep picking.
Perhaps your interests may lie more in the theoretical or
compositional fields – understanding “jazz” extended chords,
learning to read music, learning to work in odd time signatures.
Frankly, after the exceptional level of compositional talent that
everyone involved with the Winterwonderland2014
(www.facebook.com/winterwonderlandcharityalbum)
demonstrated, I'd like to see some of you writing your own solo
albums this year!
One thing that I think everyone should include in this year's resolution list, though, is to simply sound better. To this end, try focusing in on the details of exactly how you play your regular chords, licks and phrases – fret and pick hand pressure, angles of grip (making sure you're not inadvertantly bending strings while playing chords, for example), muting from both hands to minimise string noise and of course focusing on an even, rhythmic and controlled vibrato. I've covered all of these aspects before in various blog posts, but these are the minutiae that often get overlooked in the quest for more speed, flashier licks and so on. Mastering these details – stripping your technique back to basics and really focusing on the fundamentals – can make you sound far smoother, cleaner and more fluid without having to spend anything at all!
One thing that I think everyone should include in this year's resolution list, though, is to simply sound better. To this end, try focusing in on the details of exactly how you play your regular chords, licks and phrases – fret and pick hand pressure, angles of grip (making sure you're not inadvertantly bending strings while playing chords, for example), muting from both hands to minimise string noise and of course focusing on an even, rhythmic and controlled vibrato. I've covered all of these aspects before in various blog posts, but these are the minutiae that often get overlooked in the quest for more speed, flashier licks and so on. Mastering these details – stripping your technique back to basics and really focusing on the fundamentals – can make you sound far smoother, cleaner and more fluid without having to spend anything at all!
To
this end, let me give you an example of how I approach this in my own
practice routine. Once a week I set an afternoon aside for band
material, setting iTunes on Shuffle and seeing what comes up. I then
make a point of playing the solo, or any “spotlight” guitar part,
as slowly as possible. This challenges me to control each note for as
long as possible, ekeing the maximum emotion and drama from each note
and projecting it with as much passion as possible. It's a great way
of getting back in touch with the musicality of the solo, rather than
simply stringing together a bunch of licks and finger motions. Try
it, you might surprise yourself!
Good
luck, and happy 2015 to each one of you :-)
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