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Author Topic: practise routine  (Read 5523 times)

Muso

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practise routine
« Reply #15 on: April 15, 2007, 10:52:26 PM »
Hi Brodo

Firstly what kind of ability level would you say you are? I would break down the time more so say practise, fingerstyle, alternate picking, legato, sweep picking, string skipping and tapping. Try and keep the exercises musical so its usually good to take licks from songs because you can always use them in your own stuff.

MDV

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practise routine
« Reply #16 on: April 15, 2007, 11:53:18 PM »
I can see the point of the poeple that say that technique gives you a grounding and programs your fingers, but I think thats a double edged sword. The other edge is that programming your fingers can lead to you playing the same scale fragment type music all the time when you actually want to do something 'different'. I think a player thats gone through drills and scales really shows: they dont miss a note, but all too often you know exactly which one is coming next. [cartman voice] Weak [/cartman voice]

I try to get around this by playing as cleanly as fluidly as I possibly can, but basically improvising all the time, but always pushing myself. Always. I cant pick up a guitar without pushing the boundaries of what I can do or trying to do something I never have.

Like HTH I find scales and drills dull. They make a more proficient player out of you, yes, but I'd much rather make up a motive I like and then explore it, play it with different phrasings and emphasis, cut out and add beats and 'coloured', out-of-scale notes, all the while trying to be clean and fluid.

If youre going to go the way of drills and routine, then please please please, even if just as a 'reward' for yourself, spend equal time just going nuts throwing shapes on the fretboard and trying to make stuff up, thinking "well what if I play a major 6th over that?" or "I wonder what that shape sounds like?" and "lets stick a semitone in there, see what happens" or whatever, and try and spend some time thinking outside the proverbial box, and hopefully you'll get the best of both worlds: technique and proficiency as well as creativity and character.

Good luck!

Edit: and the importance of a click Cannot be understimated.

Ratrod

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practise routine
« Reply #17 on: April 16, 2007, 11:09:20 AM »
Great idea! After your drills and routines.....go Angus on that axe.
BKP user since 2004: early 7K Blackguard 50

Muzzzz

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practise routine
« Reply #18 on: April 16, 2007, 11:29:01 AM »
Quote from: dave_mc
Quote from: Muzzzz
when I was first picked up piano


wow, do you work out?

sorry. :oops:


Haha, I was thinking that when I was writing it :)

MDV, that is FANTASTIC advice, I am now officially inspired!!
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MDV

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practise routine
« Reply #19 on: April 16, 2007, 11:53:25 PM »
:drink:

noodleplugerine

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practise routine
« Reply #20 on: April 17, 2007, 12:24:49 AM »
I heard playing upside down after drinking Goat's blood helps too.
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JamesHealey

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practise routine
« Reply #21 on: April 17, 2007, 04:04:43 PM »
learn your diatonic chords in every key with atleast 5 voicings for each one, be able to play any scale in any position over the entire neck. that includes Major, Aeolian Minor, Pentatonics, Harmonic and Melodic Minor and all the modes. know your triads and 7th chord arpeggios for every chord.

then practice playing chord tones throughout II,V,I progressions going backward through the cycle of 5ths it works for key changes that way.

then just practice rhythms, odd time signatures, syncopation and sight reading every day..

break all that down into a 2 hr practice session then concentrate on technique for say 30mins a day.

oh and just play songs nothing is better experience than just playing. but don't mistake this for practice.