ripock
Well-known member
- Joined
- Feb 27, 2017
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- high desert of New Mexico
I tried to make a jump in musicality and it didn't work out so well.
I thought I would try to erase the lines between the shapes I am playing, thereby freeing me to play wherever I wanted. After all, I know the notes so why not just go to them without the shapes. I believe this is a noble quest because then I could use the whole fret board.
But it just sounded like crap. It was really disjointed and random. I guess I don't quite have an understanding of the relationships between the intervals. In a perfect world, there would be a sound I am after and I'd go to the note to achieve that sound. But today I was just jumping for the sake of jumping and it didn't sound good.
When I play within a shape, the relationships are evident and the shape itself makes the music.
I have to conclude that I'm just not ready. I don't have the experience nor the discretion to pick appropriate notes.
I'm going to have to take smaller steps by combining adjacent shapes. That I can do. I can play in a shape, slide at a certain point, and then be in the next shape. So for now I will need to remain being conscious of what shape I'm in. With enough practice I may be able to erode the lines demarcating the shapes.
One thing I can do is study a little bit and be more aware of which notes at which frets are in which octave. In that way I will be able to join shapes which aren't contiguous. For example the B on the 2nd fret is B4 and so is the B on the 11th fret. So I could be playing the C# Aiolian b5 really low on the neck and then use the B to transition to the B mixolydian b6 on the 11th fret.
I thought I would try to erase the lines between the shapes I am playing, thereby freeing me to play wherever I wanted. After all, I know the notes so why not just go to them without the shapes. I believe this is a noble quest because then I could use the whole fret board.
But it just sounded like crap. It was really disjointed and random. I guess I don't quite have an understanding of the relationships between the intervals. In a perfect world, there would be a sound I am after and I'd go to the note to achieve that sound. But today I was just jumping for the sake of jumping and it didn't sound good.
When I play within a shape, the relationships are evident and the shape itself makes the music.
I have to conclude that I'm just not ready. I don't have the experience nor the discretion to pick appropriate notes.
I'm going to have to take smaller steps by combining adjacent shapes. That I can do. I can play in a shape, slide at a certain point, and then be in the next shape. So for now I will need to remain being conscious of what shape I'm in. With enough practice I may be able to erode the lines demarcating the shapes.
One thing I can do is study a little bit and be more aware of which notes at which frets are in which octave. In that way I will be able to join shapes which aren't contiguous. For example the B on the 2nd fret is B4 and so is the B on the 11th fret. So I could be playing the C# Aiolian b5 really low on the neck and then use the B to transition to the B mixolydian b6 on the 11th fret.