wintercept
Well-known member
Err… define practice
There's going to be zero judgements on that from us. The less time your have a guitar in your hands, the more time you'll have for pcb crafting. May your axe gather many cobwebs.I'll tell you how often I actually play ....
Every now and then I read posts here and for a split second my mind thinks "Oh wow, these folks play guitar too? What are the chances that we're all pedal builders and we play guitar? ... oh, wait."![]()
Yeah been there done that, I spend most of my time lately on trying to find different approaches, if I'm at a jam and somebody's playing cowboy chords, I want to be playing other voicing's up the neck, maybe arpeggiating those chords or doing some stabs, staying out of the way but adding a little sumpin' sumpin'I try to play and practice everyday for at least 1-3 hours. I'm practicing all sorts of stuff like the major modes, pentatonic impro in every key, jazz comping and soloing with arpeggios, pink floyd stuff and some classical guitar stuff. I have only played about a year and a half, but stuff like scale shapes, alternate picking, and jazz chords are almost natural. I have practiced 100s of hours on them. One of my first 10 songs was the bassline to hysteria by muse. Thats some tricky stuff. It took months for me to get close. Also, having a great teacher is what helped me. I managed to find a Guitarist who graduated from Berklee school of music. He is a monster player but most of all is a great teacher. I was playing the shire theme with no harmony like crap when I first started and I have only been taking lessons for 7 months now. Right now I am having a hard time getting better at string bending and improvising, but that stuff comes with time like all guitar related skills. Sorry for my whole life story. Jeez that's a lot of words.
Add stinkface and you're a god.It's really amazing what you can add with just one well placed note here and there
Especially if your looking right at someone when you do it, like "this is the shit" and wham you hit em wid itAdd stinkface and you're a god.
Everybody in the room knows it!
Spider walk is great, I also like to play scales in thirds and other intervals@BuddytheReow hahaha are you me?? I bought a Katana Mark II specifically so I wouldn't need pedals right before I got into building an absurd amount of pedals. I've been playing guitar since I was 12, and I'm 28 now - but didn't play much when I was at college and never really have gotten back to the skill level I was at when I was 18 playing for multiple hours every day. I took lessons from when I was 12-16. I'm having more fun now though, but I've definitely started to get back into the rhythm of practicing more.
I play at least an hour most days and on the weekends play as much as 3. I try to practice for at least 10-15 minutes to warm up. I usually find that near that 10 minute mark I'll just naturally run a scale or exercise that will just kind of lead me into riffing.
One exercise that has paid insane dividends for my fretting hand dexterity is the spider walk and I really cannot recommend it enough. It's just playing 5-6-7-8 on each string while making sure to only move the finger that is fretting the note you are playing. That link is a really good overview.
Semi-related to the spider walk is that I practice scales while keeping my index finger clamped down to the fret board, imagining that it's basically a capo. I can't remember where I saw this as a practice exercise but I remember it being from a jazz guitarist. Between this and the spider walk I have noticed a huge improvement in the accuracy and ease of fretting, with my hands taking much longer to get tired.
I've been trying to find exercises specifically for picking as my right hand gets tired faster than it used to. If anyone has any good recommendations I'd love to check some out.
Just noticed the discussion on this exercise, I used to practice it all the time when I studied classical. Gotta get back to it.@finebyfine - that spider exercise is way harder than it looks! I’m going to give that one a go.
My ring finger just doesn’t want to join the rest of the other fingers hahaJust noticed the discussion on this exercise, I used to practice it all the time when I studied classical. Gotta get back to it.