1. It makes us become as
creative as possible. Just how many different ways can you use grace notes? How
many different vibratos can you employ? Can you play an entire melody by
bending only one initial note and then coaxing all the other pitches out of
that one starting point?
2. It really centers our
attention on one seemingly simple idea and you start to realize there is a lot
more to any given technique than you thought. After two to three minutes of
only performing slides you learn that there is a lot more to a slide then just
moving from one fret to another. How many frets should you slide? How fast
should you slide? How slow can you
slide? How long can you sustain one attack, sliding from note to note to note? How often do you slide with your pinky? Etc. The possibilities of each of these techniques is limitless but only with
sustained concentration.
PRACTICE ROUTINE
1. Record short chord vamp your choice (or just try Am to
D), for two to three minute.
2. Play corresponding scale(s). Ascending and descending.
Play the scale a few times with rhythmic variations. If you go with my vamp
suggestion Am – D then play the G Major Scale, this will give you a Dorian
sound a la Carlos Santana.
3. Solo focusing on only one of the techniques listed
below. Take a break after two to three minutes. Try it again with a different
technique.
TECHNIQUES
1. Rest!
2. Play with a small number of notes: 3, 4, or 5.
3. Vibrato.
4. Staccato: Short notes and phrases
5. Legato: Long phrases and ideas. Let notes ring.
6. Slides (slurs)
7. Hammer-ons & Pull-offs (slurs).
8. Grace and ghost notes (from above and below).
9. Call and response / Question and answer.
10. Motives/Motif
11. Bends.
12. Tremolo
13. Sequences: Intervallic, 3rds, 4ths, etc. Groups of 3,
etc.
14. Play on one string.
15. Play with only one finger.
16. Large interval leaps.
17. Play only in one position: Think Miles Davis.
18. Play in only one position but two octaves: up 12
frets.
19. Repetition licks, ideas and phrases.
20. Unisons.
21. Approach from a half step below. Half step above.
22. Octaves and triple stop octaves.
23. Double-stops.
24. Speed
25. Don’t play on the “1”. Rest on it, or sustain a note
through it.
26. Chords.
27. Changing rhythmic phrases measure to measure i.e.:
From quarter notes to quarter note triplets to eighth notes to eighth note
triplets, etc.
28. Changing dynamics from measure to measure i.e.: soft
to loud and as many levels as possible in between.
29. Use only your fingers to attack the strings.
30. Trills.
31. Chromatic movement.
32. Playing with a swing feel over a straight groove or
vise versa.
33. Playing poly-rhythms: Playing a 3 or 5 note phrase
(steady quarter or eight notes) over a 4/4 beat or playing a 4 or 8 note phrase
(steady quarter or eight notes) over a 3/4 beat.
34. Think in shapes:
- Jagged lines or Flowing lines
- Broken lines
- Curving waves
- Circles, Squares, Triangles, etc.
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The End.
See you next week.
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