T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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421.1 | what time's dinner? | ERLANG::SUDAMA | Living is easy with eyes closed... | Thu Dec 10 1987 17:40 | 1 |
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421.2 | time and direction | ISTG::WARDEN | A Play For Today | Thu Dec 10 1987 17:41 | 7 |
| Well mostly keeping time. That's my biggest problem right now (even
when I am not soloing). Besides that, I try to get a feel or direction
of where the song is going before I get to the solo, and then continue
in that direction. Of course this for the bass, so it might be
completely different for lead guitar (i imagine rhythm is similar).
greg
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421.3 | the real note | ERLANG::SUDAMA | Living is easy with eyes closed... | Thu Dec 10 1987 17:48 | 19 |
| Sorry about that, Dave, I just couldn't resist.
Seriously, this is a good topic. When I'm soloing I think first of all
about what harmonic changes I'm playing over and what scales I should
be using. I try to be precise about not deviating from the harmonic
structure, unless I do so deliberately (I'm really not advanced enough
to want to). I try to get some variety in the riffs that I use. I would
say that I "build" a solo by stringing together riffs when I'm
improvising. I'd like to be able to say that I have some kind of
melodic intent, but that really isn't true, unless I compose it
beforehand.
I'm also probably more attentive to the rhythm than anything else going
on around me. If somebody else hits a bad chord or something I'll
probably ride over it, but if the rhythm or tempo changes I would try
to pick up on it. I don't really pay much attention to the audience
while improvising.
- Ram
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421.4 | What Clapton said... | SPYDER::BRIGGS | Richard Briggs | Fri Dec 11 1987 06:46 | 31 |
| Interesting this topic comes up at this time. The other night there
was a 50 minute documentary on the BBC about Eric Clapton. He was
asked this very question...
He said that he sings his solo to himself in his head and he is
so totally confident of being able to translate his voice to the guitar
that he doesn't need to think of what his fingers are doing. The
analogy seems to be to think what you want to sing but instead of
the brain activating the vocal cords (chords?) it activates your
hands.
I can see what he means. I can just about translate a move from
C to F to G with no concious signal to the hands, it just comes
naturally. I guess I have a long way to go! He also said that he
doesn't see that there's any remarkable skill involved its just
the fact that years of experience enable you to perform this
translation (complete with 'feeling') to the fretboard with the
absolute and unquestionable confidence that it will happen!
It's a bit like a friend of mine. When I ask him what that chord
was he just played halfway up the neck he never knows! He really
has to replay the song until he gets to the bit I mean and freeze
his hand, look where his fingers are and work out that its the third
inversion of Ebm7 or something. In other words he's doing my CFG
bit to something somewhere between my meagre level and Clapton's.
I find this fascinating, and it must be what differentiates any
true musician from a musical 'technician'.
Richard Briggs
UK SWAS
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421.5 | You hit the nail on the head !!! | SALEM::ABATELLI | | Fri Dec 11 1987 07:14 | 8 |
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RE.421.4
I wouldn't add anything to your response.
Very well put !!!!
Thank you for the input Richard !!!!
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421.6 | This probably doesn't help | MTBLUE::BOTTOM_DAVID | Not so famous rock star | Fri Dec 11 1987 07:50 | 8 |
| I think about what the current chord is and very little else.
I have a "mode" where I totally lose contact with reality (yuk
yuk) and solo like a fiend (for me anyway). Clapton's afraid of
that mode, Carlos Santanna lives for it...it plays through him etc.
I can get there and when I do there is no thought, I just listen.
almost like a spectator.
dave
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421.7 | You need a VISION | ERASER::BUCKLEY | Street Lethal | Fri Dec 11 1987 09:05 | 18 |
| Well, before the solo I get all the analization nasties (Key's,
the changes, what modes, etc) out of the way so they don't haunt
me during the solo. Then, a conception of melody and a rhythmic
theme is established (to a certain degree). It can mirror the vocal
melody, or be more contrapuntal to it...depending on mood. Of course
you can think of ways to incorporate those neat lil tricks like
pulling harmonics or (yuk) tapping. Something that is a bit subliminal
sometimes is the notes I'll play...ie, If I hear a melody in my
head and it ends (or starts) on a weak note (like the root or the
fifth), I'll change it to be more interesting (like the 2nd, sharp
4, or flat 7), thus changing my melodic idea to an extent.
What are peoples ideas on phrasing and interpertation? Anyone ever
consider revamping old licks into new rhythic patterns and with a new
approach to attack (like with the whammy, or tapping, sliding, hammers,
staccato as opposed to legato, and vice versa)??
wjb
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421.8 | Well...I'm not Eric Clapton thats for sre! | VIDEO::BUSENBARK | | Fri Dec 11 1987 09:18 | 17 |
| Soloing....If I have a set of changes in front of me,I think
chords,scales,modes and notes and concentrate rythmically rather than
melodically. I figure out the harmonic possibilities beforehand,I do sing
when I play........
If I don't have changes,I play a combination of,singing what I hear
and complement that with patterns I know work harmonically.
I'm working at getting rid of patterns.....I learned this from
listening to people like Oscar Peterson(piano)who if you listen real
close sings or buzzes everything he plays. I have found that some music
is so familiar to me that I don't need even the chords to"feel" where I
am. Knowing theory and harmony helps but unless you can hear it in you
head and translate to your fingers then you really just playing patterns
or licks. One way of doing this is to try to sing what you hear on record
or tape and transcribe it to the instrument. Note for note...Phrasing
to me is actually more important and harder to get than the notes.....
Rick
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421.9 | I do it occasionally!!!! | DELNI::GOSS | | Fri Dec 11 1987 09:23 | 24 |
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What do I think about when I'm improvising...Ususally I'm
improvising cause I forgot what I was suppose to be doing!!!!!
I know this is not what the question really meant... But some
of you noters have the luxury of having a band with other people,
I do solo and man does it #@$% when your in the middle of a song
and all of a sudden forget where you are... I just keep playing
anything. Eventually after about two or three wrong chords I get
back on track...or remember what the words are!!! People in general
don't seem to notice but as I look around the club I always seem
to catch the eye of someone (I imagine another musician) and there usually
smiling or kinda laughing..hey what the hell I screwed up,and I
usually kinda give them the look like ( oh ya I know I screwed up...)
that's what makes live performances so great!!!!
But I have to admit I have never just stopped,I think
everyone would notice then...
I'm sure some of you noters can relate to that...
That's what I call Improvising!!!
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421.10 | Get of off to a good start !! | ANGORA::JACQUES | | Fri Dec 11 1987 09:31 | 16 |
| In an interview Jerry Garcia stated that he feels that in order
to play a good solo, he has to start it off right. If he starts
off wandering without a direction, the solo really goes nowhere,
but if he starts off on the right track to begin with, the rest
seems to come naturally. I try to keep that in mind when arranging
tunes. I may start a solo off differently each time I play it, but
I try to have an idea how I want to start it so that the entire
solo comes off being tight. Not having blazing speed, or an endless
selection of scales or riffs in my repetoire, I try to do the best
with what I do have, and concentrate on making the solo sound tight,
and get the best sounds out of my guitar. Just before a solo starts,
I'm usually concerned about switching effects, volume, and other
technical detail, as well as how to start off.
Mark J.
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421.11 | My .02 | STAR::KMCDONOUGH | | Fri Dec 11 1987 13:12 | 16 |
| If I can feel the tune, I can solo to it. Sometimes I sing it in
my head as I play it, sometimes not. I never think about the notes
that I am playing or the chords. I just do it.
However, if I don't feel the tune, then I pay particular attention
to the chords and the structure of the song and plan my moves.
As I get more comfortable and get a better idea of what I want the
solo to say, the mechanics go into the background.
I agree with the Jerry Garcia's comment, with a little interpretation.
Solos should say something. If you don't know what it is that
you want to say, it's not time to talk.
Kevin
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421.12 | it works well | SALEM::SAWYER | ya want me to kill em sarge?...ok... | Fri Dec 11 1987 15:22 | 5 |
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re 6
yup.
me, too
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421.13 | Think, Me? | FLOWER::JASNIEWSKI | | Tue Dec 15 1987 15:19 | 21 |
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I dont think about anything. As a matter of fact, the further
I can draw myself away from the conscious realization of what I'm
doing, the better it is. I prefer to kinda let the guitar take over
and play itself, while listening from a 3rd vantage point of sorts.
I dont know where I go. Probably somewhere in my head called crankville.
It's expression in a pure form, likely a release of all the noise
that builds up in my head, which doesnt know where else to put it.
I'm not a very good soloist, in that I've never learned to play
*any* recorded solo note for note, from beginning to end. It shows
in my playing. It also doesnt show in my playing.
I dont really get to solo anymore, since I've been playing on
bass for the last three years or so. I still keep a six string electric
strung up - but just to show guitarists I can still smoke 'em up if I
want to.
I was impressed with your "Heartbreaker" solo, Dave. I've never
succeeded in doing *that*.
Joe Jas
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421.14 | My usual thought: "Shit, what do I do now?" | DREGS::BLICKSTEIN | Dave | Tue Dec 15 1987 16:37 | 15 |
| > I was impressed with your "Heartbreaker" solo, Dave. I've never
> succeeded in doing *that*.
Thanks.
Actually, I remember what I was "thinking" about when I played that.
Something like:
"What am I gonna do now that the drummer spaced out and
failed to listen for the lick that we agreed would cue
the end of the solo."
db
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421.15 | I Couldn't Say It Better Myself | AQUA::ROST | A circle's not invisible | Tue Dec 15 1987 16:41 | 8 |
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A quote from Martin Mull's "Licks Off Of Records":
When he says black, I play soulful,
When he says blue, I play doleful,
When he says *solo*, I can't wait until I'm through....
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421.16 | borrow a phrase from the melody | HYDRA::BOLDUC | | Thu Dec 17 1987 17:06 | 19 |
| -<This sometimes helps>-
The problem I find with riffs is that they are patterns which do
not distinguish one solo from another. Although they help to get
through a solo, I would not rely only on them. I like learn, at
least, a portion of the melody within the scale where I will
be improvising. I may play the head in open position but move to
the 5th fred if I want to solo for example in A blues. On occasion,
I will play a phrase which is very similar to a phrase within the
melody. I use this phrase like a theme where I will begin to change
it rhytmically or melodically and evolve this theme.
Using this idea as a guide, I have a starting point when I begin.
It also takes me ahead so that after playing one phrase I don't say to
myself, "what's next", I continue to shape the idea. The most
important benefit, I believe, is that the solo becomes unique to that
particular song. I get bored with "one solo fits all" idea.
For what its worth,
dmb
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421.17 | Kind of along the same lines... | CSC32::G_HOUSE | Greg House - CSC/CS | Thu Dec 17 1987 19:34 | 36 |
| I know this is a little late...and I'm a little off the topic, since
this isn't really what I think about when soloing, but I think it's
related.
RE: .4 He [Clapton] said that he sings his solo to himself...
I had a guitar teacher a year or so ago who, in an effort to get my
solos away from sounding like scales or canned licks layed this advice
on me. It was very similar to what E.C. states above.
My teacher had me put the guitar down and listen while he played some
simple changes. He told me to sing a few notes for a lead line. Now I
found this really embarrasing, since I don't sing well, but I did it.
Then he had me get the guitar and play what I'd sung (only in key...).
It was amazing! The line sounded much simpler and more melodic than
any of the stuff I'd been playing before. My previous efforts were
much faster, but said absolutly NOTHING (a la Yngwie M. - "Yeah, here's
that diminished/melodic minor scale again, only FASTER!").
This guy also recommended singing along with what you're playing when
you practice, so that you learn to equate what you hear (perceive your
hearing) to what you're playing.
This probably would have helped my playing if I'd followed up on
it. Unfortunately that was the next to the last lesson I had with
him (had to move halfway across the country to work for DEC...).
I'd kind of forgotten about this. This note refreshed my memory
and I thought I'd share it with all "yall" noters.
Of course this would be more useful for constructing planned solos.
At least until you became proficient enough with the technique to
think what you play, as Clapton indicates HE does.
Just a thot.
Greg
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421.18 | what goes on in your mind | CSSE::CLARK | dodging lions and wasting time | Fri Dec 18 1987 09:32 | 17 |
| Thinking what you play is the best way to solo. What's amazing to
me is that what you THINK so often follows theory so closely.
What makes you 'think up' certain licks to play? Is it n years
of listening to western/rock/jazz music? I know if I listen to
a lot of Jerry garcia, I play like Jerry. If I listen to a lot
of Ronnie Earl, I play like Ronnie. (I never play like Yngwie).
It seems to me that what you think up is the sum of your influences
plus little picking patterns you've developed over the years PLUS
a little voice in your head that's YOU. As you play longer, YOU
becomes the dominant voice in your improvising.
From my vantage point (11 years of mostly blues playing) what
Clapton does is not particularly hard. Playing 'what's in your head'
over more complex changes is more of a challenge. But it still
seems to follow the theory behind the chords. And learning more
about theory can change what's in your head.
-Dave
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421.19 | Build - don't blow all your cookies at the starting gate | DREGS::BLICKSTEIN | Dave | Fri Dec 18 1987 12:00 | 29 |
| One of the things I think about is to build gradually.
As many of you no doubt no, I have this pet stereotype of guitar
player that I rag on a lot. I've described it in detail elsewhere,
so let's just say that it's the kind of guy who plays "Eruption"
in music stores.
Anyway, one of the key things this type of guitarist does in a solo
is to go flat out as soon as the gate opens. That is, he shows
us the pinacle of his speed or technique by the end of the 2nd or
3rd bar. And inevitably, that leaves him with nowhere to go.
You wanna hear a prime example of this? Listen to ANY of Dweezil
Zappa's solos on "Them or Us" (Frank Zappa). They just sorta
peeter out and go nowhere. He truely sounds like he's searching
for something to play.
One of the most effective pieces of advice I ever got was to build
solos to a climax. And I definitely try to remind myself of that
BEFORE I go into the solo.
db
p.s. I'm real proud of this one solo I did for a tune my (ex)band
recorded. There's a high speed section towards the beginning
and yet, it is NOT the climax of the piece. It was sort of
a challenge to myself to construct a solo where speed was
present but NOT used to climax the solo. (This is on the
Commusic III tape for any of you who knows what that is.)
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421.20 | seconded... | EARWIG::BRIGGS | Richard Briggs | Sat Dec 19 1987 12:10 | 29 |
| Dave,
What you said about building a solo to a climax I think is essential.
When I think of a couple of solos I find memorable they all
do this.
They may not climax in a crescendo of complex playing or sound. They may
just climax in such a way as to lead you irresistibly back into the
vocals or whatever. I'd never thought about this before reading the
last reply. I'm not going to comment on the 'quality' of the
guitarists here (don't even know who they are) but for me their solos
work 100% because of this:
- Solo in the middle of Ride My See-Saw by Moody Blues.
- The solo in My Love by Paul McCartney (I don't know who played it
but PMcC reckoned it was improvised in the studio.
- The solo in Starship's big hit back in summer (Nothing's Gonna
Stop Us?).
I have the Band's LP, The Last Waltz. There is a track on there
with a guitar solo that climaxes beautifully by blending almost
unnoticeably into a sax solo (played by someone elso of course!).
This is just a few I can think of off the top of my head. In all
cases when I hear the solo start I sort of long to hear the climax
come.
Richard Briggs
UK SWAS
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421.21 | solo tips | JACKAL::MURRAY | | Fri Feb 05 1988 15:44 | 20 |
| Here are some thoughts from a humble, intermediate guitarist.
1. I agree totally with the comments on starting off on the right
foot. If you just start blasting notes with no thought of development,
where can you expect to end up?
2. Singing the notes as you play is a great way to get caught up
in the feel of the song. And once you're there, you're golden. I
sing all the time!
3. What you don't play is as important as what you do play. A few
well-placed silences can add alot of tension and buildup to a solo.
Mark Knopler leaves holes all over the place. He can use silence
as well as he can use notes.
4. Concentrate on your strengths and downplay your weaknesses. Not
to say that you shouldn't practice the things that you can't do,
but you should use your best pitch when you want throw a strike,
so to speak.
Nuff said by this dude. Go for it!!!
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421.22 | Strike 3!! | WLDWST::JENSEN | | Fri Feb 05 1988 17:49 | 5 |
| re.21
I agree, when your in the game..throw striks but when you at practice..
conentrate on the curves
Mark
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421.23 | Don't play at all | CSC32::G_HOUSE | Greg House - CSC/CS | Fri Feb 05 1988 18:46 | 6 |
| re .21 #3...what you don't play is as important as what you don't...
I can believe this. My best solos are the silent ones.
Greg
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421.24 | Chromatic approach notes | ERASER::BUCKLEY | Frenzy! | Mon Feb 08 1988 09:42 | 4 |
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Think about how to make non-scale tones sound good.
wjb
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421.25 | can't break the rules till you know them | CSSE::CLARK | but I dont WANT a new area code | Mon Feb 08 1988 09:44 | 4 |
| re .24
First you have to think about how to make the SCALE tones sound
good!
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421.26 | --> ? <-- | ERASER::BUCKLEY | Frenzy! | Mon Feb 08 1988 09:46 | 4 |
| Ok, Chormatic approach to chord tones then, at least. CT's will
always have you in the clear.
wjb
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