TGJesusfreak wrote:I find that a medium pick is best for me. It has the bounce needed for quick motions up and down scales etc... I'm not really sure what kind of picks I have. They just work for me haha
Also I'm learning Fur Elise by Beethoven. It's my first classical piece. and I'm doing pretty well. Anyone have any other good clasical songs? Anyone wanna post a tutorial for some of them? XD
Strafe wrote:What could be more exciting than learning guitar?
Strafe wrote:Wow. Quite the diverse bunch we have now. Me, a number of Acoustic worship players, a rhythm worship player, A neoclassical shredder with an acoustic, a few bassists, A humbly insane girl with a PRS, and now a full on classical dude.
(Oh right, LadyRushia is not the only female in the thread! Thanks Sapphy! We almost got drowned out by the testosterone before you showed up. XD)
Strafe (post: 1418617) wrote:This is me the other day, excited about my new pedals, pretending that I can play guitar:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Hb44BIE1H-I
Its pretty thumbs down. Especially when I botch Cliffs of Dover pretty bad and end up improvising and trying to act cool when I stop. LOL. But its me trying to: Be Jazzy, Be Funky, Be The Edge, Be Eric Johnson, Be a Shredder, and failing at all of the above.
Strafe (post: 1418536) wrote:And don't worry, there's hope in the guitar world for women. Orianthi's incredible. She's pretty mainstream now so I'm sure alot of people know her. But when I first heard her a couple years ago, she was shredding the face off of every person in the room. There is no such thing as gender gap.
Strafe (post: 1418536) wrote:Actually, that brings up an interesting point of discussion: How does everyone practice Guitar? Like what do you do to get better? And now I'm really curious as to what you did, LadyRushia, to get that good. Maybe I should take lessons.
[...]
Then my favorite thing to do is put my ipod on shuffle and blast it over the surround sound and crank my amp to it. I only do this when my parents aren't home, but they're never home, so its the best thing ever. Really helps with learning how to go deaf and get Tinnitus when you're a kid... I mean playing in rhythm with a backing band. I'll play whatever comes up, Switchfoot, Joe Satriani, U2, Van Halen, Arcade Fire, Hendrix, AC/DC, Dir En Grey. I don't know how to actually play the song, but I improvise along. Helps with Key recognition and typical chord progressions, also picking up stuff by ear. I recommend doing it if you don't care about hearing sounds when you're thirty and you don't live within 100 feet of other houses.
What do you do usually?
LadyRushia (post: 1418546) wrote:Oh, here's something I like doing with my acoustic guitar. If you haven't played around with alternate tunings before, do it because there are some really pretty ones out there. I like tuning my acoustic to an open F major chord, so from the low E string to the high E string it goes FACFAF. No chord forms you learn in standard tuning will work with that, but it's very easy to get really pretty melodies from it. I recorded myself playing two songs in that tuning, which you can listen to here:
http://taylorramage.blogspot.com/2010/06/acoustic-guitar-songs.html
Strafe (post: 1419294) wrote:My fave chord at the moment are 7 and major 7 chords, which is alot of what I use in the little Jazz comping thing I do at the beginning of the vid, like Gmaj7, B7, Cmaj7, Am7, Bm7 etc. And some diminished chords descending chromatically which sound nice as well. I felt a little bit Gypsy Jazz with the comping there.
Strafe wrote:The AC4 half stack, however, is one of the best sounding amps I've ever heard under $500. Actually, maybe even $1000. My Dad played it today. It's really simple, but the natural overdrive on that thing is Incredible. Real class A, EL84 break up. I highly highly highly recommend it to anyone. It comes with a head and a 12" celestion, and it can get loud enough to play a club sized gig. But that's the point. It sounds incredible at low volumes. and it's about $300. Anyone looking for a really nice tube amp, look that one up.
Strafe (post: 1423298) wrote:cool cool dude. Welcome to the thread. Not to bash on specs, since it's good to know what you like so that you don't go into a store and get stuck trying everything from a flying V to a Jazz Box trying to find what sounds and feels good to you. It's just that my knowledge is obsessive. <_< I have fun with it though. But all I really need to know is that the best guitar I've ever played was my Dad's PRS since he set the action super low, so really, the only guitar I'll be able to live with is a PRS.
And you memorized modes like Dorian, Phrygian, etc? Is it really memorized? The way I see it is if you know a few major scale boxes, you know all of the diatonic modes already. From there it's just figuring which box to use for which root note. But it's like a major scale basically. Root note I- Ionian, ii- Dorian, iii-Phrygian, IV-Lydian, V- Mixolydian, vi- Aeolian, vii- Locrian. Plagal Gregorian modes and minor modes... well... that's nice that you know them too... they're very weird though. Not sure where you'd use them. I learned the Chromatic Hypolydian, and I still never used it once. Maybe I'll cut a riff out of it or something.
I listened to your myspace link down there. Really cool song man. Incredible drummer on Spark. Now I'm all inspired to start recording again. When my laptop gets back, I think I'll install Live again and scrap together a few demos.
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