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How fast are you guys?

idssdi

Sold-out Crowd Surfer
Nov 11, 2019
5,336
6,749
Groningen
11
Even though I find speed one of the less important things in music I got bored a while ago and decided to check how many notes I can play per second. At 60 BPM 16th notes would give you 4 notes per second for example(at 60 bpm each beat is a second and 16th notes are 4 notes per beat). So I tried to see how many I could do and got to 5 notes per beat at 180 bpm which is 15 notes per second(I didn’t care any more whether I could go faster than that). How many can you guys play per second?
Remember music is not a contest I’m just interested😅
 
Synner Endless Summer Collection

Noah Berends

Campfire Attention Holder
  • Nov 11, 2019
    408
    86
    Fort Wayne, IN
    13
    I sat down and did a little bit of testing of this a while back out of curiosity, and the peak speed I was able to hit accurately on a legato run was between 20-23 notes per second depending on fingers used in the pattern





    This reply was modified 6 months, 3 weeks ago by  Noah Berends.


    This reply was modified 6 months, 3 weeks ago by  Noah Berends.


     

    Firsty Lasty

    New Student
    Nov 11, 2019
    278
    284
    Honestly I can’t get my alternate picking exercises clean at 16th notes 150 bpm most days. That’s because I didn’t start learning alternate picking properly until after owning guitars for I think about 20 years haha fml. If I wanted to get something going really fast my best chance would be with a combination of legato & economy picking.
     

    Christopher Lonski

    Free Bird Player
    Nov 11, 2019
    275
    1
    58
    The fastest I was able to pick back in the day was 16th notes at 360 or 24 per second, which at the time broke the record from what I was able to find but this was also the beginning of the online guitarists competition to beat each other in speed and people posted stuff much faster not long after I hit that speed. I can tell that I have never found a song that required me to play 24 notes a second or one that even sounded good at that speed.
    One of the best things I ever heard about having crazy speed was told to me by my guitar teacher at the time, Alex Machacek. He said playing shreddy stuff like that is kinda like showing someone a magic trick-
    You show it to someone once, and they’re like “WOW! That’s amazing!”
    Show it to them again, and they’re like “Alright man, that’s pretty cool”
    Show it a third time, and they’re like “Ok, do you know how to do anything else? I’ve seen that already”
    People like music for music’s sake. They don’t want to see the say trick over and over again. This really goes for a tone of shred music out there. Your playing has to have rhythm, a groove, good harmony, good melody- just something to make it musically different or interesting, otherwise most people wont really care.
     
    Synner Endless Summer Collection

    Christopher Lonski

    Free Bird Player
    Nov 11, 2019
    275
    1
    58
    Yeah dude, it was kinda cool. But I was going to school at MI at the time and I realized pretty quick that most people didnt give a shit. Id play something like that and then you’d see/hear an asian kind in the next room jamming with Scott Henderson playing the tastiest jazz or fusion shit and it would put you to shame. Which btw, those Japanese and Korean students just dominated that school. You could go at 2 or 3am and all the practice rooms would be taken up by these dudes just practicing their asses off. There were a few shredders that thought it was cool, but again, it’s a novelty that wears off quick. And also, it’s not like I could play EVERYTHING that fast. There are certain scale patterns that are easier than others and positions on the fretboard that are easier. I definitely wasnt playing 2 note per string pentatonic patterns at the first fret.
    It’s funny you brought up michael angelo batio btw! He was actually one of my favorites when I was like 16 because I was so driven on being the best technically. I used to have his “No boundaries” instructional DVD and was able to play that way back then. I met him when I was 17 and actually got to play that double guitar too. There’s a pic floating around on the internet somewhere of a very long-haired Chris holding it and posing with MAB. But you are correct, his songs arent super memorable for the most part. He actually does have some cool melodies here and there, but for the most part its just scales or arpeggios up and down.