J
Jak Angelescu
Guest
Papa Gates had talked about a book called "The War of Art" and it's a book I read before and found quite useful. It's about how the hardest part of creating is not actually creating; it's sitting down to create. To be honest, I'm afraid of guitar. And what I mean is that all day I find some excuse to not play like "oh the dishes need to be done" or "I need to work" or something. In all actuality, sitting down to play was a fear of mine. I was afraid of it. It wasn't anxiety like fear of messing up or self doubt. Rather that the overwhelming aspect of frying my brain on so many things to where playing guitar became more of a chore than fun. Please hear me out...
For a while now (until I got sick) I was playing guitar anywhere from 4-5 hours a day. My growth happened but not like how I wanted it to happen. I got faster with scales, I got more familiar with the neck, my ear training was improving and I was learning songs faster but ask me to improvise or write my own solo? I fell flat. FLAT.
I want to be like Papa Gates. I want to be able to hear chord changes and sit it with a group of guitarists and just know what to play. I want to be able to feel and create melody. I want to be like Papa and write amazing solos with passion and be able to pick up any guitar and play with my eyes closed and people go "Wow, SHE is a GUITARIST. Not just someone who knows scales and songs."
I have big dreams. In my neverending quest for finding out HOW to practice, it came along with (thanks to advice from Syn) also importantly what to practice. With this, I really want to scratch doing covers. I'd rather listen to a song and say "oh wow! I love that melody/lick/riff/progression/etc I'm gonna go home and learn THAT part" than beat my head in for years not being able to get a song right. I really passionately want to be a damn fine classical guitarist. I gained entrance to a great conservatory with an audition and with how I play now you would never know. I've lost it. And it's killing me to get it back. I heard a song called "City of Night" and it's the sexiest song ever. I'll link it below. Latin jazz, bossa nova, flamenco, classical, it's all so sexy and romantic to me. But between wanting to be an established musician with classical and originals, nowhere does my time allot for covers. Nowhere.
So I dug into my newfound passion more. And yet still for 4-5 hours a day I was overwhelmed and then I read an amazing interview with Andre Segovia.
I can't sit still long. It's who I am and I refuse to fight it. It doesn't mean I'm not disciplined or not serious about my work. It means my brain can only process so much at once and I will no longer feel inferior because of it. Andre Segovia practiced for about 5 hours a day but he gave himself a break every FIFTEEN MINUTES. FIFTEEN!!!! He'd focus on one thing, then get up and get a drink, say hello to his wife, whatever and go back to work. Every hour and fifteen minutes he'd give himself a real break. This is what I've been doing and guitar has become fun and adventurous all over again. I don't feel like I'm being disciplined or punished or forced to sit down and let my butt/shoulders go numb for hours.
So after that long endless confession, my question lies in this: Do you think it's okay to drop covers? My idea is that if I really focus on this school and learn licks and tricks instead of just songs, perhaps learning covers down the road will come much easier. Thoughts? Thanks for listening to my ramble
fall in love here...
For a while now (until I got sick) I was playing guitar anywhere from 4-5 hours a day. My growth happened but not like how I wanted it to happen. I got faster with scales, I got more familiar with the neck, my ear training was improving and I was learning songs faster but ask me to improvise or write my own solo? I fell flat. FLAT.
I want to be like Papa Gates. I want to be able to hear chord changes and sit it with a group of guitarists and just know what to play. I want to be able to feel and create melody. I want to be like Papa and write amazing solos with passion and be able to pick up any guitar and play with my eyes closed and people go "Wow, SHE is a GUITARIST. Not just someone who knows scales and songs."
I have big dreams. In my neverending quest for finding out HOW to practice, it came along with (thanks to advice from Syn) also importantly what to practice. With this, I really want to scratch doing covers. I'd rather listen to a song and say "oh wow! I love that melody/lick/riff/progression/etc I'm gonna go home and learn THAT part" than beat my head in for years not being able to get a song right. I really passionately want to be a damn fine classical guitarist. I gained entrance to a great conservatory with an audition and with how I play now you would never know. I've lost it. And it's killing me to get it back. I heard a song called "City of Night" and it's the sexiest song ever. I'll link it below. Latin jazz, bossa nova, flamenco, classical, it's all so sexy and romantic to me. But between wanting to be an established musician with classical and originals, nowhere does my time allot for covers. Nowhere.
So I dug into my newfound passion more. And yet still for 4-5 hours a day I was overwhelmed and then I read an amazing interview with Andre Segovia.
I can't sit still long. It's who I am and I refuse to fight it. It doesn't mean I'm not disciplined or not serious about my work. It means my brain can only process so much at once and I will no longer feel inferior because of it. Andre Segovia practiced for about 5 hours a day but he gave himself a break every FIFTEEN MINUTES. FIFTEEN!!!! He'd focus on one thing, then get up and get a drink, say hello to his wife, whatever and go back to work. Every hour and fifteen minutes he'd give himself a real break. This is what I've been doing and guitar has become fun and adventurous all over again. I don't feel like I'm being disciplined or punished or forced to sit down and let my butt/shoulders go numb for hours.
So after that long endless confession, my question lies in this: Do you think it's okay to drop covers? My idea is that if I really focus on this school and learn licks and tricks instead of just songs, perhaps learning covers down the road will come much easier. Thoughts? Thanks for listening to my ramble
fall in love here...