So here I am at the wrong end of the age range, seemingly attempting to do something I don't really have the temperament to do. Which means, I need to adjust what it is I think I'm going to be doing and expecting of myself, if I'm not going to be wasting my time. If such adjustments are possible.
At this point, I want to remind you that I totally do not mind doing spider-walks (look it up on You Tube) for minutes on end. I have something to build on.
Most people studying music academically pass the next Grade, then the BMus, or whatever, then to get a gig somewhere. Others may want to find a bunch of guys to play with, and then get a gig somewhere, while picking up what they need to know along the way. It's the gig somewhere that's the end goal. These days, that "gig" might be a TikTok channel on which they demonstrate preposterous virtuosity.
Here's what I could aim for: be able to create a loop of chords that have a sense of direction and some harmonic spice, and solo over it.
Creating a loop with a Looper pedal is nowhere near as easy as people make it look. Putting together some chords isn't just some random thing either. Neither is soloing, if it's done with any taste. The chords could come from other people's songs.
In support of this, there is...
Musical Literacy: reading music, making sense of what is in the score, identifying chords etc
Sight-reading: a) connecting the notes in the score with the notes on the instrument; b) playing those notes in a musical and fluent manner. (if the notes come from a bunch of Miles Davis solos, so much the better!)
Basic Composition: how do chords go together? what creates a sense of direction? How do solos fit over the chords (aka "playing the changes")?
Familiarity with the instrument: where are the notes? Where are the chords? (Electric: where are the tones and effects?)
And in support of that, there is...
Technique: a) getting the fingers where they need to be when they need to be there, and no more (no going down shredding rabbit holes); b) learning to use a Looper pedal, and how to set up the gear to do so.
What about genre?
Classical / Flamenco / Folk / Acoustic Blues / Jazz Solo. Fingerpicking is beyond me.
Metal. Horrible un-musical shredding.
Rock / Funk / Soul / Jazz-funk. The guitar is basically an accompanying instrument. I'd need to be in a band.
Jazz. I'll have a post about jazz, but in summary: chord-scale is no more musical than shredding; cocktail / lounge jazz is cringe; Older styles, fine.
Ambient. Possible, but as a secondary subject.
Noise (Sonic Youth etc). Pass.
Playing classical pieces for solo cello and violin: do-able, but short on self-expression!
Electric Blues / Blues-Rock. This is what I imagine myself playing to an audience if I imagine myself playing to an audience.
So, yeah. Looks like I'm going to learn to play the Blues.
And you will get progress reports.
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