Guitarist why not chase your own dream
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Why not chase your own dream
The article:
Guitar Tab
I grew up in the
late sixties in South Africa and started playing guitar in hard rock bands
right into the seventies, initially groomed on a heavy dose of Clapton and
then literally blown away by Hendrix followed by monster injections of
Sabbath(Toni Immoni); Deep Purple (Blackmore), Zepplin (Page) and so it went
on until the super heavies like Malmsteen, Rhodes, Gilbert, Eddie Van Halen
(the master finger tapper) Satch (still my favourite) and Via and many
others, all of whom just seemed to kind of arrive and literally explode in
the eighties.
They all continued to re-invent and shred until I
wanted to give up playing because it was hard enough trying to emulate
Hendix back in the sixties let alone cope with a speed shredder like
Malmsteen going apeshit up and down the fretboard without missing a note. It
all just got way too difficult...or so I thought back then.
To make things worse, I went solo, destined to 'make
it' as a super guitarist. I tried in vain to follow all the big name styles,
bought their sheet music, copied the licks but somehow never really felt
comfortable pulling off their complex solo's. I knew my Pentatonics
backwards, was nicely into the modes favouring the 'Dorian' mode (like
Santana - another big hero for me) but normally ended up mixing a few modes
with pentatonics to create a sound that I was comfortable with - which
was not like my hero's.
It was only in the
late nineties that the whole thing actually came to me. I suddenly realised
one day that I was chasing a dream, someone else's dream. Why not chase my
own dream, create my own sound, master my own destiny. I decided there and
then that I would stop trying to emulate everyone else and create a unique
sound and technique of my own, one that I felt comfortable with - Dorian
mode mixed with pentatonics??? What next....?
I realised that the reason I could never really master
my hero's sound was because they created the music, not me and when you're
in creative mode that's exactly what happens. You let rip and improvise and
let the flow take you wherever it wants to. Without realising it your
fingers do the walk but it's the creativity from within that is ripping. You
can't dial into someone else's creative pysche and just tune in...
Once I'd come to this conclusion it was like a breath
of fresh air. My playing upped a whole standard as I searched for my own
unique sound. I recorded a few CD's in the process as I ploughed through
several styles and finally came to where I am now.
I use a Fender Strat (was always a Les Paul fanatic)
with the switch in the neck (bass) position and I drive this through a
Digitech multisound pedal and I use a sustain pedal and an equalizer pedal.
On the Digitech settings I opt for a clean sound with slight chorus and I
use the pedal for delay. The sound is insane - similar to Stevie Ray Vaughan
I suppose and I've gone full circle back to my roots playing blues but with
a bit of a twist. It gets into you and you feel it eventually...
Living in Jeffreys Bay, which is an alltime surfing
destination, got me play listed on several surfing videos so I just went
with that whole sound and evolved with it. Still playing...still learning
everyday...
Guitar Tab
My message to all aspiring guitarists out there is
simple - if you can understand what I experienced then you need to try
breaking away from the real world and for once let your creativity take you
to places you've never been before on your instrument. It'll blow your mind
and change your perspective on music and your particular sound and technique
forever.
I urge every aspiring young guitarist to learn his/her
Pentatonics until you can play them in any key, in any one of the five
positions and only then start looking at the modes and learning how the
entire jigsaw fits together. Once the basic skills are in place, let the
creativity take over. Don't try and master the greats. They are so far ahead
it will only demoralise you rather than motivate you.
I wasn't born
blessed with a good ear or a great talent as so many young gifted people
are. It took years of hard work, sitting in front of the TV after work at
night, the guitar unplugged (you don't bug anyone this way) and just doing
scales over and over and over again until my fingers followed the patterns
without having to think about it. Then you need to play with a lot of
different people to understand other styles and see where you fit in.
It's a lot of work but it's eventually enjoyable. I
love going into a new music shop and picking up a guitar when the eager
salesmen quickly approaches and says, "Careful with that sir. Do you know
how to play?" To which I reply, "just a little..." and then proceed to run a
lightning lick with sweep arpeggiois, from the bottom of the fret board all
the way up and then hand him back the guitar and smile when he
curses, throws his arms in the air, his eyes the size of saucers
and stutters, "F*#k me....do that again!!!" Now thats the kind of
compliment that keeps me playing...
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Updated: 2/24/07
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