Quencho092
New member
Re: How is your sweep picking?
just have a listen to Guthrie Govan. THAT IS REAL FUSION! He takes all those extreme guitar techniques that many people talk down or call cheesy because they're labeled as 'shred' or because they simply can't execute them, and he uses them to build VERY palatable, always TASTY phrases.
I have respect for people with a good repertoire of techniques and articulation methods, even more so when they use it in a melodic context, rather than a step by step context. For example, you have a guy that is good at sweeping/tapping/trem picking. If he does a solo that consists of a sweep section>tapping section>HIGH SPEED TREM PICK SECTION>bluesy lick, it's obvious that he's just playing a repertoire of techniques.
On the other hand, you have someone who constructs a tasty legato melodic phrase, uses a sweep to articulate a target note that highlights the next chord change, plays a tasty variation of the initial phrase, mixes in a tap to get a 3rd or a 9th on top of the next lick chained together seamlessly, it no longer sounds like a 'shred guitar techniques video'.
CONTEXT! People who use sweeps to add a subtle 'sheets of sound' effect to their music and to highlight melodic phrasing get two thumbs up from me
just have a listen to Guthrie Govan. THAT IS REAL FUSION! He takes all those extreme guitar techniques that many people talk down or call cheesy because they're labeled as 'shred' or because they simply can't execute them, and he uses them to build VERY palatable, always TASTY phrases.
I have respect for people with a good repertoire of techniques and articulation methods, even more so when they use it in a melodic context, rather than a step by step context. For example, you have a guy that is good at sweeping/tapping/trem picking. If he does a solo that consists of a sweep section>tapping section>HIGH SPEED TREM PICK SECTION>bluesy lick, it's obvious that he's just playing a repertoire of techniques.
On the other hand, you have someone who constructs a tasty legato melodic phrase, uses a sweep to articulate a target note that highlights the next chord change, plays a tasty variation of the initial phrase, mixes in a tap to get a 3rd or a 9th on top of the next lick chained together seamlessly, it no longer sounds like a 'shred guitar techniques video'.
CONTEXT! People who use sweeps to add a subtle 'sheets of sound' effect to their music and to highlight melodic phrasing get two thumbs up from me