Well, he is a conservative 75.It does if that's what you want to play. I started on a classical acoustic and had difficulty switching to electric for a variety of reasons.
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I doubt it.^^^agreed^^^ I kinda did both at the sametime. I turned out terrible
Don't you think most guys/girls w/ experience would agree with you? Makes sense to me.I find I get better at whatever I’m spending real time with — acoustic, electric, clean amp, high gain, bass, single-coils, humbuckers. I tend to dial in on the peculiarities of whatever it is and change my approach to suit it. I don’t have a lot of universal skills that I can just apply to anything.
Being able to dial in on the peculiarities is the definition of a universal skill in my book.I find I get better at whatever I’m spending real time with — acoustic, electric, clean amp, high gain, bass, single-coils, humbuckers. I tend to dial in on the peculiarities of whatever it is and change my approach to suit it. I don’t have a lot of universal skills that I can just apply to anything.
Don't you think most guys/girls w/ experience would agree with you? Makes sense to me.
What's a conservative 75?
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I think everyone should have an acoustic, and learn to play it well...but that doesn't necessarily mean that they need to start on one. I think people should start on whatever keeps them coming back to practice the instrument and learn about music. Then, once they've established a solid technical foundation for the instrument in general, they'll likely branch into other variations of the guitar all on their own.
I started on electric for bass, then learned upright within a few years. My order on other stringed instruments was: acoustic guitar, electric guitar, banjo, dulcimer, mandolin, tenor guitar, nylon stringed guitar. Picked up a trombone not long after learning bass, which led to me learning to play every other brass instrument, and sax, in short order. Started playing drum kit somewhere in there too. I had lots of formal training on bass and trombone, but my only formal training on another instrument was nylon stringed guitar, for which I took just a few college classes (though I've completely forgot how to read treble clef by now). Learned basic harmonica in my 20's. Pretty much the only common instrument that I really can't grasp that well is piano...and that's really just because I never bothered to put the time in to feel "at home" on a keyboard.
Anyhow, all that came from playing electric bass. The point is, if you're motivated and interested, it doesn't matter what you start on.
Well, if that's in reference to me, I'm proud to be a curmudgeon in training. I say the only things that I know to be correct, indeed. Which is not to say that there are other things which are also correct, but at this time I am unaware of.Old school, meaning what he says is the only thing that is correct and he knows more than anyone else. These are his words, so I try to respect that, but he also says he's an old curmudgeon, and he's damn sure right about that!