Rich_S
HomeGrownToneBrewologist
Okay, yeah... I came up in the 70's and never learned to shred. Shoot me.
With the return of our first-year keyboard player, we have added a couple Journey songs to the set list for this year's big 25th college reunion extravaganza. The part that gives me fits is just four simple notes - the decending 16th-note lick in the introduction of "Don't Stop Believing".
I don't know how I managed it back in 1983. Actually, my most vivid memory of this song is absolutely BLOWING this part one night, hitting the big 1st-position E chord at the end, then falling over laughing. Now add lack of practice, advancing age, and arthritis to the mix, and we have a recipe for humiliation.
Years ago, I forced myself to start using alternate picking as much as possible, instead of so many downstrokes. So, I could play it as written in the first example below. The trouble is the jump over the G string between the D# and C#. I can play this fast a few time, but get all crossed up before I'm finished.
So, I been thinking about this stupid little lick. I realized a better way to play it would be two small sweeps, I think they call this "Circle" picking since it's not sweeping across multiple strings, just going back and forth across two. See second example below.
The problem with this is, I'm not used to sweeping and can't play it as fast as alternate picking. Also, the up-and-down is out of synch with the count - the downbeat is in the middle of the down sweep. So, it logically seems to be the "right" way to play the part, but it's really rough and nowhere near as fast as alternate picking.
Either way, I'm going to have to play this 1/4 measure several hundred thousand time between now and May 1st. Knowing that "perfect practice makes perfect", I'm looking for any advice I can get on how to play thing for four measures without falling apart. (Don't worry I have no dillusions of doubling speed to 32nd notes the way Neil Schon did... show-off.)
Help!!!
With the return of our first-year keyboard player, we have added a couple Journey songs to the set list for this year's big 25th college reunion extravaganza. The part that gives me fits is just four simple notes - the decending 16th-note lick in the introduction of "Don't Stop Believing".
I don't know how I managed it back in 1983. Actually, my most vivid memory of this song is absolutely BLOWING this part one night, hitting the big 1st-position E chord at the end, then falling over laughing. Now add lack of practice, advancing age, and arthritis to the mix, and we have a recipe for humiliation.
Years ago, I forced myself to start using alternate picking as much as possible, instead of so many downstrokes. So, I could play it as written in the first example below. The trouble is the jump over the G string between the D# and C#. I can play this fast a few time, but get all crossed up before I'm finished.
So, I been thinking about this stupid little lick. I realized a better way to play it would be two small sweeps, I think they call this "Circle" picking since it's not sweeping across multiple strings, just going back and forth across two. See second example below.
The problem with this is, I'm not used to sweeping and can't play it as fast as alternate picking. Also, the up-and-down is out of synch with the count - the downbeat is in the middle of the down sweep. So, it logically seems to be the "right" way to play the part, but it's really rough and nowhere near as fast as alternate picking.
Either way, I'm going to have to play this 1/4 measure several hundred thousand time between now and May 1st. Knowing that "perfect practice makes perfect", I'm looking for any advice I can get on how to play thing for four measures without falling apart. (Don't worry I have no dillusions of doubling speed to 32nd notes the way Neil Schon did... show-off.)
Help!!!
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