weepingminotaur
Well-known member
I also think that both camps (theory and no theory) idealize the extent to which their playing is "free" of whatever it is they're trying to get away from. 
There are phenomenal guitar players who are masters of theory, and phenomenal guitar players who wouldn't know theory if it walked up to them and smacked them upside the head. There are many approaches to uniqueness, but also many different personal backgrounds that inform said approach, as well as a wholly personal set of goals for each player. As long as you are playing and happy with what you're doing and trying to improve, you're OK.
trying to improve, you're OK.
Ya descriptions & metaphors and stuff don't cut it. That's why I post my playing.IMO metaphors are not particularly helpful in this discussion, in that you can bring too many variables from whatever metaphoric scenario you're sketching out to either disprove the other person or prove your point, since it's all just general metaphor and not localized in any specific and concrete.
There are phenomenal guitar players who are masters of theory, and phenomenal guitar players who wouldn't know theory if it walked up to them and smacked them upside the head. There are many approaches to uniqueness, but also many different personal backgrounds that inform said approach, as well as a wholly personal set of goals for each player. As long as you are playing and happy with what you're doing and trying to improve, you're OK.
I know this is hurtful for some people to hear but I find "thinking" about what I want to play while I'm actually playing to in fact be detrimental to my playing. Not saying that's the case for others, but it is for me ....and Mateo Mancuso says the same thing all the time in interviews too. The best things come to me when I just relax & let it all flow from within ...I've heard other players mention this as well.
Well that's an argument I've definitely heard a lot myself in the past. My saying I did'nt think about theory (or anything else really) when I played certainly ruffled some feathers & caused a fair bit of outrageI don't think anyone is arguing that thinking their way through a solo is the optimal way.
Getting out of my own way is the prime directive. I remember reading a GW interview with Santana back in the 80s, and one thing he said struck me: "My job is not to play the song. My job is to let the song play me."
That doesn't mean that knowing what I'm doing is hampering my ability to be inside the moment.
Well that's an argument I've definitely heard a lot myself in the past. My saying I did'nt think about theory (or anything else really) when I played certainly ruffled some feathers & caused a fair bit of outrage![]()
Mozart was a sexual pervert who was rebuffed by the instructors that he wanted to learn from. A pothead tripping balls ain't got shit on the father of modern melodic theory.If you say so
Dude was a pothead who was tripping balls all day long, so hardly Yoda ..and he'd started playing himself a week or two earlier....not exactly a fount of musical theory knowledge
Besides I already said I'd learned the barest basics early on. Just never looked at a theory book (or even a pamphlet) ever.
Sure, I'm eternally in his debtMozart was a sexual pervert who was rebuffed by the instructors that he wanted to learn from. A pothead tripping balls ain't got shit on the father of modern melodic theory.
That good pothead taught you some good theory, and gave you a cloud of good smoke with it.
haha...you missed all the fun we used to have around hereMeh, I don't see outrage, I see discussion. Go back to the Wild West days of MyLesPaul for butthurt, or outrage -- or as we called it, "buttrage". This is a few oldsters sitting around the bar, quibbling, nothing more.
One of my core tenants of playing guitar is muscle memory. If you have to think about your playing, whether theory intensive or not, you don't have enough muscle memoryI know this is hurtful for some people to hear but I find "thinking" about what I want to play while I'm actually playing to in fact be detrimental to my playing. Not saying that's the case for others, but it is for me ....and Mateo Mancuso says the same thing all the time in interviews too. The best things come to me when I just relax & let it all flow from within ...I've heard other players mention this as well.
Open E, A, and D chords are just the same chord with a root on a different stringI've been playing for almost 20 years (it'll be 20 years in August), and I don't know how to play an open D chord.
(Open chords don't really come up with the noise I make).
Open E, A, and D chords are just the same chord with a root on a different string
Yeah if you're a nerd. But if you want to learn music through experimentation you don't need all that.All chord voicings of the same type (be it major, minor, maj7, dom7 m7, maj6, m6, dim, aug, etc.) are the same chord with the root on different strings. : P
Yeah if you're a nerd. But if you want to learn music through experimentation you don't need all that.
Exactly, like you don't need to know the names of the modes, but if you know the Phyrgian mode and think "I want to slip into something more Latin sounding" it's right there, you don't have to reinvent the wheel each time you write a song.I've found that knowing some basic music theory helps my experimentation an awful lot.
Like I find a chord progression that I like, but there's something a little off about part of it. I could spend a couple hours getting increasingly frustrated randomly guessing what other notes on the fretboard will give me different voicings . . . or I can use a tiny amount of music theory to run through a couple different chord voicings to fine tune the progression to flow better. The former tends to take hours and will often result in failure and return to the progression that I wasn't a hundred percent satisfied with. The latter is quicker, simpler, and lets me do experimentation without as much frustration.
Exactly, like you don't need to know the names of the modes, but if you know the Phyrgian mode and think "I want to slip into something more Latin sounding" it's right there, you don't have to reinvent the wheel each time you write a song.