the day is young, i have faith this wont make top five by the end of the day.
Also sports and musics have the same concept of experimentation at practice, but stick to what you are good at on game day. If you never run a specific play, but then it's called on gameday, its going to be a mess. In other words, you don't try something in front of the crowds unless you have it down to where you are unable to mess upI think there is a certain amount of talking past each other that happens when theory comes up, in that non-theory players sometimes think knowing theory means thinking more about what you're playing at runtime, which is not actually the case frequently (maybe not at all). In its best form, theory allows you to play with less intellectual effort and more fluidly, because you have internalized concepts by committing them to muscle memory and situational use.
Analogies are always risky, but I'll offer one anyway: no one chastises a defensive back for studying film on enemy receivers, practicing spot drops based on the defensive coordinator's scheme, and understanding why, for example, outside leverage is key in a certain cover call (because you have safety help over the middle but not near the sidelines, so if you're going to be beaten, better to get beaten toward centre field, where you have help!). All of this physical and mental preparation allows a good DB to go out and play effortlessly, without thinking.
not having a lot of theory doesnt mean you cant play your ass off
I'm not saying theory is bad but.....
It does sometimes get in my way when writing
I'm not saying theory is bad but.....
It does sometimes get in my way when writing
For example I know that the leading tone should resolve to the tonic
So a V should go to a I
But....
If i am building tension it could go somewhere else
My ear wants that resolution
My brain wants that resolution
My song wants something else
Hey maybe I'm a bit jaded 'cause of all the shit I used to catch around here just for refusing to come around to the general concensuss that I should accept that I needed theory from books in my life so I could improve.I just think there's a false dichotomy going on here: knowing theory doesn't mean one's playing is inherently less emotional, not knowing theory doesn't mean one is copying George Thorogood. Studying music doesn't necessarily hamper feel, ignoring it doesn't mean you're being more real. Feelings and brains can exist inside the same solo.
There are crappy guitarists in every approach to the instrument. There are great guitarists in every approach to the instrument. Any tool is only as good as the guitarist wielding it.
Stereotypes suck. Avoid them.
I just think there's a false dichotomy going on here: knowing theory doesn't mean one's playing is inherently less emotional, not knowing theory doesn't mean one is copying George Thorogood. Studying music doesn't necessarily hamper feel, ignoring it doesn't mean you're being more real. Feelings and brains can exist inside the same solo.
There are crappy guitarists in every approach to the instrument. There are great guitarists in every approach to the instrument. Any tool is only as good as the guitarist wielding it.
Stereotypes suck. Avoid them.
They also tend to pick all their notes individually. Is that a hard and fast rule? I would'nt know 'cause it's (Jazz) not my thing.
I noticed no one said anything about classical guys ( I got that one right. huh?) and who could have a dorkier approach more steeped in nothing but theory & book learning than those guys
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