Caelumamittendum’s Guitar Blog

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    Hello and welcome everyone!

    The reason for doing this…

    A couple of weeks ago I presented the idea of adding a blog/log section on the forum, where people could have their own blog/log/thread. By posting this I am not questioning the speed at which ideas go through the system, but my own eager to do this prevents me from holding back any longer.

    I got this idea from a danish site, a drummers’ site, where they have a dedicated “blog”-section on their forum. those blogs could typically be about your setup, your playing, your new gear. People post their videoes, what they’ve been practicing and readers can comment and give critique and what not.

    The reason I wanted to start this is simply that I lack self discipline. I cannot just sit down and practice scale run on scale run or some other technical stuff. Sure, jamming along, having a good shred once in a while and just generally fooling around is something my self discipline (or lack of) can handle. However, without that very needed self discipline it takes so much longer to learn something than with a dedicated practice session. So, basically I needed something to give me a push in the “right” direction. I don’t think I’m the only one that feels this way…

    …so, about my lack of self discipline.
    …so, I signed up for a Premium Membership on InfiniteGuitar – just for a month to see what the site had to offer, and most importantly how it would affect my playing. This signing up forces me to play, as it would otherwise be wasted money. A lot of people ask me: “do you really want to pay to play guitar?” and my answer will always be: “yes, if it “forces” me to practice. I want to play guitar and I want to be good at it. This site helps me in providing good lessons and I pushes me in that right direction.” (Thanks, IG!).

    Quoting the drum site:
    Here is a quote from http://www.trommeslageren.dk, which states their intentions of the blog section. I have translated it somewhat roughly:

    This sub-forum is not for the regular general discussion, but the intention is that every user (who wants to) makes their own thread (you could use the title-bar to state your name, so we all know who’s blog we’re reading.) Remember that there’s only one thread per user allowed.

    The idea behind this is that you write your practice notes and the likes in the log. In this way others can follow exactly what YOU’re practicing, how you’re progressing, just as others can give you good ideas and suggestions.

    About me:

    Enough with all the inapplicable talk. Here’s the real deal.

    My name is Benjamin Storm and I play guitar, to the big surprise of all of you. I am currently 19 years old, and I have had guitars in my life since I was about 13. I used to play football, but got a pretty bad knee injury, which totally put me out of the game forever, so I decided I would find another hobby. For some reason that became guitar playing, though I had never really had an interest in music. I hear quite a lot of guitar players around saying how they’ve been playing since they were 4,5 or 6 years old. Unfortunately I have not had that privilege.

    My first chord was a D.
    After I got injured I had been thinking for a couple of days about starting to play guitar, so I had of course found some basic instructions on the internet on how to play the guitar. So I sat without a guitar and tried holding my fingers the way it was presented on the internet site. Later that week I asked my mom: “Can I get an guitar?”. I geuss it was sympathy due to the knee injury that led her to say: “sure.”. We looked in the used section of the news paper and found a pretty cheap Fender Sierra Vista acoustic guitar. I had read that Fender was supposed to be good, so it seemed a fair deal. I bought the guitar, took it home and played the D chord I had been practicing.

    The following years went by with playing Nirvana, later Alice in Chains and Pearl Jam. I then got my first electric guitar, a Hohner, from one of my dad’s friends. He also gave me his old amp and a blues overdrive pedal. He didn’t play the guitar anymore, so he felt I could have it. Nice bloke. About a year later I got my Yamaha AES800.
    I used to play a little with a guy from my class who got a severe concussion and also couldn’t play football anymore. It was nothing serious, but it was quite fun, though we had no idea about what we were doing.

    Two years after I got my first guitar I went to an “independent boarding school for upper secondary students” (dictionary…), where young people dedicated to music attends. You live there for one year. You don’t have to be anything special to be there, you just have to be lucky. By this time I was still into Alice in Chains, but more bands like Dream Theater and Pain of Salvation. I didn’t play as much music as I would have liked, mostly due to me being a ***** about it, as all we ever played in the “teams” were pop and funk. This day today I would have been more interested, of course. There were not many metal heads at the school, but I had a few jam sessions with a drummer who was into Planet X and such. Nothing much, but it was alright. Most importantly I got to practice guitar seriously at this school. We had every evening off and a lot of free time (which I honestly didn’t take enough advantage of), and I would sometimes go into one of the rehearsal rooms and sit there for an entire evening playing through John Petrucci’s Rock Discipline.

    These last 2Ā½ years I have been very busy with school, which means I haven’t had time to practice properly, and I admit to have totally neglected it. With my lack of self discipline everything I had learned pretty much went down the drain. It comes back fast though, and I’ve always been a “fast learner”, so that’s really an advantage. These past months I’ve been trying to get back into the game, trying to play more and more guitar. And it really pays of.

    My gear these days:

    Guitars:
    Schecter C7 Diamond Series (old model with Floyd Rose)
    Yamaha Aes800
    Fender Sierra Vista
    CIMG2109.jpg

    Besides that I still got the old Hohner (Strat copy) and another acoustic (12 string Takamine Jasmine) – sorry for the bad pictures:
    161800.jpg
    161939.jpg

    Effects:
    Boss GT-6
    V-amp2
    Boss DS-2
    Electro Harmonix Small Clone Chorus
    Crybaby Wah pedal

    Amps and stuff:
    I recently sold my Marshall “rehearsal” amp, which was a MG30DFX, so now I’ve only got my half stack, which is a cheap Laney MXd120H.
    Laney.jpg

    I don’t use that much as I’ve now plugged my pedal board through my computer, just for the ease of recording, which I’ll post a picture of later.

    other stuff:
    Besides the above I got a digital Yamaha P140 piano:
    efe.jpg
    A Behringer B-1 Microphone and a Behringer Tube Ultragain Mic100 Pre-amp alongside it.

    Some of the above stuff I got at birthdays (single pedals, Mic, etc.)

    What I plan on doing here:
    The problem with me is that I lack some of the basic stuff. I know my tapping well and I know my legato alright. My alternate picking has become rather bad through the last years of not playing much. I know my theory for my needs (chords, scales, harmonies), as I’ve still been able to keep that up as it does not necesarily have anything to do with playing. Lately I’ve been working on arpeggios and sweep picking, which suddenly led to a neglection of my alternate picking in regular runs and gave me the idea of using economy picking.

    Anyways… I plan to write in this blog every time I go into/I’ve gone through a dedicated practice session (be it 5 minutes or 2 hours), write what I’ve played, maybe record/Video it, let you hear it and comment on it etc. All unserious practice (picking the guitar up and playing some ****) wont be included. I will write dates, time, year etc. to keep a fairly good view on development. I hope this will take me to the next levels of playing.

    Have fun!
    It has taken me a pretty long time writing this, so I won’t start of with anything about practicing, but I will leave that to the next time I post.

    I hope this inspires you to go and make your own thread if you feel like it and see the benefits of it.

    Finally:
    Feel free to ask questions about whatever you want!

    /Ben

Viewing 15 replies - 1 through 15 (of 36 total)
  • Replies

    April 2nd, 2008

    Here in my first real post I will try and set up a practice schedule, which I will try and stick to. I want to be able to have a schedule which I can go to from A to Z lasting approx. 1-2 hours, but I also want it to include sections that can easily be used as stand alone sections, if I feel I only want to practice that certain thing if I have a spare 10 minutes during the day.

    I have created a schedule that is somewhat above what I feel I can manage, but we will see how it goes. It looks like this:

    00.00 – 00.02 – Stretches without the Guitar
    00.02 – 00.12 – Warming up with Guitar
    00.12 – 00.22 – Alternate Picking
    00.22 – 00.30 – Timing/Rythm
    00.30 – 00.40 – Economy Picking
    00.40 – 00.45 – Hammer ons/Pull offs
    00.50 – 01.00 – Legato Technique
    01.00 – 01.05 – Scale Study
    01.05 – 01.10 – String Bending (+vibrato)
    01.10 – 01.15 – Sweep Picking
    01.15 – 01.25 – Arpeggios
    01.25 – 01.30 – Tapping

    Am I missing anything?

    I am aware of the fact that there are no “learn songs, riffage etc”, but that is on purpose. I will handle all that outside of the schedule, which is primarily focused on technique (though not without melody!), as I have become quite tired of people claiming that learning doesn’t sound good. Therefore I want to find and create lessons, for each catagory, that actually sounds good. After all, it is playing something that sounds good that makes guitar fun – at least for me. For the sake of the IG instructors I will not post any of these lessons here! (Maybe this thread should be moved to Members Only?)

    Now I am off to bed, and I will meanwhile think of lessons to incorporate into this project. See ya tomorrow!

    …I should probably add that as for now I just want to practice concentrated once or twice a week. I see some people play 2-4 hours every night, but unfortunately I don’t feel I have the time to do that, if I want to do other things as well.

    Sean Conklin
    Sean Conklin
    Member

    Ben,

    Very cool thread man! And it’s really cool learning about you and your guitar playing. Like you mentioned, definitely feel free to post any audio or video of you practicing certain things.

    If I had to recommend anything for you at this early stage, I’d try maybe spacing out your practice material more. For example, right now you’re cramming in 10 or so topics into an hour and a half. I might recommend studying only 2 or 3 topics each practice session, rather than 10. That might prove to allow the material to “sink in” more and be more effective. With that said, people learn differently, so if your current system works well for you, by all means keep doing it that way.

    Rock on man! I look forward to observing your progress as time goes on. šŸ™‚

    Sean

    Hey Sean! Thanks for the reply, I was worried no one would be interested.

    I geuss the right term of the stage I’m at would probably be “re-beginner with some advanced training” šŸ˜›

    I’ve always been a faster learner, and since I’m not going to do a “practice” session every day, I would like to cover as many things as possible, otherwise there would probably be way too long between practicing certain things. In other words I want to keep a constant flow in development. Besides, this is only just an experiment – if it doesn’t work, I’ll try another schedule.

    Thanks for letting me post videos/audios šŸ˜‰

    …as a token of gratitude for your reply I have created a video with a short tapping lick, which will also goes to show whether I can actually figure out how to attach/link to videos. :p

    Click here to see!

    Avatar
    Iluha
    Member

    Hey man that’s a great idea.. I actually done something similar on the “other” site :P, and I think this can motivate alot of people, so good luck man and stay focused! šŸ™‚

    I sat down this evening and tried putting some more specific details into this, and I decided that maybe warming up is not to sound good as for now. I played through most parts to check out how much time I should put into each, and I got some pretty decent notes on that, and will have a watch with me when practicing. I also decided to skip some parts that weren’t really relevant.

    Training Schedule – further planning:

    Stretches without the Guitar:
    – Inside wrist
    – Outside wrist
    – Thumb
    – Fingers
    – Arm above head
    – Arm across chest

    Warm ups with Guitar:
    – Finger Duos
    – Finger Triplets
    – Finger Quartets
    – Right hand warm ups:
    – Chromatics with string skipping
    – Weaving the web

    Timing/Rythm Practice:
    – Quarter notes
    – Quarter note triplets
    – Eight notes
    – Eight note Triplets
    – Sixteen notes
    – Sixteen note quintuplets
    – Sixteen note triplets
    – Seventuplets
    – 32nd notes
    – Song sections – (create drum tracks)

    Alternate Picking:
    – Speed control
    – Petrucci chromatics.
    – Scale Fragments
    – Sequences
    – Patters

    – Usage:
    – Petrucci’s example 10
    – E.g. Moto Perpetuo, Flight of the Bumblebee, Chopins Concerto in A minor.

    Scale study:
    – C
    – C#
    – D
    – D#
    – E
    – F
    – F#
    – G
    – G#
    – A
    – A#
    – B
    – Practice different key each time to get hold of more than C, G, A, B and F

    Hammer ons/Pull offs:
    – All fingers, all strings

    Legato technique:
    – John Petrucci’s “Legato Playing” in Rock Discipline
    – Legato Exercises from Rock Guitar Secrets

    String bending:
    – Bend it!

    Tapping:
    – Rock Guitar Secrets
    – Parts of apping Sonata by Beckerfan101
    – Michael Romeo’s tapping mechanics 1 & 2

    Sweep Picking/Arpeggio:
    – Sweep Picking section of Rock Discipline
    – Sweep Progressions by Joe Spiro
    – Various arpeggios

    I haven’t really gotten any further on the whole deal of technical practice, but felt a certain urge to dwell deeper into the topic of the theory modes/chord progressions/improvisation. Somehow though, the logic behind it seems dificult to grasp. I’m usually quite good at seing the logic behind certain areas and such, but this time I’m having dificulties. As far as I can understand though, it is one of those topics that are hard to grasp and understand fully. Is that correct?

    Mike Edwin
    Mike Edwin
    Member

    Great job with your blog!

    I do the same thing on occasion with a little notebook in my guitar case. When ever I learn something new or pinpoint a new area that interests me it all gets recorded for refference.

    your comment about having trouble grasping modes/improvisation is warranted. There are many different aspects to understanding modes in a real musical way an of course using these ideas in improvisation. Keep doing what your doing, but if you have specific questions. Pop over to the premium section and request a lesson if theres is something you want more info on.

    Mike.

    It’s not really that specific. I tried composing some stuff in the different modes (so far only Dorian, Phrygian and Mixolydian), and then had a friend who knows about such judge or tell me whether it really was that mode which it was meant to be. So far, no mistakes! So I’m learning on this one. Once I grasp onto this a little more I might go back into hardcore guitar practicing…or might do so meanwhile.

    I often feel like “now I wanna practice guitar!”-ish, but then something else gets in my way. That is something that might be worth working on. Any suggestions on this certain matter?

    Just drank a large amount of coke and even though it’s pretty much in the middle of the night here I’m going to do some practicing now!

    On another note: in my journey through the land of modes, I stumbled upon a scale called C Iwato and made a short riff out of that. I will try and record it tomorrow.

    Alright. I went home and recorded it. It is sloppy and somewhat simple, has a very late 80’s/mid 90’s tech. prog. sound to it a la Catharsis (not the power metal band. The prog metal band from the mid 90’s. Only released one cd.). So I geuss it has a somewhat underground prog metal sound to it as well.

    http://www.geocities.com/progressivia/C_Iwato.mp3

    Here is a video showing the riff played. I couldn’t get my video recording program to work with the sound of the drum track, so here it is without. There’s an obvious mistake at the very end, but don’t be fooled…this is about the best I can šŸ˜›

    http://www.geocities.com/progressivia/Movie.wmv

    I should also correct my self from yesterday. The scale is just called Iwato, the “C” included was simply an error.

    Mike Edwin
    Mike Edwin
    Member

    Hey cool riff šŸ™‚

    Okay. I’ve decided to embarress myself yet again.

    My friend sent me a track that he had made in Cubase or Reason or something like that, and I decided to use it as a backing track. It’s nothing fancy, and it really goes to show, that I have to think too much, or too long, about what to play when improvising – which is something I’d really like to work on.

    http://youtube.com/watch?v=gLahcH86qWI

    Sean Conklin
    Sean Conklin
    Member

    Good job man!

    I do know what you’re talking about though. That’s one thing that can’t be hidden while improvising. If you’re thinking too hard about it, it’ll inevitably show. That said, thinking in itself isn’t a bad thing obviously, but the challenge is to think as musically as possibly with the knowledge and skill you have. “Channeling” your thinking so to speak. And making that solid connection indeed takes time.

    Just my opinion, but if I were improvising over that track, I’d feed a lot more off of that little 3,4 note melody in the backing track. Playing in sync with it and playing harmonies, and gradually breaking away from it to play a melodic solo, yet still returning to the main melody to keep it thematic.

    Anyway, great job man! Keep it up and keep showing us your progress!

    Sean

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