Please forgive me-- this thread has little to do with "recording" and everything to do with musicianship. But I know there are some fantastic guitarists on this site and I thought you might be interested in exploring this song with me. :)
I'm labouring trying to learn this song on guitar:
I'm trucking along, but one part I can't figure out for the life of me is the run at 0:25. I know he is doing octaves from C to E chromatically, but I can't figure out why he is strumming like that. He seems to be doing down-up-down-down-up-down-down-up-down-down-up-down and every third stroke (always a down) is a rake. Why wouldn't he just do down-up-down-up-down-up-down-up? Is it possible that he is actually doing down-up 16th notes and then raking down-up 32nd notes in between and it's just so fast that I can't even tell when I slow it down 75%?
This song is driving me crazy and I love it! :p
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Well, I don't know if this technique is "formal", as I never too
Well, I don't know if this technique is "formal", as I never took guitar lessons, either, but being primarily a rhythm player, I generally play this way as well ... but it depends on the song, too, I guess. Without having a guitar in my hands it's kind of hard to know exactly what I do and when, because so much of it is a second nature/habit thing... LOL
It's almost as if he's slipping into a bit of a bass guitar -slap/thump style thing occasionally as well, providing more of the "percussive" vibe..
Sound wise, it's a classic strat tone.
Sounds like he's keeping the 16ths note pulse going just groupin
Sounds like he's keeping the 16ths note pulse going just grouping the pattern in 3. Common for drummers to do R l R R l R etc.
The rights would be a shuffle pattern. The difference here is that he's using 16ths as the pulse so you get a 3 over 2 thing happening.
Cool tune very Oz Noyish
Chris Perra, post: 430425, member: 48232 wrote: Sounds like he's
Chris Perra, post: 430425, member: 48232 wrote: Sounds like he's keeping the 16ths note pulse going just grouping the pattern in 3. Common for drummers to do R l R R l R etc.
The rights would be a shuffle pattern. The difference here is that he's using 16ths as the pulse so you get a 3 over 2 thing happening.Cool tune very Oz Noyish
My thoughts as well.
The beauty of the guitar, the strum hand is like playing hi-hats.
Fun style! Curious, is it the sound you are struggling with too
Fun style!
Curious, is it the sound you are struggling with too?
But, (except for the traditional palming and/or 1/4/1/8 note down down stuff) fwiw, I strum the same direction as I would if I was soloing. So, at any given moment in a song, I don't get tripped up by going against the natural swing of the rhythm guitars do so well. :D
The strum hand its the metronome.
This approach makes it easy to solo or chord "improvise" without loosing a beat.. I took this approach for practicing my chops which seemed to attribute to the ease picking up a song just by listening to it a few times.
Guitars seems to have a natural up or down motion that we all seem to fall into sooner or later.
The "down" is the kick and "up" is the open hat/ off beat, back beat. "chuck" (Boom/Chuck)
I'm curious to hear others on this. I never took a "formal" guitar lesson so I could be talking my own language.