Thread with 13 posts
jump to expanded posttfw you play something you half-know on keyboard and realise it spans just over three octaves and many of the intervals involved are very close to a perfect fourth and you go 💭🎸❗️
tries to play something written for guitar on keyboard wow this is hard how are you expected to make these hand movements
tries to play something written for keyboard on guitar wow this is hard how are you expected to make these hand movements
been spending a few hours now trying to nail the iconic first few bars of [song] and i love how trying to learn to play some known material fluently on guitar is a mixture of practice and problem-solving, making gradual improvement both in skill and in strategy through repetition
oops playing with a consistent rhythm is very important when practicing. i keep forgetting i should try to play slow consistently before trying to play fast…
my dreams will be haunted by the sound of a continuous loop of the song i am practicing played at 50% time in the macos default general midi soundbank piano with metronome on
練習する、練習する、練習する、
もっと少し練習するぞ、後少し練習する、練習する、練習する、ずーっと練習する、練習ぅぅぅぅぅぅぅぅぅぅ
okay, enough teasing, here's an okay-ish recording of what i've been practicing the better part of three days now
i must have been a masochist to pick [rot13]qver qver qbpxf sebz znevb fvkgl sbhe[/rot13] as the first song i seriously attempt to learn on guitar but it's great fun
my arrangement takes some artistic liberties of course:
- i dropped the held G on the right-hand part when the left-hand part repeats
- the shiny high-pitched two-note chord is one octave down because the strings just ring better like this
the biggest limitation however, which i first realised today (😅), is that the lowest note of the chord in the ninth measure (not played here) requires a note outside of standard eadgbe guitar tuning
…but you know what it's not outside of? drop d >:)
time for me to get metal
of course after realising that i also realised that the song is probably straight up easier to play in drop d in any case because all these bass parts happen to be nice barre power chords in drop d… i think. i didn't actually try tuning down my guitar yet. that's for tomorrow :)
i switched to drop d, which does accomplish what i wanted, but now that my thumb reaches down three strings rather than one or (occasionally) two, it's tempting to thumb the rest of the notes, which is an unexpected difficulty
…and now my guitar's tuned to drop d i'm going to have to adjust the action and intonation a bit to compensate for the drop in string tension. i'm gonna have to commit to the bit! well, this guitar has humbuckers, maybe this is what it's made for?