
TheRockDoc
New member
When shred was king, I used to shed 3,4 sometimes 5 hours a day just doing scales. As rock music has changed, it seems that there is less wanking and more song. So what do you guys do for actual practice these days?
gbondo9 said:Sadly, I don't make time anymore. Wife, 2 kids, Mortgage, Job, etc, etc.
I jam when I can with my friends and we have a good time, but rarely these days, do I sit down and work my scales or speed.
One of these days is what I keep telling myself.![]()
![]()
mshilarious said:I only practice what I need to do to record.
JazzMasterWil said:I feel your pain. I do record some of my best stuff, listen to it 6 months later and start trying to figure out how to play it again.![]()
punkin said:That's what I'm doing right now...working on sweeping arpeggios. Lets see...about 2 hours. I find that I mix the practicing up with writing. I find that doing intense skill building and theory work often inspires me. I'll work on boring scales -n- such an all of the sudden, a particular series of intervals will start to sound like something...it goes from there.
Don't call it practice...call it something else like human instrument bonding...it will be way more fun.![]()
Treeline said:Instrument body building?
Diatonic Bowflexing?
Is that what DavidK does when nobody's looking?
Inquiring minds want to ... well, want to inquire, I guess.![]()
Sirnothingness said:All the time. I found myself doing more practicing than playing songs lately. I run through some or Frank Gambale's Chopbuilder guitar workout. It's a great dvd to work on your picking and to run through scales and modes and patterns without pulling my hair out. A good practice routine is important uless you want to just play in a cover band all your life.
punkin said:It's not "just" rock -n- roll...it's pursuit of the ultimate amalgamation of sounds...it's finding sonic oneness...building camaraderie in aural bliss...it's a way of life...
Our mantra for the day, say it with me...rock -n- roll ain't noise pollution.