Some Guitar jaming

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post your critiques and comments on the whole thing
 
Sort of a blues/southern rock flavor to the leads - is that a Strat you're using? Interesting use of (what sounds like) acoustic rhythm and electric lead. I like the tone of the lead - classic bite and growl. Good blend between the instruments. Nice licks too - very bluesy. This is the start of a good tune....when will we hear some more?
 
It was recorded with an epiphone using guitar rig. I had 2 guitars and a bass, and just some simple to drums to keep my guitarist in time using general gm drums and some reverb. This week we should record some more. I'll keep you guys updated.
 
when it stopped i thought it was about to get more intense, but it ended. nice.
 
sorry we recorded in like 30 minutes and that's all we got. This week, we will record some more and I'll post it up as soon as I'm done. Just wanted to get some feedback from you guys before we continued.
 
I thought the mix sounded good. Excellent guitar instrumentation. More please:)
 
Some of the guitar lead passages are too low in the mix, the sense of hesitancy & contemplation the playing conveys is lost by straining to hear.
Apart from that the mix sounds quite natural.
Cheers
rayC
 
the whole thing was recorded to low, going to redo the whole thing this week and add some more. How does it sound being recorded to an m-audio mobile pre?
 
hey for those you checked out this song I wanted to ask you guys a question. The dude who played guitar on this track was to my words amazing. I just met the guy and I had mentioned I was building my studio and I'm a drummer, he was also building his studios and was a guitarist. So sounded like a good combination. Well the guy finally comes over, loaded up cubase and guitar rig, and he was blown away at the sounds I can produce in guitar rig. So I finally listen to the guy play and he was playing some pretty nice chords, some more advanced than I could do. While he was just jamming on some chords I hit record in cubase. Once he was done playing, I played back the track. He said add another track and hit record. All of a sudden he started soloing, and what amazed me was that he could play these beautiful melodic solos on the spot. After we recorded we were amazed, and we had to re-record this time, with a metronome, so I recorded some quick drum tracks on my midi controller, looped it and hit record again to record rythm, instead of playing the same chords he had before, it was even more prettier!! So now we were ready for the lead. Loaded up another track, load up guitar rig, hit record. Holy shit this is what came out. No time to think just work the fingers. My question is, HOW THE FUCK DOES HE DO IT. I can definately do the same on drums. Pick up the sticks, feel the beat go for it, been playing professionally for a while, but how does he do it on the spot with a guitar. Is it the experience. I pick up guitar about 2 years ago, and I can follow someone with a chord sheet. But I've seen guys just pick up there melodic instruments and just go at it. Guitar keys bass horns. How do they do it? Is there a secret? Can anyone let me know? Is it a special book, do I need to practice a milllion hours a day. Someone please enlighten me.
 
Aren't guitars more melodic. Don't you have to know a million different scales to know how to improv like that? And to top it off, this guy never had any lessons.
 
it works like this. know 2 scale patterns very well. play them for fun, so that you can picture them on the fretboard as easily (in your mind) as you can see all the white keys on the piano, that's your major scale. then learn where the roots are, then learn where the diatonic triads are and then picture those superimposed on the major scale pattern for each of the 2 main patterns at least to start with. when practicing the major scale patterns, play up and down the 2 octives and then up and down in 3 notes at a time, advancing by one note, then up in 3rds (every other note) and advance one note at a time up and down, then practice the arpeggios of all of the diatonic chords triads at first, then advance to the 4 note chords, for each of the 2 scale patterns. I use the C scale pattern starting at fret 3, then the G Major scale pattern starting at fret 3 as my 2 main ones, at the present time.

then to put it together, start getting used to changes - record a few chord patterns, start with I to IV, then I IV V in a 12 bar blues progression, then go to I vi ii V then add the 4 notes too IMaj7 vi-7 ii-7 V7 over and over in the 2 patterns, then start including other progressions and try to be melodic and use the scales for passing tones, but also the arpeggios and make sure you know what note in the arpeggio you are playing the 1, 3, 5, 7 etc. so now you know the location of each step in the major scale patterns and the components of each of the diatonic chords in the pattern.

i love the melodic first take feeling, isn't it great!? I have one I should post to see what you think of it, actually I have about 50, but the one I just did was a memorable one.

i also know where all the blue notes are and the minor pentatonic superimposed on top of the major scale pattern for more of a pop/rock/folk/blues/country feel
 
very interesting do you have like any patterns on tabs or sheet music? I would love to practice this. I was just so kool to see someone improv so well on a melodic instrument. It's not like it's percussion or something.
 
thanks I've been practicing do you have any work sheets, and does anyone else have any comments?
 
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