I was just surfing while listening to one of my favorite Canadian musicians of all time, Bruce Cockburn (B.C.). I came to the realization that I am finally playing like a great guitar player of the 80’s, Mark Knopfler.
In grade 8, a song came onto the music scene that was really new and refreshing. It was a band called “Dire Straights”. The song that caught my ear was “Sultan of Swing”.
The guitar player was just a jammin’ on this tune. His name is Mark Knopfler. This popular song at the time was a song that I just had to play. I was taking lessons from the best guitar teacher of all time, in my mind, C. Peterson. I had requested that he show me how to play this tune and he said that he had already figured it out.
Mr. P. was just unreal at figuring out anything in on guitar. So off he went and started to show me the song. It was fun and challenging to play, just the way I liked it. After a couple of lessons, I could play the song pretty much inside out, which is the way he taught me.
While playing the song for many years, I decided to re-visit this song to see if there was any other way(s) to improve playing it. Mr. Peterson introduced me to the technique that Mark Knopfler used on the song but I thought that this guy was one of those off beat musicians that would fade after a short success, boy was I wrong.
I had listened to this song repeatedly over the years,and I noticed subtle tones that I had missed while playing. When I played it, it had a crisper sounding to it then what he had. His version almost had a muddled sound. In my younger years listening to the song, I had noticed that, and I thought it was just the recording technique at the time and that was it. So I then tried playing it with just my fingers and wow, it was really hard to play.
Being a classical guitar player, I was use to using my fingers but had to use my nails to attack the strings but, this guy used his thumbs and at a lightning like speed during his solo’s to boot! I tried and tried and tried but I could not get the calluses on the sides of my fingers that I really needed to pull of the song so I went back to the original way of playing the song.
Now fast forward to 2 years ago when I fell in love with the B.C.’s style of finger picking. The attack technique used here was different from my classical training but I loved the sound he got out of his axe. It was just plain fun to listen to.
So today while I was surfing and listening to B.C. at the same time, I was listening to this song called “It’s Going Down Slow” and “Mamma just wants to barrelhouse all night long”, from Waiting for a Miracle (1987). Today I can play these ones not bad and I just enjoy listening to them. It was at that moment that I noticed the similarities between both techniques and it had just dawned on me that, I can play guitar.
Keep on jammin’
Jonathan says
I just wandered into your blog from the “wall of blogs” over at FuelMyBlog – and have really enjoyed it so far.
I can’t play a guitar at all – I tried to learn when I was younger, but gave up due to a catastrophic lack of talent 🙂
You know we’re waiting now for you to record yourself playing and post it up on the blog…
Chris says
Hey, thanx for the response to my post! In response to your lack of talent, I have this to tell you.
If you ever pick up the guitar to learn just remember these two simple things …
(1) play the song SLOWLY, over and over and over again.
(2) Pretend that you’ve never seen you fingers move in this fashion before. Be very curious at how (what path) you fingers took to get to a certain chord. On the hand that you are playing the chords, always look at the easiest way to move you fingers from one chord to another. Make sure the way your fingers move from one position to another is very smooth. Be aware of what fingers are in the way and make sure that you are aware of this because you are using very fine motor skills that you are not use to yet!
Now you can start playing/figuring out how to play the guitar! Remember, you have to learn to walk (develope balance, fine motor skills, co-ordination, depth perception) before you can run.
Don’t just sit there, start playing
Dave says
You bringing up Mark Knopfler and Dire Straights that still is the most amazing (for me) to listen to on headphones there’s so much in there that I can’t hear any other way, now I need to get new headphones, thanks Chris