• Entertainment
  • Musicians
  • Recreation
  • Guitars
  • Playing Styles

Guitar Licks

Guitars, tips and great music discussions

  • Home
  • Blog
  • Archives
  • Links
  • About
  • Guest Blogger
  • Contact



You are here: Home / Archives for finger picking

Simon and Garfunkle in Toronto

March 15, 2010 by Chris

Simon and Garfunkel are going to be playing May 12th, 2010 in Toronto at the Air Canada Centre and I hope to be there! These guys have produced so many great memorable tunes that it’s not funny! Do you plan to go and see them on their up coming tour?

I remember seeing these guys in the late 80’s at the old CNE bandstand and I’ll never forget it. We had concert seating which was like a free for all at the front of the stage. We brought a small blanket and some beverages, if memory serves me correctly. Our piece of the turf was center-right of the stage about 30 feet away.

The place was full of people sprawling out where ever they could with blankets, pick nick baskets full of food and wine. I was totally surprised to see little kids as young as 2-3 years running around everywhere! It had a nice small town fair feel to it.

The best part of that show for me was when they performed Scarborough Fair. For many year I’ve attempted to play this song and it turned out fine but this was the time to see it done right!

Before the song began, I noticed Paul Simon was practicing the beginning of it, so I asked this guy beside us if I could use his binoculars. I watched every single movement of his fingers and I found out that I was doing it ok except for a few parts. When I got home all I did was play the hell out of that song and I finally have it perfect!

So that was my favorite part of the show. Does anyone out there have a neat Simon and Garfunkel moment that they’d like to share with the rest of us?

Keep on Jammin’




Filed Under: Concerts, Entertainment, General, Great Bands, Music, Musical influences, Musicians, Playing Styles, Recreation, Songs to play, The early Years, Video Tagged With: 60s icons, Art Garfunkel, bands, bandstand, cne, concert, finger picking, Paul Simon, Scarborough Fair, Simon and Garfunkel

John Mayer is coming to Toronto

May 14, 2008 by Chris

John Mayer will be playing July 7, 2008 at the Molson Amphitheatre.

jm1.jpg I’ve been so busy doing everything but blogging and playing that I almost missed this show that I would kill to go and see! I love seeing bands live anywhere, but when looking at ticket prices it really makes ya wonder if it’s really worth it.

Now if I had to choose a guitar player(s) I’d like to be stranded on a desert island with, with a 20 year supply of strings and picks, this guy or Bruce Cockburn would be the winners hands down. Just watching John play, or for that matter even listening to anything he does just makes my mind wonder around aimlessly. Oh all those wild chord inversions!!!

jm2.jpgHas anyone else looked at ticket prices and thought the same thing?

The prices are just out of this world! Who can afford them, I can’t even begin to justify the cost. Is it just me or is the way artists make their money on CD sales?

John, I love ya brother, but are you really worth it? Well … maybe.

Keep on Jammin’

P.S. If someone wants to learn how to play a couple of his tunes, and you have a extra ticket with my name on it, I’ll give you 10 free guitar lessons!


Filed Under: Concerts, Entertainment, Health and Fitness, John Mayer, Music, Musicians, Playing Styles, Recreation, Songs to play Tagged With: acoustic guitar player, Amphitheatre, blogging, blues guitar player, Bruce Cockburn, cd sales, chord progressions, desert island, extra ticket, finger picking, free guitar lessons, guitar, guitar player, John Mayer, john mayer playing in toronto, john mayer tickets, July, molson amphitheatre, show, singer, song writer, ticket prices, Toronto, tunes

Imagine the freedom

March 29, 2008 by Chris

I imagine that having an extra digit on your left hand must have it’s con’s, but the pro’s might just make it worth it!

6fingerguitarist.jpg

Playing a 7 string guitar would come in quite handy with a hand configuration like this? When playing difficult chord progressions like the ones that Bruce Cockburn and John Mayer use, wouldn’t it be nice to have another finger just hanging around the old fret board?

Wow, keep on Jammin’

Filed Under: Entertainment, Health and Fitness, Humor, Musicians, Playing Styles Tagged With: adjust, Entertainment, finger nail, finger picking, funny, guitar, guitar action, Guitar Equipment, Guitar finger picking styles, Guitar finger picks, guitar picking techniques, guitar picks, guitar picks for sweaty hands, guitar player, guitar strings, guitarist, How to pick which guitar strings to use, Humor, John Mayer, lessons, Music, playing, strings, teach, teaching

Taking Guitar Lessons

December 12, 2007 by Chris

If your a guitar player who thinks that he or she knows it all, then you should just skip this post! Also, this post is VERY LONG as well!

Every once in a long while I come across a guitar player who thinks that they know it all. I think that we’ve all met a person like this who fits the category? I understand that in order to be a great player you have to have this invincible attitude or ego to obtain these lofty goals but come on, you can’t know everything. There is always someone out there that knows something that you don’t.

In my younger days, there were moments when I had this type of footprint attached to my persona. Sometimes upon entering a Brantford music store some musicians put down what ever they were playing and looked at it as if they didn’t know what this thing was that they had in their hands. Sometimes at a party or other social event guitarists would not play while I was playing or afterwards for that matter. This I thought was good for my ego, but later on I realized that we all were doing was just cheating ourselves out of a learning experience. After not playing for many years, I started to understand this problem.

While living in a dorm/frat house I started to play with many levels of musicians. I realized that some had these guitarists were playing these great little progressions that I had never heard of before and it spurred on my thirst for more musical knowledge. I made great efforts to stunt my level of playing and let other people shine. This approach made others relax and play without intimidation.

Fast forward to today, I think that it is time for me to take lessons again, not to figure out songs/styles but for technique. I know proper positioning, how to change chords efficiently, but I could use some work on understanding progressions better.

Another area is finger picking.

My classical picking is now at the level of a hack, but I can achieve the action and dexterity that I need to pull off a song or style without any noticeable problems. The classical stance is something that I do not use to any great extent but it does come in handy once in a long while.The real problem is with my thumb drone or an alternating bass picking style. The easiest way to understand this is to imagine a piano. You have the left hand working the bass or lower notes and the right hand doing the phrasing/melody. In guitar, your thumb is the bass and the rest of your fingers are the right hand playing the phrasing/melody.

Bruce Cockburn is the master of this in my eyes! It’s almost impossible to pigeon toe his style into one word but this is one of his many fortes. The best example of this is one Going to the Country which I have been trying to finger out or master for many years. I wish that the intro to the song was there to introduce to you to what I mean about his playing ability.

So now I am toying with the idea of taking lessons at the 12th Fret by a gentleman call Dave Martin. He specializes in picking, he loves the some style of picking that I do and best of all he has the same length of fingers that I have. While talking to him, he told me that he has come up against the same playing/technique problems that I have so it would be nice to have someone who has similar issues in this area.

They charge around $22.50 a 1/2 hour so I’ll try him out for a bit and see how it works out! I’ll get back to you later on the results and besides, he probably knows something that I don’t!

Filed Under: Bruce Cockburn, Guitars, Home and Lifestyle, Musicians, Playing Styles, Recreation, Songs to play Tagged With: Brantford, Bruce Cockburn, chords, dexterity, dorm, finger picking, footprint, fret, guitar lessons, guitar lessons in Toronto, guitar player, guitarist, hack, house, how to, intimidation, Intro, learn, learning experience, lofty goals, Music, music store, musical, musical knowledge, musician, Musicians, noticeable problems, play, playing, playing guitar, progress, progression, progressions, taking guitar lessons, the 12th Fret, thirst, younger days

A Realization that I can play guitar

February 9, 2007 by Chris

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’

Filed Under: Bruce Cockburn, Musicians, My experiences, Playing Styles, The early Years Tagged With: band, Bruce Cockburn, Canadian, challenging, finger picking, General, guitar, guitar player, house, how to, lessons, Music, musician, Musicians, play, play guitar, playing, sing, sound, strings, teach, techniques

The hardest tune I can’t play … yet

January 8, 2007 by Chris

Well, the song that I would die to play live is ” The Clap” by Steve Howe from YES, (search you tube under, “YES, the clap” or “Steve Howe plays Clap”) is the one to go for,for me! I’ve played mood for a day and other standards to good response but this song is in a league of it’s own.

This next one is something that you can get a better view of how to play this one the way he plays it.

Filed Under: Songs to play, Video Tagged With: Classical Rock, Difficult songs to play, finger picking, Progressive Rock, Songs to play, Steve Howe, The Clap YES, Video, YES

The toughest song I can play, and sing

December 15, 2006 by Chris

Well as you already know, I enjoy the challenge that comes with playing some of John Mayer’s tunes. I love the chord progressions that he exposes us to. He also brings the high difficulty of playing guitar while making “Pop Music”. I honestly hope that other musicians, who make pop music, notice that the bar is raised VERY HIGH because of this man!

Anyways, Neon is the song that I find that is the toughest song to sing and play at the same time while USING FINGERS ONLY. I actually am still in the process of fine tuning this song, if truth be told. I can play and sing the song to the level of any hack can but if it ain’t perfect … well, I refuse to play it live. Nothing worst then people listening to you live at a venue and knowing by the look in their eyes that you are just another guy playing guitar. I must admit that I am very hard on myself but that’s the way I’ve always been. When I do master and play it live, this will be such a natural high that I will find it hard to contain myself.

The song that I’m trying to reproduce is a collage of many of his versions of this tune. I am working on the acoustic one first then playing the electric one will come easier, I hope! There are many little and subtle things that he does version to version that I want to incorporate into one version. In all honesty, I think that I am not that great at improvising solo’s at all. I fuck around but I am nowhere near the level that I really should be!

So below is a great version of Neon done live by JM and I want you to play this over and over again and please give me your input on the difficulty of both playing and singing this song live.

Filed Under: John Mayer, Songs to play Tagged With: Acoustic finger picking, finger picking, from John Mayer, How to play neon, John Mayer, Neon the song, Songs to play

Connect with Us

  • RSS

Suggested Sites


Eavestrough Cleaning Toronto

Categories

Recent Posts

  • 5 Amazing Alternative Rock Albums Of The 90s
  • Want To Learn To Be A Musician?
  • How Can Ambitious Musicians Find Great Advice From Professionals?
  • Which Musical Instruments Are Hardest To Learn?
  • Things To Know When Beginning A Career In Music
  • Suicidal Tendencies Still Rocking After All These Years
  • Learning Guitar Basics Online

Recent Comments

  • Judy Green on The Old Gasworks was a Toronto institution for music lovers and bands
  • Frank Bolduc on The Old Gasworks was a Toronto institution for music lovers and bands
  • Tom Farr on 5 Amazing Alternative Rock Albums Of The 90s
  • DW on 5 Amazing Alternative Rock Albums Of The 90s
  • Nick Othen on 5 Famous People And Their Guitars

Subscribe

Never miss a post
FREE - Subscribe NOW!
Read our posts in your favorite RSS reader.
rss feed

OR

Subscribe to Guitar Licks by FREE Email Newsletter


Follow us on TWITTER!

Alltop, confirmation that I kick ass
Alltop Guitar news

Shopping

Gifts, Gadgets,
Books and More!

Site Ratings

Visitors


Meta

  • Log in
  • Entries feed
  • Comments feed
  • WordPress.org

Archives

Search

Pages

  • About
  • Archives
  • Become a Guest Blogger for Guest Licks
  • Blog
  • Canadian Bloggers
  • Contact
  • Disclosure
  • Do Follow Bloggers
  • Links
  • Privacy Policy
  • Toronto Bloggers

Blogroll

  • Guitar-Werks
  • Eavestrough Cleaning Toronto
  • Guitar Boomer

My Store

  • My Store

Other Sites

  • Amphibian Care
  • Reptile Logic
  • Guitar Licks and Tips
  • Organic Gardening Tips
  • Celebrity Scoop 2

Tags

Acoustic amp band bands Brantford Bruce Cockburn Canada Canadian concert Entertainment fender funny General guitar Guitar Equipment guitarist guitar player guitars Home house Humor humour instrument jammin jazz John Mayer keyboard Live Music musician Musicians play playing Progressive Rock Pylis rock RUSH Songs to play sound strings Technology Toronto tour Video YES

Copyright © 2026 · News Pro Theme on Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in