Tuesday 11 February 2014

There is no denying it - we are all influenced by others. Deciding upon your BIG THREE.


When considering the playing of any of the great musicians it becomes apparent that everyone is influenced by someone else in someway or another. All of the great players share this; no one is a total original. If they were it would be so weird to listen to that few would find it appealing.

Wes Montgomery is a good example, he was influenced heavily by Charlie Christian. I believe one of Montgomery's first regular gig's was performing a tribute of some sort to Christian. He had to sound as close as possible to his hero and was paid for it! George Benson was influenced by Wes Montgomery in a big way ... and one of Pat Metheny's key influences is Jim Hall. You can clearly hear it in Pat's sound and his approach (which is a vertical approach: see my YouTube video where I discuss working on a vertical approach using the minor pentatonic scale - click here). Yet clearly Pat has his own sound. 

I advise my students to choose three players to study and to make these people their focus. I call them the big three. To start you should consider learning these people's style, their choice of notes, their phrasing, how to recreate their tone and their time feel. At the end of the day, no matter how hard you try to sound exactly like someone else, you will never achieve it, but it does not matter. The goal is to absorb then to come up with your own sound based on a deep understanding of what came before you. As the saying goes - imitate, assimilate, innovate.
I would advise you go to the source. If for example you wanted to sound like George Benson then it would be a good idea to check out Charlie Christian. Remember, the people on your list do not have to be guitar players, although this makes it easier to directly use anything that you transcribe (knowing it will work on your instrument). Besides, if you play the guitar it is probable that you do so because you love the instrument. 

Now that you have decided on your big three it does not mean these are set in stone. This list will likely change over time but the important thing is to get started. Try to learn everything you can about these people. Some important things aspects to consider could be:

Their playing characteristics? 
What instrument / amps and effects they use?
Who are their key influences?
What makes them special?
What are the tunes they play regularly?
What is it you can borrow from them?
Are they still around to get lessons with?
What is their background? 
What is the album the everyone raves about?
What can you think of?






Keep in touch:

... and you can download my latest album from:  nickgranville.bandcamp.com/album/home

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