Once I got my guitar unpacked and plugged in (which took 31 minutes longer than I expected), I had to tune my guitar. Despite being a recluse in it's case for over a year, it wasn't as out of tune as I expected. The first strum still made my ears burn, but it is relatively painless to correct. No, I cannot tune by ear. I can tell you when it's off, but don't have the skill to correct it.
Alright, power source ready, tuned guitar, and now it was time to warm up. Ay. Ay. Ay.
My fingers are out of shape! Compared to what I used to do, they are slow and I felt like I could only get them moving one tempo and trying to swing notes got me mixed up. However, I successfully made it through two warm-ups both with a pick and finger style.
After this warmup, I did my first research step: examined what I already know. While in college, I took a year of lessons, one semester with a small group and one semester private lessons. Luckily, since I was earning a minor, my program of study wasn't as intense as music majors. Did you know they practice THREE to FIVE hours EACH DAY?! Anyway, I started looking at all the scales and arpeggios I had memorized about six years ago, and yikes! I feel like I don't remember any of it anymore.
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Copies of scales memorized while in college. |
It's intimidating to feel like I've lost all of this knowledge and skill, but then I returned my thoughts to my goals of this project:
Short term: Learn the settings on my guitar and amp to create different sounds.
Long term: Feel comfortable to play at church.
This helped me narrow the focus of what research I need to do. I want to be able to play notes and chords at different speeds and create different sounds for different genres of music; I'm OK with not being able to improvise over a jazz piece. There's no reason to stress over my scale proficiency.
Now I've been working on learning and relearning settings on my guitar and amp.
This video has helped me understand my own guitar better:
There's a disc with settings that came with my amp and direction booklet for my amp, so I started looking into this but haven't done much with it yet. Turns out my amp has pre-programmed settings and then I can also create my own once I know what I'm doing.
This next week, I plan to pick out my song to play for students and to learn the settings that are on my amp.
Thanks for following my Guitar Genius Journey!
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