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What is the greatest, wisest, funniest or hardest hitting song lyric…?

One of my favourites has to be from Bob Marley’s Redemption Song and it goes like this…

Emancipate yourself from mental slavery,
None but ourselves can free our minds

Bob Marley was inspirational. Some even believe he was a modern day prophet, spreading the word of peace and truth as preached by so many religions, but with such soul awakening words and music that I’m sure all religious branches wished he was singing for them.

Another great force that was ended prematurely, possibly due to the frequent partaking in the rastafarian religion’s ritual of smoking marijuana.

Click here for more details on one of music’s greatest treasures.

Bob Marley is quoted to have said “Me not of the world, y’know. Me live in the world but I’m not of the world.”

I think was speaking openly and honestly and what’s more, I would not be surprised if he was speaking truthfully.

Please post here if you agree or disagree or if you have your own suggestion for best lyric.

I will post more of my own, in time.

One Love

Until next time,

The Guitar Master


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Merry Christmas from The Guitar Master…

Wishing all my students, friends and family a Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year.

Here’s a few possible new years resolutions to get you started with your list for 2007:

New Years resolution number 1…. Play more guitar!

New Years resolution number 2…. Listen to more music!

New Years resolution number 3…. Play more guitar whilst listening to music!

New Years resolution number 4…. Eat healthy and exercise lots to keep your mind healthy and active and improve alertness for school, work, play and guitar.

Seasons greetings,

The Guitar Master


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The best Christmas song ever…

This is an open discussion… please feel free to post your own comments!

It is my opinion that “Happy Xmas (War is Over)” by John Lennon is the greatest Christmas song. The words are so meaningful compared to the average Christmas song that comes out year after year. It sends out a true message of hope…

A very merry Christmas
And a happy New Year
Let’s hope it’s a good one
Without any fear….

….And so happy Christmas
For black and for white
For yellow and red ones
Let’s stop all the fight

And apart from that, John Lennon was a true genius of the highest level. His songs pour out the deepest sentiment of life’s pain and joy and offer incredible wisdom. one of my favourite lyrics (more on this in a future thread) has to be from “Watching the Wheels”:

People ask me questions,
Lost in confusion,
Well I tell them there’s no problems,
Only solutions

A great attitude to have I’m sure you’ll agree.

See here for more information on John Lennon, one of musics brightest stars that, like many, fell far too soon.

I’m sure many will be amazed that I managed to write this much on Lennon without mentioning the Beatles. Damn! Well, the were quite incredible and will no doubt come up many times in future threads.

Well, that’s all for now. If you agree or disagree with my thoughts laid out here, please reply to this thread!

The Guitar Master


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What I’m teaching… Cavatina (aka the Deer Hunter Music)
By Stanley Myers (most famously recorded by John Williams)

I started learning Cavatina after having played the guitar for around 6 months. Within a relatively short time (a few weeks) i had the whole thing committed to memory. however, it took me at least two years to iron out all the little mistakes and pauses and be able to play the piece to a standard that someone else would not mind listening to.

To this day (I have been playing for just over five years) I still have good and bad days with Cavatina. on a good day, I play the whole thing all the way with (almost) no pauses or mistakes and come to rest on the final notes feeling utterly relaxed and pleased with myself, wishingthat someone else had heard me play it so well. On a bad day, my fingers stumble around all over the place; there are pauses where there should be fluidity and on occasion I have had complete mental blocks and failed to remember what comes next. I find that by putting my guitar down somewhere and leaving it for a couple of days, my memory is magicaly restored and I can play it again.

This is why I truly believe that the guitar is special. I’m sure all instruments have their various similarities and differences but I haven’t played enough of them to know. But I can tell you that to play guitar well requires a certain frame of mind. Some people have this level of consciousness all the time, whilst others do not have it at all. Most people however, are able to sink in and out of it when needed, as long as the mood is right. But if the mood is wrong, frustration can arise, and I reckon that’s why some people get angry and smash their guitars against the floor. (Although it’s probably not whilst playing Cavatina…)

Here is the tab for the whole of Cavatina, personally transcribed by me.

Now have fun and don’t smash up your guitar. If you need any help, please let me know. But I promise that when you get it right (which may takes several lifetimes worth of effort) all of the planets will align and you will restore order to the galaxy, and then the universe and all it’s inhabitants.

(OK, I may have made up that last bit… or did I…?)

Good luck

The Guitar Master

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What I’m playing / Learning… “Invention No13″ by J.S. Bach

This is a classical piece written by one of the most well known composers af all time. Amazingly, Bach was not fully appreciated as a composer until over 100 years after he died.

No13 is a two part piece requiring two guitarists playing together (it was originally written for the piano). The style is referred to as “contrapuntal” meaning that the two parts dance around eachother to form the melody.

The style of music itself is called “Baroque” and playing it makes you feel a bit like you’re the entertainment at an 18th century royal reception or playing the background music for some dialogue in a Three Muskateers film. The link above takes you to the Baroque music entry in wikipedia. Try searching wikipedia for just “baroque” to get more of an idea of what baroque can refer to, i.e. it was not just a musical stlye.

It’s a pretty difficult one, No13. I found that I started to pick it up really quickly and after committing several sections to memory, thought that it would be a breeze. But as it happens, there is an inner element of surprise difficulty whilst learning the piece and especially when playing it with someone else who is also learning their part.

We have both committed the first half to memory and the standard is getting ok now so it will be our job over Christmas to learn the rest.

If you have the time and the patience (and a similarly able partner) I can highly recommend giving it a try. Search google for “invention 13 by bach tab” or something similar and you should find the tablature. Or if you really can’t find it, let me know and I’ll make it available here.

No go forth and learn. Learn to play the guitar so that everyone might listen and learn from what you have learnt. Then knowledge and compassion can be experienced by the whole world and people can start to clean up some of the mess that they and their ancestors have created. No one will starve, no one will fight, and no one will die before their time. Science will become exclusively a force for good and the whole world will benefit. And our wisdom shall live on until the sun breathes it’s last breath and our genetic mutations are wiped out and their life force scattered back into the vacuum from whence it came, to catch rides with passing meteorites and comets and spread our memories to new planets to form new living creatures that hopefully use the good and bad from what we have learned to become better moral beings.

If you’ve read this far, you probably think I’m insane. And you’re probably right.

Now go play some guitar.

The Guitar Master


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What I’m playing / learning: “Hey Oh” by the chilli Peppers

The intro to “Hey oh” by the Red Hot Chilli Peppers, from disc one of their latest album “Stadium Arcadium”. The discs are named “Mars” and “Jupiter”. Truly inspirational.

The Chilli Peppers rock and that’s all there is to it.

They’ve written some of the best music to listen to and to learn, forcing the trainee guitar master to stretch their fingers quickly into various uncomfortable positions. Excellent for stretching and strengthening the muscles used in playing the guitar.

I’ve been playing this my own way on my Spanish guitar using Am (hammer and pull with 4th finger (pinky)), a modified F (H&P with 4th again), C (hammer with 1st), and a three finger inversion of G starting with the first finger on the 2nd string 3rd fret. Second time around I play a normal G and hammer / pull with 1st finger again. If this sounds confusing and you are interested, please let me know and I’ll create a tab using “songwrite” for Linux.

To play the intro properly, use an electric guitar and bar chords higher up the neck.

Any questions? Please email me.

Good luck

The Guitar Master


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Most inspiring music / musicians – Cat Stevens

I will myself be adding occasional crtiques on whoever I happen to be listening to, and I invite you to do the same.

Today it’s Cat Stevens. Click on the link (left) to visit his wikipedia entry if you are interested in his history.

My first experience of the music of Cat Stevens was as a very, very young child when my father used to play and sing Moonshadow to me on his guitar.

More recently I have found his lyrics and guitar work to be quite incredible. Whilst never showing off with loud riffs or long solos, the inner subtleties of each note and the way it flows into the next are so perfect that I doubt many artists have bettered them since.

Listen to the albums “Teaser and the Firecat” and “Tea for the Tilerman” with headphones on a warm summers day at the top of a hill in the countryside or on a cold winters evening in your car on the way home from work. Wherever you happen to be, his words and music will make you realise the beauty and tragedy in this world and have you pondering the next.

As a guitarist, you may want to try playing Moonshadow. It’s very simple and quite satisfying. I like to play my own guitar based version of Sad Lisa (which is a song about the inner child in the writer, and I suspect in all of us). Another good one is If I Smile, which requires the guitar to be either retuned into E, or into D with a cappo on the second fret.

If anyone wants to try these and cannot find a tab on the net or would like some help, I can post tabs or more instructional, erm… instructions.

Until next time… (hopefully soon) Bon soir.

The Guitar Master


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The Guitar Master RSS Feed!

Click here and then add this rss feed to your favourites. Alternatively, drag this link into your favourite rss viewer.

The GuitarMaster


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Important Note: This message is always at the top of the page. New posts will appear just below this one in chronological order. For the latest post, simply scroll down! And always check the “read more” or “comments” links for a post as there may be more to it than first meets the eye.

What is this website for?

This blog is a place for me and any of my students, compadre’s or random internet visitors to place their thoughts and opinions. Note: you need to create a user account and sign in to leave your own contributions.

The site is primarily guitar based BUT (did you notice that was a big but?) anything that is related to a guitarists way of life will be accepted onto the blog. You will see postings of guitar tips and tricks, discussions on current and all time favourite guitar (and non-guitar) music, links to instructional websites and videos, opinions on what is good and evil and what music can do to make things better, universal discovery and how music has influenced and inspired our planets greatest scientists and explorers….

You get the general idea.

The site is currently in it’s infancy but things will start to appear soon. Feel free to post with your ideas and comments. Almost anything goes.

Thank you for your visit. You are very welcome here.

The Guitar Master

P.S.
1. You can add your own topics for discussion by clicking on “Contribute” at the top of the page.
2. You can read more on a topic by clicking… “Read More” at the bottom of the section.
3. You can comment on a topic by clicking on… “Post a Comment”
4. The best way to keep up to date is to subscribe to the RSS feed!


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After learning some basic lead guitar tricks like the pentatonic scales, you may feel ready for something a little more challenging.

The next logical step is to begin practicing arpeggios and trying to employ the sweep picking technique. Sweep picking is a technique where the plectrum is literally “raked” or “swept” up and down the strings in a constant action, whilstthe left hand fingers go crazy trying to keep up. This tutuorial is an excellent, excellent place to start. (If the link does not work then please email me.)

See how you get on.


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