I find that when I'm learning a new tune (by ear, of course) I'll sometimes accidentally settle on fingerings and positions which don't work well when I'm trying to play the tune at tempo. For example there might be a part where I could comfortably play it at a slow speed and get a good sound, nice left hand fingering, but then at speed there are consecutive downstrokes or some other problem where the playing is awkward. Then I have to rework the position (or slur some notes and compromise the sound) and this requires twice the work because you have to "unlearn" what was already practised and relearn the notes in a new place.
Any tips for avoiding this? I do like to practice at slower tempo because I've found that when I can nail a tune at a slow speed (sometimes even harder to do well!) it's going to sound much less sloppy at tempo.
One method that has been great help is the patrus53 + soundslice combo, where I have video I can actually see the positions that evidently work and get it right the first time. So thanks very much to Adrian and Patrus for their work, it's a good time to be a guitarist..
But when there is only audio, how can you know where the position is? Sometimes I can hear the difference between notes on higher strings and notes at the same pitch on lower strings, but at speed it can be difficult sometimes. With Django it's easier because there are usually only 1 or 2 positions which would have been possible for him. With Stochelo, Tchavolo and many traditional sounding players it's also usually simple because you can often hear what their picking pattern is and that answers a lot of questions.
But with Adrien , Benoit, Olivier's lines etc it's very hard to guess sometimes where to play - especially since these guys don't always pick the usual way. I've noticed Olivier uses his little finger heaps, coming up with positions that I wouldn't have considered or even thought of, if it weren't for youtube!
How do you pick the right position to learn a line??
Comments
I have often found that because I have learned differently from SR or DC or anyone else for that matter any fingerings that they might use are only a suggested guide.
I use all four fingers and having spent a number of years in Sal Salvadors Single String Studies world and classical patterns of scales world what works for me will often be different.
If a fingering is difficult, mastering it is never a bad thing even if it takes years. It all helps in developing technique.