Hi guys
1. I would like to ask you for help. Except for Gonzalo Bergara's materials which method that teaches improvisation is based on learning ready made lines by heart ? Can you recommend any tutor or any book that teaches by telling students to learn lines by heart? I like this method of learning therefore I am looking for materials that teach in this way.
2. I have recently bought gitane dg 255. I like this guitar but unfortunately white dots on fretboard are placed on 10th and 12th frets . On my regular guitars dots are placed on 9th and 12th frets. Do you know any methods to correct position of dots so that my gitane looks like regular guitar and I don't get confused when I play gitane ? Should I buy black sticky tape or sth and put it on existing white dots?
Should I buy white sticky tape and put white dots on desired frets ? Probably sticky tape method will not work so can you recommend something different ?
Comments
I recommend getting used to it. You never know when you'll be in a situation where you need to play somebody else's guitar — perhaps you go to Samois or Django In June and borrow a friend's guitar that has different dot locations, for example.
Being able to change your "dot orientation" on the fly is a useful skill for a guitarist!
Adrian
As far as the dots on the fingerboard, you'll get used to them and if not, you learn how to quickly use chromatic half step runs. Any good guitar tech/luthier can alter the dot placement.
Bireli, Stochelo, Fapy...they all say that's what they played first.
http://www.djangobooks.com/Item/gypsypicking
The Daniel Givone book "La Guitare Manouche" has many useful arp fingerings, but be warned that the text is all in French....
http://www.djangobooks.com/Item/daniel_givone_guitare_manouche
Good luck!
Will
Edgar Degas: "Only when he no longer knows what he is doing does the painter do good things.... To draw, you must close your eyes and sing."
Georges Braque: "In art there is only one thing that counts: the bit that can’t be explained."
"It's a great feeling to be dealing with material which is better than yourself, that you know you can never live up to."
-- Orson Welles
I don't know if there are Django solos available in the form of books in the market. Let's assume that they are available. Do you guys think it is better to try to copy Django's solos by ear or is it better to buy books where solos are already given ?
The middle ground would be to learn the short parts that you really like, figure out over which chords they're being played and use them in other songs.
It's good to try to change them slightly and make them your own somewhat.
The way I do that sometimes is if I'm learning a part I like, I don't particularly try to be exactly true to source, I just play what I hear making sure whatever it is I'm playing fits the chords so I might be off with both some notes and timing but it still works over those particular chords.