Hey Everybody. Don't know if this happens to anybody else, but playing in colder temperatures... not Antarctic temperatures but even a slight drop in temperature, inside or outside, results in something like a 30 to 50 percent loss of technical facility for me. Now I've seen footage of people playing outside in what seems like winter weather playing just fine and I just don't get it. Is there some trick to playing in these situations? Any advice would be helpful.
Thanks a bunch.
Comments
the secret is to raise your hundred percent level as high as possible so that anything less seems acceptable/decent...
have you ever noticed that after having played for an hour or two, your technique seems so much better than it was when you started playing??
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So one must develop a reservoir of skill for these situations... I was afraid that was the answer!
The soak does really help though.
I always try to warm up a bit before going on for real- even if its only sound check . . . for five minutes. also, build you set lists smartly- dont put cherokee and such at the start!
Ben
In the winter, when I'm going somewhere to play, I'll come in, have a coffee/cig, and BS with people while my guitar aclimatizes to it's new suroundings. A cold guitar can really be a bummer to play. It's also better for the instrument and even the strings then have time to settle. Far less tuning issues I find.
But then i think i missed out on all the gopher-slaying.
Hey ho, swings & roundabouts...
Besides just cold weather, poor circulation can really inhibit your hands. Besides other obvious health problems, the less oxygenated blood cruising around your vascular system, the colder they'll feel, which can make flights of frailing falanges', that much harder.