Classical Guitar Performance – Cutting Loose and Going For It

Cutting loose and going for it. Cutting loose is about letting go and letting the unconscious mind and your muscle memory and all that hard work and practice you’ve been putting in do its thing. It’s about trusting yourself.

What does that even mean when playing guitar? For me at least it means:

  • Resigning conscious control of what it is I’m playing.
  • Being really in the now and present with what I’m playing in exactly that one moment; living for the moment!
  • Not being concerned with the music I have just played and is now past.
  • Not becoming upset with any glitches or imperfections I may have played or thinking how I’d like to play that better and so on.
  • Not judging myself or thinking about what others may think.
  • Not allowing myself to get over-excited when I really nail something spectacularly.
  • Maintaining a calm, confident and centred (not ecstatic, not negative) demeanour when playing; just being.

Here are some ideas to help loosen you up and get you to trust yourself….

Why are you playing guitar? To make yourself and others happy or moved? Or to make yourself feel tense and horrible? Hopefully not the latter or you and I need to have words! Note that I say “make yourself…..” – only you can make yourself feel a certain emotion….Think about that one. And remember why you’re playing in the first place.

Close your eyes when you’re next practicing and really listen it to the sound you’re making. How does it sound? How does it feel to really focus in on your sound in this way? How could focusing in on your sound help you in a performance situation? It gives your conscious mind something to focus on and be occupied with so your unconscious mind and your body can get on with the job in hand (boom boom). It will also mean your sound quality remains top notch.

Practice getting in the zone, and quieting the active, bubbling, bouncing conscious mind and its whirling thoughts. Some daily meditation, or similar mind-body awareness practice can really help with this. I like to do daily Alexander Technique practice with my semi-supine position as it gets mind and body awareness working together – I become aware of both mental and physical tensions and practice noticing and letting go. It’s soooo relaxing…

This one’s for those who are ready to take it to the next level……. Say “bugger it! What is the worst that can happen?!” As special as you are and all that, no one is going to remember your performance in an hours time let alone that you played a B-flat instead of a B (if they even realised!), or that you skipped a section, or that you lost your place because you got excited. I promise you.

Think on it – do you remember any particular moments from the concerts and gigs you’ve been to as an audience member? Maybe a couple, but overall you remember them as fantastic experiences I bet?  People always remember the big picture rather than the little details, so give them a technicolour experience rather than something in muted tones!

And then pull it back a little

And when you’ve got that down pat it’s time to review, revise and perhaps look back a little in the other direction.

Sometimes cutting loose and really going for something may not always be entirely appropriate – Barrios and the idea of high-energy “cutting loose” seems to go well together. With a Bach prelude perhaps the interpretation of “cutting loose” needs to be tempered slightly.

In the act of getting excited and really going for something we may in fact over-egg the pudding and diminish it’s impact. This is then where we need to exercise a little, not restraint – I don’t think our playing should ever feel restrained, do you? – but refinement.

This is where we now work to define the point or range between totally, 100% “safe”, timid and indeed restrained playing and 100% playing by the seat of your pants, super exciting, edgy, risk-taking playing….. I call this the Rogers’ Cutting Loose Scale. Hah hah!

Where do your current repertoire pieces sit on this scale? Is it time to put a rocket up the proverbial backside of some of your playing? Is it time to bring some back down to earth a little?

Ooh before I forget…..

Watch out for a wee announcement tomorrow about an exciting new development for the blog. 🙂

Nicole

 

Playing guitar is a lot like kickboxing

circlaire10.jpg
This is a skill clearly transferable to the guitar………. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

So I’ve just very recently started a new hobby. Kickboxing. Yup. Kickboxing. Don’t ask me why – I just felt like something a bit different and it looked like fun. And of course, if ever there was a sport that went hand in hand (or boxing glove in hand) with something as refined and dignified as the classical guitar that would have to be the first choice right? Hah hah!

Well you may not think so on first reckoning – brute force used to beat the living daylights of something with your fists and the other jumping into a ring and leaping about like a mad thing, all arms and legs flailing for a 2 or 3 minute round. Hah hah – I jest!

And before you get excited and say something like “what about my hands/ fingers/ fingernails?!”. Well, my hands are very tightly bound with wraps and have some very snug gloves on. The punches are also very light at this stage; it’s all about learning, feeling comfortable with and developing the technique in these early stages.

Sound familiar? Classical guitarists and martial artists are not so dissimilar.

It’s all about the technique

When one first starts to learn a martial art such as kickboxing one has to take care to firstly  think about the technique for carrying out even the most seemingly simple of movements, otherwise you run the risk of (a) injuring yourself and (b) instilling a very bad habit which is going to limit your progress and (c) see you in a big heap on the floor when your opponent bops you on the head because your technique is less than ideal.

So apart from (c) (obviously one would hope…. would make for an interesting guitar competition) this is the same when we’re learning the guitar either for the first time, coming back to it after a hiatus, or learning a new skill. We must take care with and be really aware of even the most simple of movements and hand positioning in case we (a) injure ourselves (pins and needles or carpal tunnel syndrome anyone?) or (b) find months or years down the track that we’ve picked up a bad habit that we have to unlearn and replace with the correct technique anyway or we’re not going to be able to progress much further.

And doing it slowly

I’ve found myself saying this a lot to my students this week – S.L.O.W. = good.

Slow practice of the movements of a set piece in kickboxing, with focus, with purpose, with awareness of what it is you’re doing and why is a fundamental foundation stone of learning to kickbox correctly – with precision and accuracy, with speed, with poise, with real power and “punch”.

And, yep, you guessed it, the same goes for guitar. Slow practice of studies, of new pieces, of tricky sections, even of our true and trusted pieces gives you what? A key foundation stone of learning to play correctly – with precision and accuracy, with speed, with poise, with real power and “punch”.

And doing it regularly, especially with the basics even if you’re the Shifu

The Shifu (master or teacher in Mandarin Chinese) at the studio where I’m kickboxing practices his most fundamental basic moves every day, 6 days per week. The basic knee lifts and kicks, the basic punches. He does these, first of all, slowly and with great control, awareness and precision before then speeding things up.

And so we do with guitar. To be Shifu on the guitar one must practice the fundamentals and practice them every single day. Every. Single. Day (or at least 6 days per week!). Even if you don’t feel like it. Even if you don’t want to right then and there. It’s about building the habit and being aware of what is required for the bigger picture or goal. So just like the simple single punches preparing for set pieces, simple knee raises practicing the movements preparing for a kick, this is where we as guitarists practice our scales. This is preparing for those times in pieces where we can see something is clearly a G major scale for example, or part of, and we can say “that’s my G major ‘set piece’ – bang! Easy”.

This is where we as guitarists practice all those other fundamental guitarist fine motor movements – the arpeggios, the ligandos (ligandi?), the rest stroke, the free stroke, the barre and so on.

It’s also important to remember that by focusing on this and approaching your practice in this way, speed will develop naturally as a matter of course as you become ever more controlled, precise and efficient in your movements.

And you know when you’re getting it right because it sounds good

OK I’m drawing a fairly long bow here now, but when you’re punching and kicking a bag you know you’re doing it “right” because it sounds awesome! It has it’s own particularly juicy thud. Your particular angle of attack with your flicking right leg roundhouse kick, the amount of tension in your body compared to the level of relaxation in the leg giving the kick is balanced just right. And you’ll know when your kicking practice is paying off because you will be getting that juicy thud all the time.

We get this consistency in sound too with our guitar practice. Not a thud, no, but those beautifully full, rounded tones. We know that sound we want to produce, we can do it in isolation perhaps, or in glimmering moments of awesomeness during a piece. However, over time (and yes, it does take time), through slow practice, through being aware of our technique and what we’re doing and practicing regularly, that beautiful sound becomes ever more beautiful and ever more consistent.

See? Told you – classical guitarists and martial artists are not so dissimilar.