Play wrong notes.

We’ve all heard, practice like crazy, then forget it all and just play. Or don’t think when you play. and we’ve heard, don’t be afraid to play wrong notes. or tell a story when you play.

wtf does that all mean?

It’s driven me crazy for years, but I think I get it.

First of all, you do think when you play, but it’s a different kind of thinking. You think in sounds or musical gestures, or waves of sound. You think the lines, but not how to play them, that you’ve got under your fingers. So, that’s the don’t think part. You have to think, but think in music, not technique or mechanics. You will be aware of the changes, or at least the form, and using this as the canvas which you paint on. It matters.

Next up, Don’t be afraid to play wrong notes. It’s way more than that. Play wrong notes. You will. If you do the next thing, which is the most important thing, and it’s tied to the first thing. and this is, just play the lines that you hear and go for it, don’t send anything through the filter of theory, or most importantly, through the internal judge or critic. F them. They slow it all down, and just muck up the works. Just play the sounds, and you’ll be fine. And guess what? you’ll play “wrong” notes, but if the line is good, they won’t be wrong.

Besides, check out transcriptions of the greats, there are wrong notes all over the place. It doesn’t matter. The line, the gesture, the phrase, the impact matter. That’s it. If your line is too off, it won’t have the effect you’re after, and that’s what matters. What effect/affect are you after? Does it resolve? Does it leave you hanging? Does it question? Does it shout? Does it destroy? Does it give sweet little kisses? What effect are you after? Play that.

It is a balance between intellectual an emotional. so, play freaking wrong notes. (often they end up being the juiciest.)

All, this is being said with the assumption that you can play the right notes when you decide to, and play simply on the changes.

Subject for another day. Playing Chords Changes vs the form and its events.

As for tell a story when you play, I still have no f’n idea.

peas
gman

Take a Break

After practicing your ass off for a long time, take a break from practicing.

And there are three ways to do this.

  1. Don’t play at all.
  2. Play, but don’t practice.
  3. Just light maintanance practice.

Each have there benefits.

  1. Don’t play at all. For a day or two. I think two is the longest I’ve gone. You might try longer, it might work, I just haven’t done it. You get some perspective on things. Also, things gel that you’ve been working on. And come back when you start up again, things will be in your playing and come out naturally. Somehow, I need the separation sometimes to make it mine.
  2. Play, but don’t practice. This is really great and can be done for longer periods, weeks even. So, you’d better be gigging or have a lot of playing sessions during this period, or it doesn’t really work. Playalongs might even work, but play for a hour or two, or three and just play. Don’t practice. Be free.
  3. Just light maintenance practice. This can go with #2, or just be like a half-way version of #1. Just do basic fundamentals to keep chops up, usually not more than an hour, and don’t try to add new stuff.

Ok, I’ll flesh it out more later.

peas