Musical Theory Abound!!!
 #40077  by bucketorain
 
Ok, here it is...i feel pretty confident that i can solo to most any song...what i do is follow the chord structures for the melody and almost take an arpegio approach to it but not exactly.

My struggle is that i seem to only use strings 1-4 for the the most part...is that common or am i missing out? i just cant see to hear solos on 5 and 6. granted i do use them but not as often.

what can i do to fix this?

thanks!

 #40080  by Tennessee Jedi
 
Yo
The low notes can be cool - yer definitely missing out.
Maybe work on scales just on the E and A string.
I love when Jerry gets on the low strings like on Other One.
Check out Pete.Bs Eyes vid.He gets wicked on a 5 string- and sounds great when he hits those low strings.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kR8f0Do9tAQ
:smile:

 #40088  by KCJones
 
Here's an awsome article on soloing/improvising. I suspect Jerry would agree whole heartedly and even learn from.

http://www.jazzguitar.com/features/sharrock.html

 #40140  by BuddhaG
 
Great article, KC!

Very non-technical except when he says he finds all of the appropriate scales and modes within a few frets. Great advice.

As for your specific question... find the notes you would be playing on strings 1-4 and play them on the bass strings. You should be able to hear that they are the same. It may be a matter of practice in your scale runs so that your hands are comfortable using the top strings in quick transition from the bottom ones.

I also found myself using the top 3 strings on solos but when I realized that was boring, I push myself out of the comfort zone during practice.

 #40935  by cunamara
 
Good discussion! I think that there is a tendency for guitarists to gravitate towards higher notes because they are easier to hear over the band. Lower notes get lost in the bass, keys, rhythm guitar and even the drums. But a good soloist trains him/herself to use every note on the guitar. And a good band knows how to make space for the soloist to play in any register.

Jerry made a lot of use of lower notes at different times, as others have pointed out, and also played on the low E and A strings up above the 12th fret to get a fat horn-like sound from the wound strings.

 #41132  by qiuniu
 
I usually try to start a solo on the 6th string and kinda 'creep' into the solo, I also think its a wonderful place to resolve (or disappear).

When I'm down around the 12th fret I also like to go back and use the 5th and 6th string if I can, I think the notes there are very sharp and rich for low notes.

 #41144  by High Peaks
 
Try playing some bluegrass. This forces you to start and mostly play in the first position. That way you can't help but use the E and A strings.

 #41149  by weirimpressed
 
high peaks, do you have any specific examples you could point out, im trying to incorporate more bluegrass into my practice routines, but cant find tabs/sheet music to learn and study from (at least some traditional, typical bluegrass solos)

 #41321  by KCJones
 
What a cool site Musicmoose.com is, thanks for the tip. You gotta check out this videe on there, holy shit, these dudes are insane:

http://www.musicmoose.org/index.php?opt ... &Itemid=32

 #41325  by weirimpressed
 
yes, def. a great link, thanks for the tip

 #41378  by d-v-s
 
KCJones wrote:What a cool site Musicmoose.com is, thanks for the tip. You gotta check out this videe on there, holy shit, these dudes are insane:

http://www.musicmoose.org/index.php?opt ... &Itemid=32
:shock:

WOW! thanks for pointing out this video clip. these guys just play way to fast for me. my brain doesn't work at that speed!!
 #55137  by charliehornsby
 
great posts here. loved the improvising article. if you guys have any links or posts particular to piano improvising, please let me know :)
 #80549  by astroman99
 
I was the opposite of you, always played the lower notes, forced myself to go higher, still do!
good luck...