Why Intermediate Guitarists Can't Improvise

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 7 май 2024
  • This video is about common problems I see with intermediate guitarist and improvising as well as some strategies to fix the problem!
    My Website: www.mattfranceschini.com
    Take A Lesson: mattfranceschini.com/lessons
    Become A Patron: / mattfranceschini
    Buy My Book or Video Course: payhip.com/MattFranceschini
    Instagram: / matt.franceschini
    Facebook: / mattfranceschinimusic
    TikTok: / matt_franceschini
    Buy My Music: mattfranceschini.bandcamp.com
  • ВидеоклипыВидеоклипы

Комментарии • 56

  • @someonesomewherewithsometh9604
    @someonesomewherewithsometh9604 Месяц назад +14

    Something that may help is bending to a pitch for a bar or two while you think about what you are going to play next. I find that helps me with chord progessions and my playing.

    • @mattfranceschini
      @mattfranceschini  Месяц назад +4

      That’s certainly something that I could see working! I still think there is something to be said for some good old fashioned space as well!

    • @eddy4twenty455
      @eddy4twenty455 Месяц назад

      This is some pretty good practical advice, I must add a preface to say that this is definitely a crutch that most players should try learn to move past, however. Definitely some good advice from mister @sautante and speaks to the thought processes that players who are on the path to becoming advanced guitar players should think about.

  • @Oi-mj6dv
    @Oi-mj6dv Месяц назад +45

    Easy: arpeggios man. Arpeggios. Arpeggios and licks, pentatonics, triad pairs, melodic cells and enclosures. That gives a shiiiiiiiiitload of vocab

    • @mattfranceschini
      @mattfranceschini  Месяц назад +5

      Spot on!

    • @Viicorico
      @Viicorico Месяц назад

      how do you play it ?

    • @MissJennyGuitar
      @MissJennyGuitar Месяц назад +4

      I just pluck my notes out of thin air, 90% of the time no scales, no chord shapes, no appegios, no caged. I'm a busker, and solo improv for hours on end.

    • @Oi-mj6dv
      @Oi-mj6dv Месяц назад

      ​@@MissJennyGuitar Yes, that can work too. There are several million ways to skin a cat. I cant do that reliably tho, to each their own!

    • @MissJennyGuitar
      @MissJennyGuitar Месяц назад +1

      @@Oi-mj6dv Yeah, I do have to admit it's not useful for playing at shredding speed.

  • @sautante
    @sautante Месяц назад +6

    Thanks Matt, some great advice here!

  • @robertsguitarsandgear
    @robertsguitarsandgear Месяц назад

    Helpful instruction, thanks!

    • @mattfranceschini
      @mattfranceschini  Месяц назад

      Really glad you dug it my friend! Happy playing!

  • @ericb5852
    @ericb5852 Месяц назад

    Great advice, thank you👍

  • @thomasd9237
    @thomasd9237 Месяц назад +1

    Great explanation & ideas 👍👍

  • @collinmckenzie2306
    @collinmckenzie2306 Месяц назад +2

    I think this is something I learned from playing bass. Space gives greater meaning to the presence of the instrument. The impact when you come back in is bigger because the audience is listening for it. From the more classical side of things. Rests are part of the music.

  • @johnletitia
    @johnletitia Месяц назад +4

    Thanks, I love your down-to-earth, humble approach to teaching us to play better guitar...I hope I become better! haha

    • @mattfranceschini
      @mattfranceschini  Месяц назад +1

      Glad to hear it resonated with you! Getting better at the guitar and music is a long game, best of luck on your journey!

    • @johnletitia
      @johnletitia Месяц назад

      @@mattfranceschini thanks so much!

  • @RussellFeatherstone
    @RussellFeatherstone Месяц назад

    Great vid 👏

  • @pretendsushi2929
    @pretendsushi2929 Месяц назад +1

    Great video man, I'd recommend for the future to put an actual backing track when you play. I think it would have worked well in this video. But thanks for the tips!

    • @mattfranceschini
      @mattfranceschini  Месяц назад +2

      Glad you dug the video and got something out of it! A backing track could’ve been great I agree

  • @VicLabs
    @VicLabs Месяц назад +1

    Loved you on Workaholics!

  • @lemac3200
    @lemac3200 27 дней назад

    Great! Everything!👏👏👏

  • @joshuagodinez5867
    @joshuagodinez5867 22 дня назад

    I'm just starting on trying to improvise. The biggest barrier to me is that I have no inner voice coming up with ideas. I've tried vocalizing the repetitious lick I've used to try to engage that voice, but it's a no-go. So, if improvisation depends on having that inner voice then guidance on how to develop that inner voice is needed.

    • @mattfranceschini
      @mattfranceschini  22 дня назад

      This is a great point! If I were you I would think about my favourite guitar solos or even song melodies to start with. Can you hum them without the song playing? Have you listened enough to the music that it’s in your head? The more you do this the more you build your treasure trove of inspiration to pull from when improvising. Further to this point, when you’re listening to music try to hone in on the melody or solo and repeat the line back to yourself in your head. This will help you digest what is happening and you’ll start to build a vocabulary before you know it.
      Best of luck with it and I hope this helps!

  • @JD-vj4go
    @JD-vj4go Месяц назад +2

    I saw Herb Ellis live when I was a kid and he sang while he played.

    • @mattfranceschini
      @mattfranceschini  Месяц назад +4

      Im jealous! But I certainly believe you that he sang and played, such a melodic player!

    • @m.vonhollen6673
      @m.vonhollen6673 Месяц назад +1

      @@mattfranceschiniThat will help you to play lines that don’t exceed a human’s breath. Unlike wind instruments, guitarists can go on forever.

  • @danthsmith
    @danthsmith Месяц назад

    so true😀😀

  • @Benesii
    @Benesii 29 дней назад

    my classical trained friend told me this exact thing, the best thing is to sing your way thru it.

  • @mikeandrulonis6553
    @mikeandrulonis6553 Месяц назад

    Yep, I admit it, I'm a "musical motor mouth" when it comes to improv. Thanks for this great lesson.

  • @rookiem8
    @rookiem8 29 дней назад

    i really like your guitar man

  • @Dont_have_to_agree
    @Dont_have_to_agree Месяц назад +1

    I will use the question mark punctuation a little less

  • @HandyL
    @HandyL Месяц назад

    Totally with you my man. Thank goodness I have the piano to make me feel better after I fail on the guitar 🤣✌🏽

    • @mattfranceschini
      @mattfranceschini  Месяц назад +1

      Haha! Fair enough!

    • @HandyL
      @HandyL Месяц назад

      @@mattfranceschini I was practicing some improv last night and I have a new approach that sounded new and different for me. I have to thank you for the inspiration and ideas that came from watching your arpeggio video. It took a few days of practicing but it kind of all clicked and came together last night. Combining arpeggios with the pentatonic scales in my improvisation. I feel like I made a jump in my guitar playing since watching your videos. Cheers ✌🏽

    • @mattfranceschini
      @mattfranceschini  Месяц назад +1

      Ah man, amazing to hear! So glad that you’re finding some joy and improvement from the material I’ve covered!

  • @ButternoteBackingTracks
    @ButternoteBackingTracks Месяц назад

    Good advice. The problem stems from the fact 99% of guitarists I hear today overplay - especially in blues. To many of them, it seems it's all about gratuitous soloing - even players with pretty good phrasing. For intermediates, it's better to listen to old-school guitarists who tended to play much less and often shorter solos. Pick a handful and learn them note-for-note. It helps focus on the less is more approach. Nobody truly improvises - it's all a mix of stuff you've learned to internalise. Even when you're singing it!

    • @mattfranceschini
      @mattfranceschini  29 дней назад +1

      The line between overplaying and underplaying often I find is a personal subjective stance but I wholeheartedly agree about the act of transcription being a huge help to those learning to improvise. I also agree that we’re never truly improvising, we’re just spontaneously assembling things!

  • @TypingHazard
    @TypingHazard Месяц назад +4

    It seems like a ton of players that don't rely on their breath to produce sound through their instruments have this idea that a stream of 8th notes are a sign of fluency... the longer I play and the more I notice the correlation between lead playing and rhythmic awareness, the less and less I subscribe to that idea. If someone talks to you without pausing you'd probably hate it or feel like they were shouting you down, right? Ideally I don't think we're trying to holler at the listener, regardless of the genre (we might be shouting, but we're not dressing down the audience. Probably.)

  • @stephenhanlin2388
    @stephenhanlin2388 Месяц назад

    That is definitely not your fathers strat! Is that a Dimarzio in the middle w 2 PAFs? Partscaster?

    • @mattfranceschini
      @mattfranceschini  Месяц назад +4

      It certainly is not! I do a full breakdown of the mods here ruclips.net/video/EIZyPXJTy78/видео.html But the TLDR version is it's an HHH Strat pickguard (where the middle is a hot rail) where each of the pickups has a coil split switch, there's a mid boost switch (that I never use) and the red button allows me to play with a split neck and split bridge humbucker (mimicking a tele) and in second position it let's me have all three playing in series! It is a partscaster from a fender roasted neck, the body is a refinished Squier affinity that I’ve had since I was 11 and then the pickups themselves are all Wilkinson Alnico 5’s

  • @user-nh5ck4lg8b
    @user-nh5ck4lg8b 20 дней назад

    honestly if you have these problems you're a beginner. the bar is too low these days.