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Old March 7th, 2007
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Chris C Chris C is offline
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Playing guitar for over a year.
 
Join Date: Jan 2007
Last Online: December 19th, 2007 01:58 AM
Location: Mundaring, West Australia
Posts: 204


Quote:
Originally Posted by Ledhead V-2
Problem is, when I think I've got a nice little riff or solo worked out, it never seems to sound rock-like, which is what I'm aiming for -- they always seem to wind up sounding really cornball, "Jimmy Crack Corn"-ish if you will.


Great description! I think that most of us have had a dose of "Jimmy Crack Corn Syndrome at some time or another... Nothing wrong with the melody really, except that you can just hear you old auntie saying "That's a nice tune dear.. " or imagine it turning up on some easy listening compilation.

I believe that there is a known set of steps that you need to go through which involves shooting a man in Memphis, having your Baby do you wrong, walking the lonesome railroad tracks, drinking a lot of bad moonshine whisky, and so on. But it's a slow process.

My guess is that a quicker way is to take the same notes and play around with the timing and the attack and punch you give various sections. I'd reckon that somebody like Kirk could take the same tune and make it sound very different just by changing the playing style.

Effects can also help put you in the right mood to swing it, rock it or whatever. I once recorded a classically trained friend playing a very precise and quite intricate version of "Danny Boy" and then we spent a happy half hour putting it through various effects channels in the mixer. Amazing how different it could end up sounding.

A good exercise might be to take one simple tune and see how many different ways you can play it. Take something as easy and ingrained as Twinkle Twinkle Little Star (or whatever simple song you know well) and improvise with it - rock it up, do a reggae version, a Country version, etc. Blow it up into classical version (Mozart used the Twinkle Twinkle melody), just muck around until you get a feel for what it is that makes something sound bluesy or countryish or whatever. I think it's probably in the swing and rhythm more than the notes themselves, but then I'm no expert. I might just try it though and see if I can make something sound completely different just by the way it's played.

What do others here think makes the difference???

Cheers,

Chris


"There is no magic secret, other than loving the process of learning and putting in the time."
Quote shamelessly stolen from ColoradoFenderBender at Guitarnoise.
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