Hi guys,
I think I have learned a lot since I've been on GMC(almost a year) , I have improved my techinque dramatically, I understand a lot of theory, of course I have a long way to mastering my instrument but the important thing is that I have the motivation to do it , with passion and with feeling.
So I want to take my playing to the next level , and I just can't stop listening to guys like Guthrie Govan, Greg Howe. I want to go there, I want to go inside the world of fusion. Of course Im going to start practicing the fusion lesson here at GMC. But I really want to understand fusion and to be able to create my own music. Thats why I ask for your help guys. Any help is more than welcome , and thanks advance.
edit: spelling.
I'm surely NOT fusion master
but I will try to give you some advices of course.
Fusion as a word means mix or synthesis of
couple of different things.
In music world,specially guitar world,
it's usually another word for rock-jazz but
you can throw many other things in there as well.
The way I see Fusion is to have tight rhythm section,
someone would say that Jazz also requires the same.
Absolutely but I thinking of more energy from rhythm section,
heavier playing sort of speech.
Then you slowly adding more freedom to your playing,
you are not stick with one or two scales,
you combine more of them as progression goes,
you combine lots of different techniques as well
(hybrid picking is probably the trademark) etc.
It is really hard to explain what Fusion is
until you actually learn to play some licks from
real masters and realize the point of it,
which is usually kind of rock with more options and freedom,imo.
Thanks a lot for your answer Muris. Im listening a lot to "true" masters as you say(I would say you're a fusion master too but that is not the discussion here) , trying to get my ear comfortable to what I listen. Im also practicing the fusion lessons here at GMC, and next thing Im going to do is to create my own fusion tracks. I really apreciate your help, thanks a lot.
Anytime.
I strongly advice you to record a lot
over certain backing tracks and post it
somewhere in forum,then we could discuss about it
and even get more people interested into!
I'm not sure if Muris covered this, but I don't think so.
One thing that I feel is important in fusion is to play with conviction and confidence. Especially if you are playing outside of the certain key, outside the scales, using a lot of passing notes etc. Then confidence is a key factor. Otherwise it's not necersarily going to sound all that good.
That said, anything played with conviction and confidence sounds better than played without.
I'm also interessted in fusion.
Is there anything you could recommend to start with ? Or share a good backingtrack for fusion ?
How much theory knowledge is necessary in fusion ? Because I'm sure it's gonna be pretty hard without much theory knowledge.
Are there any common scales that are used in fusion ?
Awesome, the "fusion training board", I'll take part for sure! Thanks Muris
I would say a good starting place for learning Fusion is making sure you understand your theory very strongly.
Playing Fusion requires a dedication to tonal mastery to know exactly how to draw outside the lines and make it sound good requires strong theory skills.
I don't know if you do yet or not but a good starting point would be to make sure you know all the names of the notes on the fretboard forwards and backwards. Know when you land on fret X on Y string that its Note Z without much counting or thinking about it.
Daniel
Some good stuff to start out with
So I'm gonna learn the notes on the fretboard for the strings that I didn't learn so far (d,g and b-string) ^^
What I also going to try to do is putting chromatics in my playing, which I wanted to do anyways, but never did
And what I also think is important for fusion, well at least what I heard when listening to fusion players, is a really solid timing (skipping notes, being able to play the same licks with different timings and so on)
And getting more into theory
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