Re: [Harp-L] "I don't feel ready" to join a Jam
As a relative beginner who can't yet play ear, I certainly agree with JP. If you can find the groove, then you should sound pretty good, especially if you don't overplay. Pick your spots with a few tasty licks. Works OK for me.
----- Original Message -----
From: John F. Potts
To: harp-l@xxxxxxxxxx
Sent: Tuesday, May 01, 2012 5:52 PM
Subject: [Harp-L] "I don't feel ready" to join a Jam
with JP.
"In my world, the best place to start is always the melody."
Hard to disagree with this premise, but, I happen to think playing
accurate melodies can be difficult and certainly very challenging for
a beginner, especially at a jam where the tempo may be very brisk and
the material unfamiliar.
IMHO, there's nothing wrong with riffing or vamping off the groove,
even if you can't nail the melody. A beginner can manage to sound
passable playing rhythm oriented licks, but if you don't nail a
recognizable melody accurately, you won't sound any good whether you
are a beginner or not.
Another thing: Playing rhythmically does not necessarily mean
playing chords. Try hard to KEEP GOOD TIME. Feel the beat! If a
player who is unsure of what he is doing can cop the groove and not
overplay, he can usually get by with reasonable success. LISTEN TO
THE DRUMMER. If you've never played with drums before, it may be seem
overwhelming, but relax--it's actually easier to play WITH a drummer
because the drums lay down a rhythmic structure you can work around
and off of which means you can actually play less and still sound ok.
Simple repeating rhythmic licks are perfectly acceptable. You can
always go on to build from there as you gain more experience.
FWIW,
JP
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