Jazz or Rock Guitar – Effortless Poor Technique (Electric)(Musicians)(Psychology)(Pain)(Strain)(Injuries)(Posture)(Alexander Technique)(Albuquerque)
This ebook, An Alexander Technique Approach to Jazz and Rock Guitar Technique, is published on this website in a PDF format. It is very detailed and practical, and it will give you the physical tools you need to take the limits off of your ability to create the accurate guitar technique you want without sacrificing your body.
This ebook is also for sale on all AMAZON websites in a KINDLE format.
Located in Albuquerque, New Mexico, U.S.A. (MOVEMENT THERAPY)
When you’ve played the jazz or rock guitar for a long time, then the way you play the guitar does itself. This means that even if parts of your jazz or rock guitar technique make playing the guitar unnecessarily hard, the way you play the jazz or rock guitar is still doing itself effortlessly.
I’ve always been fascinated by how effortlessly jazz or rock guitar players do some of the things they do, when some of these things are hard work. So, poor technique is both effortless and hard, interfering with the guitarist’s freedom to play the most difficult jazz or rock guitar music with ease.
When an internalized poor technique is effortless, it can make it difficult to change, even when a jazz or rock guitarist discovers a better way to play. Why do many guitarists resist change for the better?
ONE OF THE WAYS OUR MINDS CAN BLOCK A CHANGE FOR THE BETTER, IS TO TELL US THAT IT IS TOO HARD TO MAKE TECHNIQUE CHANGES AFTER YEARS OF DOING WHAT THE JAZZ OR ROCK GUITARIST HAS DONE. IF THESE KINDS OF THOUGHTS ARE GOING ON IN YOUR HEAD, THEY CAN BE SELF-FULFILLING, MAKING CHANGES TO YOUR TECHNIQUE DIFFICULT.
But what if you tell yourself that making changes to the parts of your jazz or rock guitar technique that are making you pay a physical price can be easy and quick, then you’ve opened the door to effortless great technique.
WHEN YOU ACCEPT THAT MAKING CHANGES TO YOUR JAZZ OR ROCK GUITAR TECHNIQUE CAN BE EASY, WHEN YOU HAVE BELIEVED THAT CHANGES ARE HARD YOUR WHOLE PLAYING LIFE, YOU’VE OPENED YOURSELF TO BEING A GOOD LEARNER. What is a good learner?
A GOOD LEARNER is a jazz or rock guitarist who finds great joy in making changes to his or her guitar technique, because it is fun to make the jazz or rock guitar easier and easier to play. This means you may have to revisit how you were taught the guitar as a child.
If your jazz or rock guitar teacher and others created a pressurized experience, then this means you were always being pushed by the teacher, others, and yourself to play better and better. The result is that gaining control of your guitar technique needed to be done as quickly as possible, no matter the physical and emotional costs.
IN OTHER WORDS, WHEN YOU COULDN’T DO SOMETHING ON THE JAZZ OR ROCK GUITAR, THE EXPERIENCE OF LEARNING SOMETHING NEW WASN’T TO BE SAVORED, IT WAS TO BE GOTTEN THROUGH AS QUICKLY AS POSSIBLE.
So, here you are now, and you want to make changes to some of your jazz or rock guitar technique. You’ve got a couple of choices. You can come to the guitar as the child you were, and strain and rush to make the changes as quickly as possible. Or you can come to the jazz or rock guitar with faith that you can learn easily and enjoy this joyous time of technique transformation, between what you have always done and what you will be able to do guaranteed.
So, is it possible to psychologically flip what you’ve always believed, that learning is hard, to learning is easy? LEARNING IS EASY! BUT YOU’LL NEED TO FORGIVE YOUR JAZZ OR ROCK GUITAR TEACHER AND YOURSELF AND WHOEVER ELSE PRESSURIZED YOUR LEARNING, IF YOU DON’T WANT TO KEEP GETTING EVERYONE BACK, BY NOT LETTING YOURSELF BE AS GOOD AS YOU CAN BE ON THE GUITAR.