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SurfGuitar101 Forums » Surf Musician »

Permalink How long does it take you to 'nail' a new song?

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Just curious about the range of experiences. As a fairly un-talented guitar player with about 10 years under my belt, I find it can take me a hundred repetitions over several weeks to get to the point where I'm confident enough to play a song with other musicians. Some come easily and some may elude me for years -- though I have noticed that the songs I've learned recently resolve a little more quickly. What's your mileage?

-- Woody

It takes a lot of mussel memory to avoid clams.

Sometimes they come easy for me and sometimes it takes me months to figure out a phrase or lick from a particular song. The incremental run at the end of LSJ Casbah has been kickin my hiney for months. Many times I figure out a lot of the licks when I'm away from the guitar ......eating lunch, driving, fishing, whatever. The more you use your ear and figure this stuff out the easier it gets.

2012-2013: FILTHY POLAROIDS

We're all different. For me depends completely on how "novel" it is. If it's basically "Mr. Moto II" or a similar picking pattern or chord progression to a song that is internalized, it can be a just a couple play throughs to be able to play it, and then it's a matter of deciding whether to memorize it or not. I don't know if everybody is like this, but I can often sit down, work a first wave style song out quickly, get it near perfect in one session, but then the next day it's gone and I have to listen to it before I can play it Duh . One of the first surf songs I learned was the surfaris "surfs up". Chuck Berry is part of my DNA so that song was just too easy. You know Pipeline? You can probably learn Banzai Washout pretty easily. Not the same, but enough similarities as far as the way my brain works for me to retain it easily. But for some reason something as easy as Squad Car stymied me for awhile. I learned it easily, but I couldn't "start" the song. I had to go to a section a couple bars in, play that, and it would all come back to me Embarassed So you I guess I'm saying the first 6 Space Cossack songs will be hard to learn. From then on it'll get easier and easier. Never easy... Darn you Ivan... But they will make sense to your hands and brain. Now we just need the chops Embarassed

I strongly believe the more songs you know, the easier learning more songs, and reataining them will be, at least that has held true with me my whole life. Like a Chess master. You don't look at individual pieces, you recognize the pattern of the whole board, and recall a move someone made in 1912, and the resulting counter move... That's one reason my current approach is regardless of what I'm interested in learning or playing, once a week I set my Ipod "surf" playlist to random, and whatever song comes up first, I learn. Whether I want to or not. It's been really helpful in developing my picking hand and broadening the sponge like qualities of my brain.

Just don't compare yourself to anyone else in this area. How you do it is exactly right for you.

Woodsurfer
Just curious about the range of experiences. As a fairly un-talented guitar player with about 10 years under my belt, I find it can take me a hundred repetitions over several weeks to get to the point where I'm confident enough to play a song with other musicians. Some come easily and some may elude me for years -- though I have noticed that the songs I've learned recently resolve a little more quickly. What's your mileage?

-- Woody

i'm in the same boat with you.......about 10 years playing, maybe three or four devoted to mostly surf instrumentals. i've been working on paul johnsons lead on 'baja' from the duo-tones cd for several years. i know all the notes but the phrasing on part of it is still kicking my butt. sometimes i get it and sometimes i don't.
carol

www.surfintheeye.com

That's interseting question... however even more interesting is: HOW LONG DOES IT TAKE YOU TO LEARN A SONG YOU DON'T REALLY LIKE ??

Well i am sure someone woudl think " why would you practice such song anyway.." bt the answer is: If the label wants it on the album.. you just had to do it..." That happend on our RIDE THE FIRST WAVE... am not really now sure whether we choose a few of those songs to cover or was that Mel- a few i really disliked... so instead of learning them i waited for the studio and than cover them step by step ha ha and improvise.. eventually the sounded great, but most of them we don't play on stage ha ha

bye Robi

badash
We're all different. For me depends completely on how "novel" it is... One of the first surf songs I learned was the surfaris "surfs up". Chuck Berry is part of my DNA so that song was just too easy. You know Pipeline? You can probably learn Banzai Washout pretty easily. Not the same, but enough similarities as far as the way my brain works for me to retain it easily.

I agree with this, it depends on how close a song is to your own style of playing. I've spent most of my playing career doing a mixture of Classic Rock, Rock n' Roll, Surf, Rockabilly, Funk, Punk and Alt Rock so most stuff that falls easily into one one of those categories will probably be 'nailed' fairly quickly - but if I was called on to learn a Jazz, Fingerstyle Country/Bluegrass, classical, fusion or widdly metal number it would take me ages and I'd quite possibly just not be able to get it.

I know that the question was probably aimed largely at songs within the Surf genre, but even then there a variety of styles (There's a lot of difference between Dick Dale and Dave Wronski for example) and the closer you are to your natural habitat the easier it is.

http://www.myspace.com/thepashuns

Youth and enthusiasm are no match for age and treachery.

E-Street, I was just going to post a related response. The first wave classics come to me so easily. Then comes a band like Slacktone, whom many of their songs give me trouble.

That depends, I play completely by ear and if I can "hear" the melody line in my head. I can pick it up pretty quick listening for the intervals between notes.

However I've found that band wise, a lot of songs have a learning curve.

First you work really hard to master it and to be able to perform it with expression and conviction.

Then you get to the apex of the curve where no matter what you do, you can't improve on your performance.

Then the song begins to "sour" and no amount of working on it is going to make any difference. I just seems to get less inspiring everytime you play it. and down the tubes it goes.

Now down the tubes is cool for surfin', but it sucks for surf music.

Eddie, the realist

Traditional........speak softly and play through a big blonde amp. Did I mention that I still like big blonde amps?

I'm thinking that how "long" it takes to learn a song has a lot to do with how complex the song is, and the WAY you learn songs.

Like Eddie, I play by ear, and I've got to "feel" the song in order to figure it out. Learning how many measures and/or beats there are between verse and chorus, for example, has to be something I can feel - something that I can just naturally hear in my head.

Some people can count out measures, and know that they come in "on the one" or they need to play "quarter notes" at a particular spot, or any of countless other theory based reasons that make a song what it is.

A person with the ability to read music, understand theory, AND have an internal "feel" for phrasing, tempo etc. will probably learn much faster than those of us who fumble our way along.

Sadly, I'm not one of those people who can do both, so I pick out a melody, commit it to memory, and run with it. It works for me, and I can learn a song fairly quickly by the "fumble" method, but I'm sure there are more efficient ways of going about it.

Carol touched on phrasing when she said:

"i've been working on paul johnsons lead on 'baja' from the duo-tones cd for several years. i know all the notes but the phrasing on part of it is still kicking my butt. sometimes i get it and sometimes i don't."

To me phrasing is especially is one of those "feel" things. You can find a way to write it down on paper, but you have to feel it in your head to make it work.

15 minutes for most songs, 2 years for Slacktone songs. It's worth it.

Agreed.

Rob_J
Carol touched on phrasing when she said:

"i've been working on paul johnsons lead on 'baja' from the duo-tones cd for several years. i know all the notes but the phrasing on part of it is still kicking my butt. sometimes i get it and sometimes i don't."

To me phrasing is especially is one of those "feel" things. You can find a way to write it down on paper, but you have to feel it in your head to make it work.

Yes. Feel. We all also have different terminology and goals. Some people have been talking about learning songs to the point of "perfection" or "mastery". I learn songs to the point of "freedom" and "joy". getting to where i'm not ever stepping out of the rythmic and melodic flow. Playing the song. Not working the song. Performance ready, but not "Wow! It's like Paul Johnson's in the room" exactitude. Yes you have to learn signature and most difficult licks and phrases, but don't stiffen up the two bars before hand. I'm always impressed by someone who can sound exactly like the target. Even if you don't like the music how can you not be impressed when someone nails SRV, Brian May, Django, Chet, whoever. But I play to "pleasure" myself... Pun intended. Working too hard to get it exact seems too much like being a pornstar. Might look good up on the screen, but ya gotta figure making it look good takes all the fun out of it Embarassed

When it comes to playing lead solos of a song, a player friend of mine summed it up best...." as long as you get the first 4 bars and the last 4 bars of the solo correct everything in between really doesn't matter as far as the audience is concerned"

2012-2013: FILTHY POLAROIDS

Great stuff folks -- thanks!

Something I found is that those songs I learned early on that have 'problem spots' in them continue to plague me until I sit down and re-think the fingering from scratch. Otherwise, I'll get to that spot in the song and whether I will it on no, I'll choke because I always choke right there. Fo' zample: When decided that I really needed to get the bridge section of "Jack The Ripper" right -- and I mean play it with authority -- I started as if I were learning it from the beginning, trying out different fingerings, then playing it so slowly that it was like a 78 played on 33 (for those of you who remember vinyl and shellac). That seems to've done the trick.

And Slacktone, ah Slacktone. I've learned portions of some songs but Wronski is so far out of my league that I get lost after a short while. Have you seen him live? Or on YouTube? Dude has a most serious case of guitar face Wink

-- Woody

It takes a lot of mussel memory to avoid clams.

My record is two songs in the three hours before the rehearsal, including writing cord charts. However, the songs were easy, "Fingle Bunt" by The Shadows and "Cabazon" by Satan's Pilgrims.

My bandmates are experienced concert musicians who've been playing for about 30-40 years. All I need to do is put a chord chart in front of them and they can navigate their way through a song. Our bass player has a talent for coming up with great bass lines so he rarely bothers to make transcriptions from the original recordings. In their case, they only have to work their way through a song a few times before it sounds reasonably good. Of course, I have to put in some serious time in order to make detailed charts for them.

If it ain't broke, fix it until it is.

I've found that sometimes I can have a hell of a time with certain spots in songs and just can't get it for the life of me. So to relieve the frustration (it's supposed to be fun, right?) I'll move on to something else for a while and not do anything with it for days. Later I'll go back to the first song and I breeze through the privously difficult spots and wonder what I was having trouble with. It's not always that way, but often enough to stick in my mind.

TommyD
I've found that sometimes I can have a hell of a time with certain spots in songs and just can't get it for the life of me. .

When this happens to me it's almost ALWAYS because I'm overthinking it. I frequently hear things (abused hearing) wrong and try to work in full 5 or 6 string chords when the song actually contains a dyad or a triad at most. That's my biggest problem with non-surf instro. If it's melodic and pretty it just MUST be using big complex chords right? Embarassed

It's hard to nail many songs for me, but I can sound pretty TACK-y after a half hour or so.... Rolling Eyes

Cool It takes me as long to nail a song, as it does to nail your Wife. Surprised Ooh Snap!!!

Smile But seriously it all depends on the song, it could take a half hour or less, Or it can take all day.

The Deadbeats

TommyD
I've found that sometimes I can have a hell of a time with certain spots in songs... I'll move on to something else for a while and not do anything with it for days. Later I'll go back to the first song and I breeze through the privously difficult spots....

While I wouldn't go so far as to say I "breeze through" anything, I've certainly found this principle to be true in general. Walking away from a song, starting a new one, then coming back again does seem to work. Partly, I suppose, due to the effect of 'sleeping on it' for a while, and partly because of what gets learned or practiced during the other songs. When I decided to learn _Surf Rider _because it seemed so easy, things went fine until that 'last bit' (excuse the pedantry) that comes just before returning to the main riff. In the meantime, I figured out three other songs -- yet that one part of SR is still driving me nuts. Try as we might to make the learning process linear, it just doesn't work that way.

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