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MrAnderson

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Posts posted by MrAnderson

  1. I really doubt the OP's musical credentials are the equivalent of "reading a few phrase books". He has been offering lessons on here for years and no one decided to question his competency until he mentioned meditation or whatever "effortless mastery" involves. Yes advertising lessons using the title of someone else's method/book is possibly reprehensible but after clarifying he has read it and decided to incorporate the material into his lessons I can't see any problem. No, it's not a service I would pay for but people can judge that for themselves.

    I don't mean musically, I'm not judging him on that, but from what I can see he is charging people for specific lessons on 'effortless mastery', which I can't see any other credentials for other than reading a book...

  2. I think Kimy has a point there, learning pretty much any kind of skill from a teacher will involve methods derived from somewhere else.

    Except any competent teacher will have likely spent several years training in their chosen field...would you take foreign language lessons from someone whose only experience was reading a couple of phrase books?

    There are plenty of bad instrumental teachers out there ripping people off already, now bedroom psychologists are at it too...oh dear.

  3. One of my mates was at Thainstone mart sometime last year, and found some woman flogging a bunch of her son's gear, as he was away studying...she had his H4 still packaged, but didn't know what it was and sold it to my friend it for a fiver...I bet he was chuffed to hear that one!

  4. I try to avoid putting people in that situation by only adding people who have actually been to our gigs in the past!

    I do think Facebook is useful for promoting stuff to people you already know, whereas MySpace is more accessible for general use...although creating band pages seems fairly user-unfriendly.

  5. Same, I've had a Yahoo mail account for years that I can't be arsed keeping tidy anymore. I just use it now for things that I know will probably attract more spam, and use my uni account for important stuff.

  6. I've never seen a girl inside the walls of musical vision before. Ever.

    We've always had females playing with us (soul situation/silver city soul revue), used to be 2 girls doing vocals, now it's one girl on vocs, one on trumpet and one on trombone, and we're in there at least once a week ;)

  7. The new Facebook homepage. I wish they would stop fucking around with it. Now they've got rid of the option to only view status updates, which is the only bit I generally look at, now you have to use the "Live Feed" option to get status updates,

    I thought the same at first, but it's still there if you click 'friends' on the left-hand menu, then 'status updates' just below it.

    Now please excuse my rather pathetic intrusion into this thread ;)

  8. I'm the same dude, got a big pile of old strings packed back into sleeves and cardboard packets...not so bad now that I'm using flatwounds and don't change so often, but I'm unlikely to ever use any of the old ones! I share your logic for keeping them, even if bass-string breakages are fairly rare ;)

  9. The floating thumb is cool if it works for you,it worked for Jamerson with his hook style of one finger picking.

    Yeah, meant to also say it's down personal preference really, but as you say dropping the thumb onto the lower strings is an effective mute too and saves stretching fingers ;) I picked it up from Peter Stewart who only taught me for a year at college but I learnt a lot...I think Chuck Rainey's tutor book has a similar right hand method.

    The falling/raking thing is fairly common Rass, just take things a bit slower and be in control of your fingers, if you stick at it you'll find it comes naturally after a while!

  10. As droid says, co-ordination is key...slow scales will help with this. Try to alternate index-middle at all times, including when crossing strings.

    Personally I would advise against gluing your thumb to the pickup like a lot of players; there are different methods but I try to use a 'floating thumb'. Resting your thumb gently on the string below that which you are playing on, ie when playing the A string rest your thumb on the E, and let it move up and down strings in synch with your fingers. Your fingers take a c.45degree angle across the strings. This allows a more relaxed hand position, as you avoid arching your wrist, and your arm is fairly straight; the action of your fingers is also consistent for each string.

    Hope this makes sense some sense! Be patient and persistent, it'll pay off ;)

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