The electric
guitar that I had propped up in the corner of my living room has gone. It has
gone back to the place that I got it from, the loft. I still have my first acoustic
guitar in the corner of the room which has itself only been played a few times.
My acoustic guitar still has the original strings on, the same strings for 12
years. This can’t be beneficial.
I have
mastered three cords A, D and E. I am sometimes able to muster up a G. When it
comes to Barre chords, forget it, I have neither the drive nor patience to
master this.
In my head,
I genuinely believed that the lower, softer, easier action would improve my guitar
playing. This was, to me, a nice, positive, reasonable argument with balance
and some evidence. The evidence being that, some bloke once told me that it was
easier to play and electric guitar than an acoustic. Which is pretty much like
saying that it’s easier to drive a brand new car than it is to drive an old
banger. It all depends on your starting point. If you can drive, then you’ll be
able to drive both the banger and the new motor however ‘ICAN’T PLAY THE GUITAR!’
ergo I could play neither the electric nor acoustic. But I wanted to learn, I
wanted to be so cool and Weller-like and, God damn it, I was ruddy well going
to teach myself. There was one flaw in me teaching myself guitar. I don’t know
how to play. I would often pick up my guitar, dust it down, find it was out of
tune, spend so long in retuning it that by the time it was tuned I had lost all
interest in actually playing it.
I am sad to
see my borrowed guitar head back to a lonely place where it will lay, untouched
by human hands, just gathering dust and going out of tune, let’s be honest, it
might have well just stay in my living room. I thank you!
The thing
is, I wanted to be able to ‘play’ my guitar but I didn’t want to do the
learning side of things.
I want to
play like Weller. I have this amazing DVD where, Paul Weller is just sat on a
stool, knocking out classic tune after classic tune, incredibly simply and
seemingly easily. There is a crowd of 200 hundred people glued to his every
sound and movement. One man, one guitar, one stage and 400 hundred eyes trained
directly on him. That’s where I want to be. I don’t want to be playing repetitious
chord changes. So I now just have one guitar that sits all alone, untouched and
detuned.
Perhaps that
should have been my goal, learn how to play the guitar. Yeah! Learn how to play
the guitar then get a band together; tour the UK, then the world! Brilliant
that’s next year sorted. Look out world! Here comes rocker Gav! Let’s get that
guitar back, dust it off and tune it up and then..... What was I going to do?
No comments:
Post a Comment