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The best thing you can do is quit trying to 'do' anything with your right hand. What I want is for you to listen and sing, whistle, hum along filling up every minute that you can stand to keep it going. I want you to think about the hand moving and how it is to move and perceive how it is to move. I want you, as much as possible if you want to learn this stuff, to get it internalized. But don't let your hand 'do'. That will create more problems than it could ever solve. People should spend months dreaming, thinking, visualizing, perceiving before touching. The PHYSICAL absolutely gets in the way. The physical is the last thing this music is about. Ultimately you will have to go into the area of the intuition/creative/right brain/spiritual before you ever play music. So why not start out there? And I am not talking fuzzy-wuzzy. I am talking depth. Because to really do it, you must finally learn to hit the note before your soul/mind thinks about it. The intuition/spirit jumps over the mental and engages with the physical. Let the intuition jump ahead or reason. The mental holds you back. Avoid it. This is why I avoid books. So please stop worrying left or right, correct or incorrect, up or down, day or night. They are immaterial. Just listen and dream/cogitate. Then you will do much better when you can dream BUT it may sound really terrible to anyone else. You are not working to sound 'good'; you are working to breath life into your music. It ends up a paradox: the hardest part of playing real music is not learning melody. The hardest part is to quit trying to 'play music'. trying keeps you from learning to relax every muscle in your body. your skeletal framework needs to be set up as a metronome and utilized to snap/whip the playing arm rather than using the muscles in the rhythm arm. The muscles are far too slow to snap. They can just play fast and frenzied. It might sound good to the intellect, but it will be dull and flat to the internal system that I refer to as the 'spirit'. This is not to scare you, it is to tell you to relax and see this as an opportunity [like star trek] for your system to go where it hasn't gone before. Initially your middle class system won't like it and will fight it. However, once you have truly experienced the deep rhythm arising out of your depths, you will never want to go back to dull melody. What I have encountered over the 3 1/2 decades that I have been teaching is the problem of rhythm. Most of the emphasis over the past 40 years has been on notes with rhythm falling by the wayside. Students were not taught to place strong emphasis on proper techniques of how to get clean, clear, strong, powerful rhythm with depth, not being reminded that 'speed kills'.. After mastering the rhythm, notes can then be added to enhance the rhythm's effectiveness. The emphasis is always on rhythm and not on how many notes can be played.It's not about tunesI am going to offer some advice which is going to sound like I am trying to get students to come to more classes than they need, but there is no other way to make the point.You will be holding yourself back by trying to learn tunes from a book or a video before experiencing the playing of the old people by listening to recordings for hours, days and weeks. In addition, your music will suffer greatly by trying to learn notes and tunes before you are able to produce solid rhythm. Plus it is generally impossible for students to teach themselves good rhythm: thus the reason for schools in all walks of life. The true mountain music takes discipline and sacrifice as any other thing in life that is to be mastered. BUT there is the lasting ‘reward’. As most of you know, in 2006 I released a banjo tab book containing 27 tunes, a CD with each played so you will know how i personally play them, many black & white photographs I took mid-October, 1970 at the Hammons homes, plus strong suggestions for approaching the music and some old stories that help with context. In my experience, here is the way that works the best:
When a student can master this, then s/he is ready to move into music that has some real meaning and can give a tremendous amount of enjoyment and satisfaction.Just remember the only shortcut is the longest way around.And don't be intimidated by us hotshots. We were once where you are now. It took me 2 years[1968-1970] to start to get the rhythm on the banjo, and 32 [1970 - 2002] years to finally break through on the fiddle. Of course, I am a very slow learner, as if you havent already figgered that out.Don't compare yourself to others and don't set time limits and expectations. Just internalize the music and not city people. Initally let the old musician's music get ahold of you inside. In your gizzard. Probably a couple years or more. Listen until you don't think you can stand it anymore. You must be so full of the rhythm and the way the music goes that it overflows out of your ears. You will learn more quickly that way. AGAIN, avoid listening to very many younger musicians; always listen to the older musicians. Most are dead now.
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