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Guest Column: Approaches To Phrasing On The Guitar g9 Line
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pix Approaches To Phrasing On The Guitar pix
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pix pix by Sebastian Kalamajski  

Page added in June, 1999

 
pix About the Author    
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Sebastian Kalamajski, a guitarist from Sweden, began his music studies when he was seven years old by learning how to play piano.

Sebastian is currently studying for M.D. as a biomedical scientist. His new, large (370 pages) digital book is just being published on his web site.

His web site is at www.nordisc-music.com.

Send comments to Sebastian Kalamajski.



© Sebastian Kalamajski
In this article I'd like to share some of my ideas and approaches to phrasing on guitar. It will probably be very useful and informative for those of you who've never learned how to phrase and play a good solo on guitar, be it a written or improvised one. The good news is that you don't have to be a shredding, virtuoso guitar player to learn the topics covered in this article. All you have to know is a simple pentatonic or major scale, in one position or over the whole neck - it doesn't matter. Of course, if you are one of those who like to play fast solos, this article will be very informative too.

Why did i write about phrasing? Well, through all the years of my teaching experience i've noticed that most guitarists always learn to play scales, and try to play as fast as possible, but they miss one very important point of guitar playing and that's phrasing. So what is a good phrasing, you may ask? It's simply a means to play some melodic idea with a good rhytmic sense, thus creating a nice sounding solo (or riff). The simplest way to start to learn phrasing is by looking at some blues guitarists.

Now, take a look at all those famous blues guitar masters like B.B. King, Albert King, Eric Clapton. Do they ever play at the speed of light, ripping through scales all over the neck? I don't think so! What they're doing, actually, is playing quite slow and soulful. They may throw in some fast licks here and there, but most parts of their solos are played slowly with great melodic and rhythmic feeling to them. They are placing the notes into specific places of the measures, those places that'll guarantee the solo will sound good. And that's what I want to show you in this article! I'd like to teach you which places of the measures (you may also call them bars) you should accentuate and which ones you shouldn't. I want to show you where in the measures you should put your notes to make them sound good.

The way I approached phrasing in the beginning was to learn which beats in a measure are more accentuated than the others, and I suggest you learn it first before you go on. So here's a little rhythm theory lesson that will get you on your way to becoming a better soloist!

In a 4/4 meter you've got four beats in one measure. According to rhythmic theory the first and the third beats within a measure are the stronger ones, and the second and the fourth beats are the weaker ones. For example:
           beats:     str  weak str  weak
                       >         >
                      (1....2....3....4....)
                        ONE 4/4 MEASURE
 
So, this is one measure. Now if you go on with the music, and come to the next measure, the same things happens there too, but: all the beats in this measure are weaker than the beats in the first measure. For example: beat 1 in the second measure is weaker than beat 1 in the first measure but it's still a strong beat. For this reason the first measure is called a strong measure and the second measure is called a weak measure. See example:
   beats:   str  weak str  weak  str  weak  str  weak         
             >         >           >         >
            (1....2....3....4....)(1....2....3....4....)
                strong measure       weak measure
 
If you go on and add more measures you'll get the same situation there too, that is: the strong measure follows the weak measure and so the weak measure follows the strong measure! How can this knowledge help you with your phrasing? We come to the point right here: Try to create your own melodic idea within the two measures using the following rules:
  • In the first (or every strong) measure you'll place the first tone of your solo on the first beat (it'll be a good idea to tap you foot on beat one and three as music goes on). After that, you add more tones to the first tone, and play through the measure any way you like, but try to keep a simple blues-swinging rhythm with simple eighth- or quarter-notes. You may also place a longer note on beat three as well. Just try to accentuate the first and the third beats in all strong measures. Try to play nice melodies staying in only one position on the neck in the beginning, don't let your fingers fly all over the neck. You may do this when you've mastered the simple rhythms first.
  • In the second (or every weak) measure, don't begin to play through the measure on the first beat, it's better if you begin to play after the first beat (maybe just after the first beat or on the second beat). Play through the measure this way and don't try to place longer notes on beat 3. Instead, try to accentuate the weak beats in this weak measure, that is: beat 2 and 4. When you come to beat 4, try to play some kind of "backup" that'll lead to the first tone in the first measure.
When you begin at the new, following two measures you just follow these rules again. Simply place the longer notes on the strong beats in the strong measures and play the longer notes on the weak beats in the weak measures. Try to play ideas that will develop the first idea you've played. You may, for example, change the rhythm a bit, add more tones or play the old idea backwards. When you feel that developing the old idea is getting boring (it usually occurs after six measures) the come up with a new one and develop it.

When you're getting comfortable with these ideas you may look at these other rules:
  • You don't have to always build your ideas within only two measures. For example, you may take four measures and assume that the first two measures are strong, and the next two measures are weak and play your solos according to the rules above. Now you'll accentuate the strong beats in the first two measures and the weak beats in the last two measures. There are lots of other possibilities, so experiment with them!
  • Learn what anticipations are and learn to include them in your solos. Try to anticipate strong beats in strong measures and balance them by anticipating weak beats in weak measures. Combine anticipations with simplier rhythms!
  • Learn more complex rhythms (polyrhythms, rhythms with rests, etc.) and throw them into your solos. Great jazz improvisers are masters of this! Learn from them!
  • Treat the strong measure as a weak measure and vice-versa, and see what happens!
Happy phrasing!

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