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Paolo: > I partially disagree. What shifts one's art away from expression is > _not_ "too much technique". It is the over-reliance on habits. Playing > the blues box is a habit for some players. Playing a favorite > 3-octave harmonic minor scale pattern is a habit for others. Playing > a favorite diminished arpeggio up and down the fretboard is a habit > for yet others. And so on. > A major component of self-expression is being in control over one's > habits rather than being controlled by them. ....I agree. I try to practise other people's music at the moment, on the pricniple of Adrian Belew's "You tend to improvise what you practise". Until recently I assumed that learning other people's stuff would "dilute my inner voice" whereas what actually happenned was that my limited vocabulary became dull and in-bred. Now I try to cast my net wide, being selective about what I learn - after all, it's going to show up in my playing - to ensure that if I start playing from memory (ie learnt licks, or habits) I have such a wide variety of licks that I don't repeat myself too often. Michael Dr Michael Pycraft Hughes Bioelectronic Research Centre, Rankine Bldg, Tel: (+44) 141 330 5979 University of Glasgow, Glasgow G12 8QQ, U.K. "Wha's like us? Damn few, and they're a' deid!" - Scottish proverb