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miles also said to coltrane when asked about how to play less: it might help to take the horn out of your mouth once in a while. tilmann ----- Original Message ----- From: "Per Boysen" <perboysen@gmail.com> To: <Loopers-Delight@loopers-delight.com> Sent: Wednesday, May 23, 2007 9:19 PM Subject: Re: Horns shredd pollock roadmap > On 23 maj 2007, at 19.49, Mark Sottilaro wrote: > >> Upon a recommendation of a friend, I started internally "mouthing" >> my notes when playing and I find it really helps with the >> musicality of your phrasing whether your playing guitar or any >> other instrument. > > That seems to be a good trick! "Mouthing" played guitar notes is good > way to remember that you should be serius with every note you play > and never play a note out of habit. Sticking to that attitude is a > good way to learn good musicianship. > > Generally I think this discussion misses the point a bit. It's not > the need to breath that keeps inspired musicians playing lead lines > as phrases with pauses thrown in here and there. They simply do it > because it sounds better that way! If you listen to a good piano > player or guitar player he also does it that way - it's not just a > horn thing or vocalist thing. I can think of two reasons why someone > would play "all the time" with no pauses - either he is uninspired or > he is reaching for a certain effect by playing that way (as when > Miles Davis told bandmate Mike Stern to play loudly, fast and with no > pauses on the guitar). > > per > > >