The goal of lesson 1 is to identify and explain general areas that need
to be addressed if you are to be successful at learning to play classical
guitar. These areas include mental attitude and physical control. The necessary
mental attitude requires you to open yourself to new ideas, let go of old
habits, and free yourself to expand musically. Proper physical control
requires removing all tension from your body while playing, learning to
use only the motion of your body absolutely required to make music, and
making the instrument an extension of yourself.
Mental Attitude
Playing Classical Guitar is as much a mental effort as it is a physical
effort, perhaps even more so. Let's take a couple of steps to prepare our
minds for this challenge.
Making room for new ideas
An old story relates an incident where a young man claiming to want
to learn something new about the art of Zen visited a famous Zen master.
It was obvious to the master at the outset that this young man had already
thought he had reached an understanding well beyond his years, but that
he was coming to the master simply to be able to say to others that he
had indeed studied with the great teacher. The master invited the young
man to share a cup of tea with him and he proceeded to fill the young man's
cup. When the tea reached the top of the cup, the master continued to pour
more tea from the pot. After a short while, the tea began to run over the
cup and onto the floor, and, finally, the young man could not contain his
anxiety and shouted "stop, the cup will hold no more." "So it is with any
idea," said the master, "you must first empty your cup before it can again
be filled."
This same concept is very true for the classical guitar. If you insist
on holding on to your old ideas about playing the guitar, save yourself
some time and trouble and stop here. You won't be able to learn classical
guitar until you are willing to let go of what you think you already know.
Forgetting old habits and pre-conceptions
The degree of success you will have in playing classical guitar is directly
proportional to your ability to do what is required, but ONLY what is required
in order to accomplish your musical goal. My experience has shown that
the most difficult students of classical guitar are those who have already
reached a significant level of competence in some other musical style on
the guitar. I played the electric guitar for ten years before I started
studying classical guitar. I had developed such bad habits that it took
two years just to undo past mistakes. You will learn not only how to play
properly, but you'll learn why this way is the proper way. The fundamental
approaches and methods in these lessons have been proven by all of the
most successful classical guitarists of our time. They were taught to me
by teachers from some of the world's most respected institutions, including
the Andres Segovia school of music in Spain, the University of Southern
California, the University of Texas in Austin, SMU in Dallas, and the University
of North Carolina. When you learn to play classical guitar using this method,
you'll have the best information available anywhere. What you do with that
knowledge will then be up to you.
Opening the door to any possibilities
Classical music places a huge demand on a performer's ability to focus
her mind on the task at hand. Solo classical music challenges our ability
to maintain conscious control over several simultaneous musical events.
You can get some sense of the magnitude of the task by trying to simply
listen and to understand two separate conversations at the same time. The
key word in the last sentence is "understand." Many people learn to play
very difficult pieces, but they accomplish that feat by simply learning
to move their fingers with great agility in complex patterns. These players
are not great musicians. They may be great guitar players but it's not
the purpose of these lessons to just create great players. Truly great
musicians have developed the ability to view an entire piece of music as
a whole, yet be able to focus clearly on the details or each musical line
as it contributes to the overall musical idea.
One of the goals of this approach to studying classical guitar is to
allow the student to experience the full musical impact of each piece of
music studied. As you progress from simple to more complex music, you'll
find that your understanding and appreciation of classical music also progresses.
Pieces suitable for classical guitar students at each increasingly demanding
level are chosen to expand their mental as well as their physical capacity.
You'll find that your musical and emotional pallettes are inextricably
linked. The goal of these lessons is always to teach you to make music,
and that goal can be achieved at any level of ability. Some people call
this concept "musical sincerity." If the mind's not there, the message
will also be missing.
Physical Control
Relaxation
One of the most important abilities we need to master in order to play
the classic guitar is the ability to keep our entire bodies relaxed while
playing. A student at a master class at SMU in Dallas once asked the instructor
"How do you know if you're relaxed enough?" the instructor responded "If
you fall off the chair you know you were too relaxed". That got the appropriate
chuckle from the audience, but the response was dead on. Playing the classical
guitar is not "hard." As a matter of fact, the easier YOU MAKE IT, the
quicker you will progress. It is all too often the case that most of the
time spent in beginning lessons is just having the student get rid of tension.
Tension is the enemy! Not only will it keep you from progressing, but its
presence is brutal to any audience. If you listen to a classical guitarist
and you find yourself squirming in your chair, you can bet you're feeling
the tension he's creating. We'll talk later about how to recognize tension
and how to control it with relaxation - suffice to say that you'd be really
surprised at how this ugly demon finds it's way into our playing. Once
you've learned to identify tension, you'd also be surprised at how easy
it is to eliminate.
Minimum effort, minimum motion
We've all been raised in an era of electronic music where the electric
guitar is king and body contortions, twisted facial expressions, and all
sorts of extraneous physical motions are almost required if one is to be
considered a great player. Forget it! Classical guitar is a aural art form.
There is no motion of any part of the body except those parts which are
directly involved in creating the music. There will be many references
to this important principal in future lessons, but, for the time being
think about your own personal experiences with this concept. The physical
effort applied to anything should always be consistant with the task at
hand.
You are the extension of your instrument
What does it mean to "make the instrument an extension of your body?"
The answer to this question involves understanding 1) the motion of your
body, 2) the response of your instrument to that motion, and 3) the timing
required to synchronize your motions and the instrument's response. The
required choreography of the fingers and hands rivals the most intricate
ballet production. These three elements will become an important part of
your "technique". Don't underestimate the importance of these concepts
- they are the essence of the physical requiirements of playing classical
guitar.
Review of Lesson 1
You should now understand the importance of mastering both the mental and physical aspects of playing Classical guitar. These basic ideas will apply to every lesson that follows and they will be expanded upon and brought up many times as you progress in your efforts to learn to make music. Don't expect that you fully understand or appreciate the importance of these concepts. They are ideas and revelations that take on more and more meaning as your own personal experience grows on the instrument. Lesson 2 breaks from the theoretical to the practical and talks about the instrument and the other items you will need before we actually get into playing. Good luck, I hope we can continue to work together until you reach your musical goals