Guitar Time

Happy New Year, readers! I have been really enjoying practicing guitar lately, so I will write about that.

The Guitar

I've had a Martin Dreadnought body acoustic since high school that I think is a lovely guitar, but on a recent trip to my wife's parents' house I tried out her old classical acoustic that she learned on in high school and loved it. I honestly don't even know what brand it is... it says "Signature Series", model no. "C2", "Designed by Greg Bennett", and "Made in Indonesia." The intonation isn't great, especially as you get higher on the fretboard, but when it's in tune I think it sounds really neat. Also the nylon strings are much more pleasant on my fingers than the metal treble strings. So now I practice on it almost exclusively.

The Songs

The first song I started learning was "Don't Think Twice, It's Alright" by Bob Dylan. I didn't really know anything about that play style (I guess it's called "Travis Picking"), but it just seemed like a fun song to be able to sit down and play. Travis picking is also ubiquitous in acoustic guitar music, so I figured it would unlock a lot of other songs. And it did! I dunno I don't really feel like writing more about it, you all know this song.

The next song I learned was "Eugene" by Sufjan Stevens off of "Carrie & Lowell". Like much of this album, this song is a haunting reflection on Sufjan's childhood, relationship with his parents, and mother's death. Absolutely devastating song to listen to over and over again, but that's what I did! The progression is fairly straightforward, but for a beginner like me it was pretty difficult physically. The main left hand shape involves index, ring, and pinky in sort of a claw shape while leaving the G string between ring and pinky open (3 5 0 5). This same shape moves up and down the fretboard throughout the song. This is difficult for me for a few reasons:

This song is gorgeous though, and I feel like I still get a lot of mileage out of practicing it because it touches a lot of fundamentals.

After these two songs it was off to the races. I started learning a couple others off of "Carrie & Lowell" (title track, "Death with Dignity"), and some songs from Sufjan's recent collaborator Angelo De Augustine ("You Needed Love, I Needed You", "Blue"). Then I branched off into another Stevens (Cat) and leared "The Wind", which is a totally different finger pattern. Oh, side-note: I was inspired to learn "The Wind" because of the show "1899", which is a great show you should watch if you liked "Dark". Now I'm focusing on "Hearts and Bones" by my boy Rhymin' Simon. This song is really hard for me, but it's so satisfying to play.

The Method

I usually end up using tabs or YouTube videos to learn the songs, but I always spend at least a few minutes trying to figure it out by ear first. I usually end up with something vaguely resembling at least part of the song. Then I look up live performances of the songs, and try to figure it out by looking at their hands. Then if I'm still stuck, I look up the tabs like a dang scrub.

Eventually I would also like to do some more rudimental practice that is not just learning songs. One thing I miss about Tabla is the strict practice routine, in which I would practice a short movement thousands of times in a row to build stamina. But I haven't really found a book or anything with these types of exercises that interests me, so I'm just going to stick with songs for now.

The Goal

The concrete goal is to know 12 songs top-to-bottom in 2023. That is, I can play along with the entire track. Right now I can probably do this with 3-4.

I guess the goal-behind-the-goal is to open another creative outlet for myself. Since my band broke up just before the pandemic, pretty much my only creative outlet has been programming. Eventually I would also like to get to a place where I could write my own songs. This style of music that I've been learning feels very accessible in terms of songwriting, because they often have really simple structures and lyrics. I'm hoping the more songs I learn, the more instincts I'll build up for chord progressions and things like that, and writing songs will come a little more naturally than it does now (that is, not at all). Or maybe I will just learn a bunch of other people's songs! That's fine too!

Bye!

Hello World

Let's see if I can keep a blog going for the month of January. Here are some things I'd like to write about:

Learning Guitar

I've been teaching myself "finger-style" guitar. I put it in quotes because it's possible nobody who actually knows how to do it calls it that. But that's what I call it because you use your fingers, not a pick. Here are some songs that I've been learning:

Some of these I know front-to-back, others just a few parts. I'd like to set a goal for number of songs learned front-to-back by the end of 2023. I'm thinking a dozen is a good number, because I learned maybe 4 in 2022 and I think I could put in roughly 3x more work.

Software Development

Maybe, I dunno. I spend all day writing software so I might not be trying to sit down and write ABOUT software once I'm done.

Video games

I play kind of a lot of video games. Well actually, I play relatively few video games, but I put a lot of time into those few. Right now the big ones are Super Smash Bros. Ultimate and Slay the Spire.

Smash: I don't really have a venue to play real people (playing online is too frustrating, and I don't go to locals), but I enjoy playing CPUs. I've specifically focused a lot on Shotos (Ken/Ryu), so maybe I'll write about some of their more advanced techniques.

Slay: I've gotten Ascension level 20 on all characters (effectively, beaten the game 100%). I actually don't know what I'd write about this game, other than maybe re-post some good memes from /r/slaythespire.

Movies

We got a season pass to Alamo Drafthouse, so my wife and I have been watching a lot of these things.

Speedrunning

I've been following a small community of adventure game speedrunners who play all my old favorite point-and-click adventure games. I don't really participate (although I practiced the Monkey Island 2 speedrun long enough to place 8th on the leaderboard, which has since dropped to 10th), but I watch enough to know a little bit about the techniques they use. Also some of the glitches/exploits they use are really funny to me, so I might just post some of those.

Others

I do other things I think... maybe I'll remember what they are and blog about them.

Blog rules

I need to set some expectations here to give myself the best chance of succeeding.

Minimal editing

If perfection is the goal, I will never finish even a single post. I'm already failing a little bit at this one.

Keep it short

The bar needs to be so low that even "Not today" counts as a post.

Learn no new tools

This includes things like CSS/HTML/JS and even more advanced usage of Glitch and the Eleventy blog framework I'm using to write this (both excellent tools BTW). I'm inexperienced with these things, but I know enough to get prohibitively bogged down with the details. Can't happen here or I have no chance. I will maybe change the background color, but that's it.

I guess that's all for now. Until next time!