Playing guitar solos on air guitar and making the noises with my mouth. Bwow wow meeeeeooooooowww buda buda buda bow now wooooooooowww tadowwwwww bwaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaamp meneenenenenenenenenenenen nowwwww wowwwwwww dunnadunnadunna DUNNA DOW!
http://www.airguitarworldchampionships.com/2008/EN/home.html Sign up now. You've got to go to Finland next month.
Sometimes while I'm walking around I beatbox quietly to myself and then my friends will say 'Was that you? What the hell are you doing?' and then I tell them to STFU and then tell them to start clapping along. We can start a really crappy band, we just need someone to mouth basslines and someone who can't sing.
most people who play real guitar are good at that. i know i am. in fact, i usually can't play a guitar solo if i can't mimic the sounds in my mind or by voice. i know if i can't "see" the notes in my head...then i can't play the guitar solo. for me, it's part of the memorization technique when learning guitar solos. the vocalization of those notes is just one step further in the process. if i can't see the notes in my head, then i won't be able to play the solo...regardless of how many times i've heard the guitar solo. it's an important part of working out what your playing in your mind...then applying it to the guitar. of course, after a while...it becomes second nature where you've played it enough...it's easy to play without much concentration. for example, i've learned a lot of Eric Johnson's "Cliffs of Dover" by practicing and committing those notes to memory...which ultimately translates into actions of fretting and picking techniques. the first few times you run through a song like that on guitar (depending on your experience), it's slow going until you commit the notes to memory. then, you once you have the notes down, it's a matter of practice, practice, and practice. after a while...what you had to think really hard about to play...you don't think about nearly as much and it becomes like riding a bike. of course, getting up to the speed it is played is another story. maybe you can apply your air guitar to a real guitar. i could see it if you are good at voicing guitar solos. it's just a matter of applying what you already know to a physical device. lol
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