Simpson\u0027s Fine Musical Instruments Georgia
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Guitaring Posture and Position by Patrick Carpen
Playing guitar has always remained a strong passion among youths and elders of various generations. It is a social instrument that spices up the mood of any social gathering, or of a solitary air in the right harmony. Portable plus multi-stringed, the melodious instrument is particularly designed for public hearing. Even today, guitar plays a significant role in churning up the flavor of life on a musical note.
If you acquire in-depth knowledge of the chords, then you can play thousands of songs without having to struggle much. But there is more to playing the guitar than simply striking the right chords. An apt technique will help you sound like an expert, sizzling a song with its tuneful charm. Taking the guitar in your lap and playing it is not the end of the story. The guitaring posture and position adds to the master stroke of getting tunes precisely right.
You may want to sit in the most comfortable position with your guitar so that you can smoothly play it. It depends upon you to select the right position while playing the guitar, but there are certain guidelines that determine the right position to choose. First, make sure that you enjoy sufficient freedom of hand movement and can easily meet all the technical demands. Secondly, make sure that the instrument is placed in a stable position, to avoid any shaking of the strings. Thirdly, avert any muscular tension in the posture in which you sit.
To ensure a more relaxed sitting posture, beginners sometimes tend to pull the guitar in closer towards them, and then look down to the strings or the fret, which makes it more complicated for playing. Again, placing the arm higher or lower can lead to muscle cramps, so start by sitting on a stool or a chair with your left foot on a foot rest, which should be 10-20 cm in height. Then, place the waist part of the guitar on your left thigh.
To ensure that you do not get a muscle cramp, place the right forearm on the top front edge of the guitar. This will enable you to strum the guitar without much hassle. Keep your shoulders relaxed so that you can lean forward. Place your hand behind the neck and fret board of the guitar so that your fingers reach the strings flexibly. This whole technique of sitting posture ensures a relaxed way of striking the cords without any physical tension.
When standing and playing the guitar, make sure that your guitar is properly supported by a strap. Depending upon the weight and dimensions of the instrument, the breadth of the strap will vary. The guitar should have a hole at each end for attaching the straps. Make sure that the guitar neither hangs at knee-level nor just below the shoulders. Remember that a good seating posture and positioning of the guitar are the basics to technique development.
Hence, if you can maintain the right guitaring posture and position, then you can strike the right note with the perfect tune.
Patrick Carpen is the designer, writer and owner of the website http://guitaring.infobay.ws/
Infobay.ws is a content based, consumer oriented website that provides professionally researched, and up to the minute content on selected subjects.
Article Source: http://www.earticlesonline.com/Article/Guitaring-Posture-and-Position/297778
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Will Computers Replace Musicians? by Francis Beaudry
Computer audio technology has made huge advances over the past several years. It is now quite possible for entire orchestras or small ensembles to be duplicated in a studio using just one simple keyboard or computer. Processing power has made it possible to store actual audio frequencies of various instruments and then to adjust them for pitch, resulting in a melodious playback that would be identical in frequency to the original sound.
So, what does this mean for the future of instrumentalists? Like assembly line workers in an auto plant, will musicians be replaced by computers? Does the future look bleak for those who are studying to be professional musicians?
The answer is a resounding, NO!
There are several reasons why the future is looking even brighter for those who would endeavor to study musical performance. Now is not the time to give up on your dreams and, in fact, it seems that the study of being a musical performer could never be more important. Here are 5 of those reasons:
1) Humans are not perfect. At first glance, this may not seem like a valid reason or perhaps a reason supporting the opposite view. However, it is the imperfect, subjective, and unique quality of a human being that makes a human performance more fascinating and satisfying than that of a computer. The risk of making a mistake lends a hand to the level of appreciation that an audience has for a human performer. Sometimes, in fact, it is the poor tone or the wrong notes that truly give a performance emotion. One needs only to consider the sour notes that come from your child’s first recital or the Jr. High band’s first concert. We wouldn’t have it any other way! Yes it is true that computer experts are working on humanizing electronic performances. But success in this field seems a long way off.
2) What you see is what you get. Imagine if you will the excitement of walking through the doors of Carnegie Hall, taking your seat, watching the lights dim, and hearing the applause as a concert is about to begin. The curtain opens and there before your eyes is a small table with a computer and a set of speakers. What you are hearing could be a marvelous rendition of a symphony or an opera. But honestly are you there only for the sound? What is the performance without the visual? Nothing beats the beauty and grandeur of an entire symphony playing together. The bows of the violins are completely in sync with one another. The cymbal player is reaching high in the air to emphasize the crash. The soloist is swaying to the rhythm of the melody. The visual is key to excitement and without it you have nothing!
3) Comraderie and identification. Ask any musician today about what they feel is their most favorite aspect of being a musician, and they will tell you that it is the friendships and bonds that form as a result of performing together and learning together. There is nothing like a stellar performance that causes a performing group to become joined together as a team. Even the audience, many of whom are most likely musicians, becomes entranced with the performance as if they are playing along in their minds. Children look at and hear the performers and dream of one day becoming a musical star. Adults look at and hear the performers and dream also perhaps of one day reaching that level of ability, or perhaps of the time when they themselves could play that piece.
4) The amazing human ear. Yes technology has advanced and unbelievable things have been accomplished with musical software. However, at this point anyway, it is still possible for the human ear to detect the differences between human and electronic. There are subtle nuances in tone and style that give away an electronic performance or even a recording of that performance. People are no doubt fooled every day when they hear the accompaniment to a television commercial or the background score to a movie but, for the most part, it is still possible to tell the difference. Of course, this is the one things that is most likely to change as technology progresses. Perhaps we may be saying something completely different in the near future.
5) Music is fun! OK so even if all the above reasons are not valid, the sheer enjoyment of playing an instrument will never be replaced by playing a computer. During times of stress and times of grief, the musician will quickly resort to the therapy offered by playing songs to an audience of one. During times of celebration and joy, there is no better method for shouting a cheer than to express it in music. Of course, perhaps most importantly, during times of worship, there is no more appropriate expression of love and service than to offer a song of praise.
Yes technology is moving ahead. No technology will not replace the musician. Perhaps some jobs will be lost in the commercial world or in the studio when budgets are tight. But the world of the human musician is ever expanding and the need to continue training and raising new musicians will never end.
Francis Beaudry is currently the conductor of two orchestras. He is a writer and arranger and has published musical works for choir and orchestra. In addition he is the president of TheMaxZone.net, an online musical accessories superstore offering instrument accessories, musical accessories. For more visit at http://www.themaxzone.net
Article Source: http://www.earticlesonline.com/Article/Will-Computers-Replace-Musicians-/524054






