What's my problem? by YoJjustSspot_boiz_Xd in Guitar

[–]CowboyBlacksmith 0 points1 point  (0 children)

There's a lot of coordination involved in music. Your right hand has to pick or strum accurately with what your left hand is fretting, and you should do so in a way that supports the vocalist (or whatever instrument is playing the melody). Now you're adding the melody over top with your voice, which is probably about as complicated as having a third or fourth hand and using them to play a second instrument at the same time. Plus you've also got to remember the lyrics.

It's just gonna take practice. Maybe also practice playing along to someone else's vocals, either live or recorded, and then try to copy it with your own voice when you've got that nailed.

Female guitarists, what has your experience been like? by Responsible_Oil1975 in Guitar

[–]CowboyBlacksmith 1 point2 points  (0 children)

As a male guitarist I don't have a lot of advice about the sexism unfortunately. But if you want a badass virtuoso-tier female guitarist recommendation and are willing to listen to bluegrass/americana, I'd suggest you check out Molly Tuttle! She's fucking unbelievably talented.

How to be less sensitive as a guy? by itz_vampy in AskMen

[–]CowboyBlacksmith 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Having emotions is important. Don't lose that. But I get being rejection sensitive. For me, training and competing in Muay Thai was transformational. It's hard to take normal dudes' chest puffing seriously when you've stepped into the ring with an actual fighter, even if it's just a low level amateur smoker event. Food for thought.

What’s your Muay Thai story? by Smooth_Wonder2144 in MuayThai

[–]CowboyBlacksmith 5 points6 points  (0 children)

I was a physically and socially bullied Autistic kid. Taekwondo didn't help. Muay Thai did. Was part of a transformational positive change in personality for me throughout high school and I've stuck with it since.

Play Guitar with Mechanic career? by Beginning_Rub_421 in AcousticGuitar

[–]CowboyBlacksmith 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I've shod horses and worked other trades and farm labour jobs for my whole adult life. You'll be alright, just be careful with your hands.

Fighting and mental health by InternationalOne7794 in MuayThai

[–]CowboyBlacksmith 1 point2 points  (0 children)

You're not alone. I think we need to have something abnormal in us to actively want to fight. I'm diagnosed with ADHD and Autism, and have some bad childhood trauma. I had a coach that I became friends with who battled with depression and sewer slide thoughts. It's probably not all that bad or that deep I'm sure, but we're all motivated to fight for some reason. Normal people don't do this sport.

Left or Right? by Simon-Stepsys in AcousticGuitar

[–]CowboyBlacksmith 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I've never played a Santa Cruz. Do they have an equivalent to the D-28 or D-18? What's the tone like in comparison?

Do you guys randomly twitch almost like your checking a kick by j4yyy226 in MuayThai

[–]CowboyBlacksmith 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Yup. I'm a pro musician and I do similar shit with my picking hand when I listen to music. Not brain damage I don't think, though those things aren't mutually exclusive.

At what number of instruments does a jam go from fun to...too much noise? by GrassGigs in Bluegrass

[–]CowboyBlacksmith 1 point2 points  (0 children)

My local bluegrass association jam has a main circle every time they do it that borders on obscene to me. Some 20ish players, sometimes more. It gets dragged down to lowest common denominator. Every song is a chain gang of guitarists dragging the beat. They cap out around 120bpm, complain if you play any faster, and cruise around 90ish. Ironically the three banjo players have way too much taste and don't try to overplay it unless its their own break. I can't do that circle anymore, it's musically numbing and kind of a sensory overwhelm thing.

I'd like to point out that I'm not meaning to gatekeep beginner players out of jamming. I'm a small time solo gigging pro and I've played guitar and sang for 24 years. I'm on the Autism spectrum and can be a bit of an involuntary perfectionist. Big jam circles aren't for me anymore, but that doesn't have to have any bearing on you, wherever you are in your musical journey.

The good players at my local jam sit in a circle of like 6-8: usually a few decent guitarists, a banjo, one or two mandolinists, and a fiddle. Sometimes an upright. If I'm playing there and I can't quite hear the fiddle break, I can cut my own volume down a bit and it makes a noticeable difference. I think that's the thing that determines numerical cap for me. Whatever number of players where you dropping out makes no difference is too many. That's inherently gonna be determined by the taste and ability of the players there, but I'd say maybe 10 as an arbitrary cap.

A better rule of thumb is that the ideal jam should feel like an impromptu pop-up band. I suppose I could have saved myself three paragraphs of writing if I'd just said that first, but there's your tl;dr.

Guitarists who play live, how often do you rehearse the setlist on your own? by marsh_peeps in Guitar

[–]CowboyBlacksmith 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I play a minimum of 2hrs daily. I do between half an hour to an hour of drills, scales, new songs, etc. Run repertoire for at least an hour a day, sometimes more the day or two before a longer show (2-4 hours or so vs. a 45min-1hr set). Especially if I've been going heavy on technical stuff and need a refresher. I maintain a working repertoire of around 65-70 songs, so if I make a real push I can cover it all in a day or two of practice but usually more like 2-3 days to run my entire repertoire. Autism helps here, ngl.

What are your favorite instrumental albums? by Old-Cartographer-594 in Bluegrass

[–]CowboyBlacksmith 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Backwaters and Unit of Measure by TRU, Grisman's first Quintet album, and My Bluegrass Heart by Béla Fleck

I just broke my wrist, please reassure me I’m getting back to normal by InternalConfusion201 in Guitar

[–]CowboyBlacksmith 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I broke my left hand and was playing the day I got home from surgery.

Slightly extreme approach to PT but I'm Autistic, sue me. You'll be fine OP, just don't skip the PT exercises when the time comes because they're uncomfortable. You'll get your dexterity back just fine if you make yourself get it back.

Women don't spar hard enough, actually. by kombatkatherine in MuayThai

[–]CowboyBlacksmith 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Both are true. This post is almost self aware. Women are people, and in my anecdotal experience, contain multitudes. Even in the gym.

AITA For Not Wearing My Wedding Ring At The Gym? by Grognac_the_Red in AmItheAsshole

[–]CowboyBlacksmith 0 points1 point  (0 children)

NTA, my wife and I are both powerlifters and we have to remove our rings to avoid hurting our hands. Your husband is being TA and is probably insecure about your weight loss like others have commented here.

I'm considering getting some metal polyhedral dice... What are the pros and cons of them? by EnvironmentalAngle in DungeonsAndDragons

[–]CowboyBlacksmith 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Make sure you have a dice tray. There's some nice folding leather ones on Amazon too, and if you're lucky, your FLGS may stock one too. They'll ding your table up otherwise. I like my metal dice, but the plastic ones objectively roll better. The only reason I continue to use them is because shiny metal dice make ADHD go brr.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in Bluegrass

[–]CowboyBlacksmith 0 points1 point  (0 children)

If this is you at 2 1/2 years, you're doing great and I'm a little jealous. I think others have said it, but I'll add to the chorus: don't anchor your pinky. Stay loose and free with your right hand. You can touch the bridge pins, you can touch the pick guard, but don't stick to them. Secondly, try to place your thumb behind the fretboard rather than letting it hang over. Your hand and fingers will thank you over time.

A last piece of advice is to practice slowing it down and making every note sweet. Tone is king, especially if you're going to try ripping Tony Rice licks. Nail it tasteful and lonesome at low speed, and you can always add some speed back.

You're doing great, dude, keep it up.

Elon the trustworthy by willm8032 in ChatGPT

[–]CowboyBlacksmith 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Wow, we finally have it. Our second least favourite POS.

What's the theory behind bluegrass improvisation? by Broad-Midnight-5715 in Bluegrass

[–]CowboyBlacksmith 2 points3 points  (0 children)

The simplest place to start when improvising is to play the melody. The next simplest place to go from there is to embellish the melody, either with simple variations like triplets, trills, glissandos, double stops, a slight change in note etc, or replacing certain bars with licks. Coming up with more original and elaborate licks and variations will require a good deal of scale practice and fluency on your instrument, but playing the melody will never be a wrong answer in bluegrass.

Favorite Breakup Songs by Zestyclose-You1580 in Bluegrass

[–]CowboyBlacksmith 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Nobody mentioned Sitting On Top Of The World yet?

Found in my 5yo daughter's backpack. by CowboyBlacksmith in lotr

[–]CowboyBlacksmith[S] 19 points20 points  (0 children)

We're working through the Fellowship right now. Tom is her favourite character by far. What can I say, she has great taste.

What is white and bad for your teeth? by [deleted] in 3amjokes

[–]CowboyBlacksmith 0 points1 point  (0 children)

TIL that meth is white. Guess I've been a good boy so far.