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Isn't it hard composing music for 3 guitars? |
If you want to focus on the live performance then my personal preference is this: If you're the main vocalist give up the guitar and focus on singing. My personal thought is that a singer that can run around with a mic in hand going from one end of the stage to the other and somone that is just mobile can bring more energy to the stage than somone stuck behind a mic stand with a guitar. Don't get me wrong, I've seen it done, just the majority of the time it's better when the singer can be mobile. Also since you're just now learning you would be so focused on getting chords right you would probably look awkward standing behind the stand staring at the neck of the guitar. That is painful to watch...
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Thank you all for the advice. |
If you do have a singer who only has a mic in his hand he better be a badass and full of energy. Otherwise it's just a waste.
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Then I'm better off with a guitar, singing or not. I'm mellow, and wouldn't bring much energy to a stage singing alone.
An additional question: How hard is it to sing while drumming? |
Depends on if you're wanting a simple beat for drums or some insane playing.
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make the drummer learn jazz and heavy metal drums
make the basist learn jazz and classical bass and you urself learn blues and rock guitar...possibly jazz why jazz so much? cuz good jazz players are friggin gnar good rock players are typically....eh..... and for bass...he's gotta know some classical stuff. i mean...lookit the bassist for The Who! |
Or, you could practice until you become solid at everything so you can acctually be a good player. Jazz, metal, blues and rock aren't the only genres there is, so don't limit yourself.
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