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Breathing [was: sounding relaxed]


 

Breathing like a horn player is fine as is phrasing like one. But the best
advice I ever recieved was from John McLaughlin after a Shakti concert back in
78-79. I would stop breathing or take short breaths ( I wasn't even aware at
the time), it would deplete my Oxygen so that I would get shaky and choppy in my
lines. Partly from being scared and worrying about my chops partly from not
breathing. I ask John about it and what he did, he told me first when I was
scared to physically tell my self, arms, wrist whatever to relax outloud...
Giving a verbal command actually the body responds to, it was amazing. The second
was to learn how to do more of a yogic breathing style, what now I refer to
Taoist breathing techniques. He simply said to take full, slow breaths... this
immediately had effects on my phrasing, the Oxygen content of my blood flow
etc... He also said to hold the pick very lightly and not hard.

Jim Blackthorne...


 

John M, said a lot of other good things, but don't want to get into it here.
A lot of you guys are down on his playing, and he has always been one of my
many heroes...


 

I have recently noticed that I don't control my breathing while
playing, and I end up either with no air at all (I stop breathing) or
I inhale panically and coincidently and that kiks me out of my
playing. The reason I ask this is that I have heard so many players
taking breath just before a phrase. How can I learn this? Are there
any exercises?


Ron Murray
 

on 10/2/05 11:42 AM, Jazzguitar5@... at Jazzguitar5@... wrote:

John M, said a lot of other good things, but don't want to get into it here.
A lot of you guys are down on his playing, and he has always been one of my
many heroes...

A lot who are down on his playing are pretty foolish, I'd say.


Chris Smart
 

Yep, it almost feels counterintuitive to relax to play faster, but everybody says that's the key. I still tense up.

Interesting about the breathing. If you want, try breathing in slowly for two bars, out for three bars maybe, depending of course on the speed of the tune. :) Yoga practitioners often do the four-fold breath: breath in for a slow count of four, hold for four, breath out for eight. or some version of the same, in for four, out for eight, hold for four ...
I haven't tried it, but if you did this at half the speed of the music you were playing, it should synchronize nicely as long as you're playing something in 4/4.

About tensing up: If any of you have never had a professional massage done, yes, professional! *wink*, do it. I thought I wouldn't be able to even relax enough to benefit, but after three times now, I can definitely say it helped me realize what "totally relaxed" is supposed to feel like, albeit a bit sore too. So much of my tension is unconscious it's bizarre.

But, yogis would say the same thing about breathing: most of us do it too little, too shalow, etc.

Chris


Chris Smart
 

At 11:42 AM 10/2/2005, you wrote:
John M, said a lot of other good things, but don't want to get into it here.
A lot of you guys are down on his playing, and he has always been one of my
many heroes...
I for one am interested, even though he isn't one of my favorites to listen to. He obviously has figured out how to get what's in his head and heart out through his instrument, which is the whole point, right?

Chris