Nice tutorial man. One day maybe I'll pick one up. If anyone is interested check out krappy guitars. Nowhere near as good as a stick but an awesome starting place at about half the price or less. Also check out Kevin Keith. Awesome stick player.
@7deepbreaths-I'm a guitar player, have tried stick and believe me, if you want to play stick material, you better get a stick-they are quite different. If you develop arranging skills, you can rearrange music from any instrument/s for guitar, but it will not be the same. If you want to do polyphonic tapping, though, guitar is well suited. Ergonomically, it helps to borrow Emmett's approach, and get the neck as close to vertical as possible. Check out John Stowell's playing position.
What I have done to learn poly-rhythms is create a pair of click tracks with the free program audacity, one with tempo 90 bpm, other 120 bpm. That has really helped me.
Nice tutorial man. One day maybe I'll pick one up. If anyone is interested check out krappy guitars. Nowhere near as good as a stick but an awesome starting place at about half the price or less. Also check out Kevin Keith. Awesome stick player.
hueseph 6 months ago
Dude, you are GOOD. I can't even play poly-rhythms by stomping my feet.
lateralpazwalk 9 months ago
A lot of compression on this no?
mootbooxle 1 year ago
Hey friend, I'm (hopefully) getting close to my chapman stick purchasing phase, and I'm investigating pickup tone. Which one are you using?
varnonzero 1 year ago
That was good
Isinthas6744 1 year ago
can anyone tell me how much it costs a chapman stick???
i play electric guitar, but that... that is awesom.
you are very good men
xxXadiraelbloodXxx 1 year ago
@7deepbreaths-I'm a guitar player, have tried stick and believe me, if you want to play stick material, you better get a stick-they are quite different. If you develop arranging skills, you can rearrange music from any instrument/s for guitar, but it will not be the same. If you want to do polyphonic tapping, though, guitar is well suited. Ergonomically, it helps to borrow Emmett's approach, and get the neck as close to vertical as possible. Check out John Stowell's playing position.
Gregorypeckory 1 year ago
You must have two brains...
Bugside 1 year ago 2
nice!
enterthetoucan 2 years ago
What I have done to learn poly-rhythms is create a pair of click tracks with the free program audacity, one with tempo 90 bpm, other 120 bpm. That has really helped me.
mineralandrollcello 2 years ago