Guitar Zero Quotes
Guitar Zero: The New Musician and the Science of Learning
by
Gary F. Marcus2,202 ratings, 3.64 average rating, 269 reviews
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Guitar Zero Quotes
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“The psychologist Abraham Maslow famously suggested that after we take care of our most basic needs, such as food, shelter, and sex, we eventually strive for “ self-actualization,” or the realization of our full potential; in his words, “[Even if all our other] needs are satisfied, we may still often (if not always) expect that a new discontent and restlessness will soon develop, unless the individual is doing what he [or she] is fitted for. A musician must make music, an artist must paint, a poet must write. What a [person] can be, he [or she] must be.”
― Guitar Zero: The Science of Becoming Musical at Any Age
― Guitar Zero: The Science of Becoming Musical at Any Age
“Our sense of a composition largely inheres in how we feel about the individual parts; narrative arcs are almost always essential in drama but (unless there are lyrics involved) often less essential in music. All of this is, I suspect, again symptomatic of human memory limitations. We live, to a remarkable degree, in the present; what happened thirty seconds ago is already rapidly fading from our memory (or at least rapidly becomes harder for us to retrieve).”
― Guitar Zero
― Guitar Zero
“Sometimes guitar riffs get repeated over and over ("vamping," in the lingo of musicians), but generally there is a soloist proving variation that runs above that background, lest the song sound monotonous. Philip Glass's minimalist compositions (such as the soundtrack to 'Koyaanisqatsi') deviate from much of the classical music that preceded them, with much less obvious movement than, say, the Romantic-era compositions that his work seems to rebel against, yet his works, too, consist not only of extensive repetition but also of constant (though subtle) variation. Virtually every song you've ever heard consists of exactly that: themes that recur over and over, overlaid with variations.”
― Guitar Zero: The New Musician and the Science of Learning
― Guitar Zero: The New Musician and the Science of Learning
“Repetition sometimes works in poetry, but rarely in prose. The musical provocateur John Cage once wrote a lecture in which a single page was repeated fourteen times, with the refrain "If anybody is sleep let him go to sleep" (Cage, 1961). Midway through, the artist Jean Reynal stood up and screamed, "John, I dearly love you, but I can't bear another minute.”
― Guitar Zero: The New Musician and the Science of Learning
― Guitar Zero: The New Musician and the Science of Learning
“But nobody is born being able to hear [intervals], and many people never master them. Some people never even notice that "Twinkle, Twinkle, Little Star" and "The Alphabet Song" follow the same melody (and hence consist of the same sequence of intervals).”
― Guitar Zero: The New Musician and the Science of Learning
― Guitar Zero: The New Musician and the Science of Learning
“Memory, perception, coordination, strength: guitar is just plain hard.”
― Guitar Zero: The Science of Becoming Musical at Any Age
― Guitar Zero: The Science of Becoming Musical at Any Age
