Tag: unrealistic goal

Johnny Limón and the Southern Cyclones

Johnny Limón and the Southern Cyclones

A tried and true method to land easy laughs is to keep in mind the phrase “that’s a great band name.” That phrase, deployed any time an unusual or silly phrase comes up, usually delivers the goods.

With that in mind, I submit the band name Johnny Limón and the Southern Cyclones. No, I didn’t come up with the name because I want to start a Bossa Nova band. Or because I went to ancestry.com and discovered I’m Latin instead of Irish. (Someone as pale as me could never be Latin without some serious pigment mutations.)

I just started with cyclone and worked backwards. As for Limón?   Limón = Lemon, chosen because it rhymes with cyclone.

And why southern cyclone? Because southern cyclones spin clockwise, while northern ones spin counter-clockwise. Thus ends my interminably long article exposition, 100+ words of setting up why I’m writing this: my guitar pick spins clockwise in my hand when I play.

Apologies to the SEO gods. If SEO were a religion, an incredibly long and boring exposition like the one above would earn me a very harsh penance indeed. (Several hours of listening to Nickelback, for example.)

Anyway, why am I writing this again? Oh yeah, because that infuriating item known as a guitar pick keeps spinning in my hand when I try to play guitar. And it spins clockwise, which adds to my annoyance, as it forces me to add the adjective of “southern” to my article title.

Why is this happening? In my ongoing on-again/off-again, will-they/won’t-they relationship with guitar, I don’t remember having a problem with the pick rotating in my fingers while I’m playing a song. I’m not sure why it’s happening, but it’s very distracting and annoying.

And I don’t know about you, but I get very annoyed when I have to deal with things that are very annoying.

So what’s a man to do in this situation? Go to google, obviously. Turns out I’m not alone in combating the cyclone effect. There are many DIY (that’s Do It Yourself for the acronymically challenged) videos to address this issue, including one where a man augmented his pick with a drill press. I think I’ll avoid doing something that’s likely to end with me losing a body part.

Instead, I’ll do what white-collar workers do best and buy something to fix my problems. Enter Star Picks and Monster Grips. (“Wow, what a great band name!” See how easy it is to use that phrase?)

star pickmonster grip

Both of these items are cheap ways to combat cyclone fingers, and more importantly, involve no labor on my part. Like I said, I’m an accountant. Excel does all my labor.

The holes in the star picks are supposed to prevent spinning be allowing some finger flesh to fill the hole, which anchors the pick. The Monster Grips have some adhesive on them. They add some stickiness to the pick, which also should prevent it from spinning. Yay physics!

I look forward to seeing if these products can solve my problem. Let this article be entered into the record so that if I become a famous guitarist I can get an endorsement deal.

If these don’t work, I’m sure I can employ the American Way and buy something else to solve my problems. But if nothing else works I can just become one of these guitarists who give it the finger.

Jonathan Lemon Is Ax’ing You a Question

Jonathan Lemon Is Ax’ing You a Question

New Yawkers are known to ax questions. I’ve got an ax question of my own: at what point does someone become a master ax man?

It might provide some helpful context to describe that the ax in question is the guitar, not an actual ax.

Ax to Grind

This is the maiden article of another unrealistic goal of mine: to be a master ax man.

This goal has been on-again, off-again since I was about 14. I know the main chords that are used for the rhythm of 90% of all popular songs. So I could play at campfires, barbecues, etc…if I got an invite to one, brought a guitar, was asked to play, and knew any songs.

That’s my main problem. When I practice, I usually noodle around. I’ve historically lacked disciplined to learn and actually memorize songs.

Proof that I Own Guitar Stuff

On the awesome side, there’s never been a better age for amateur guitar enthusiasts. Gear quality, options, access, and prices have never been better. For a couple hundred bucks someone can put together a sophisticated-looking rig, start tossing around $10 words like “rig” and “boosted mids,” and look like someone who might know what he’s doing.

Also, music stuff has an active secondary market (read: used instruments) where you can get great deals if you know what you’re looking for. I have no data on this, but I’d be willing to bet “learning to play guitar” is second on the list of most-broken New Year’s Resolutions behind losing weight/going to the gym more. Whatever the reason, resolution breakage has worked out great for me.

Here’s my current set-up for proof that I’m entitled to use $10 words like a poser:

jonathan lemon guitar
PRS SE Custom 22 Semi-Hollow Body Guitar. There is a discrepancy between how good the guitar looks and how good I play.
jonathan lemon guitar amp
Marshall MG15CD 15 Watt Combo Amp. You don’t need a huge amp with my monster guitar tone! (Told you I’m a poser.)
jonathan lemon guitar effects
Digitech RP-355 MultiFX processor. They don’t make these anymore…so that qualifies this as vintage!

Hit List

I’ve taken a new approach in this guitar go-round. Rather than messing around with random chord progressions or trying to turn scales into music, I’m just going to learn songs. “Learning to play songs” is what I really meant when I told myself in the past that I wanted to “learn to play guitar.”

It’s time I focused on this distinction.

I’m starting to think that playing songs is just a better approach to learning anyway. It’s more fun and is a practical way to approach musical elements such as keys and rhythm. And let’s face it: when you tell people you play guitar, everyone’s first follow up question is “What songs do you know?” For a long time my answer was “None…but do you want to hear these random chords I put together?”

As such, I’ve put together my first list of hit songs to learn. Here are my first 5 targets:

  1. Cherry Cherry — Neil Diamond
  2. Eleanor Rigby – The Beatles
  3. Next to You — The Police
  4. JAR — Green Day
  5. Just What I Needed – The Cars

These songs are all very straightforward and I can play them all right away (sans solos)…as soon as I memorize them  🙂

Squirrel!

Another problem I’ve encountered historically when trying to learn songs is getting distracted by new songs. I’ll hear a song I like on the radio, or remember a riff I like, etc. At that point I’ll abandon a half-learned song for the new song, and around and around it goes. That’s a pattern for a lot of unlearned songs.

So I resolve to not touch any other songs until the first batch is done. My resolutions are usually like everyone else’s: they don’t have the best track record. But it’s different this time, I swear!

Finally, after I’m done with the 5 songs above I’m going to move on to… haha, nice try brain! Read the above sentence again.