Joe Pass reportedly practiced 6 hours per day.
Also to know is, are Joe Satriani and Steve Vai friends?
Satriani was Vai’s first guitar teacher and, as he confirms in the interview below, musical as well as personal mentor during their teen years. Satch and Steve remain close friends, and continue to hang out together whenever their schedules allow it.
Hereof, can Joe Satriani read music? I can read music, but I’m not a great sight reader. I studied music theory when I was in highschool so I had to learn how to read music. When I was a younger kid, 9 years old, I learned how to read drums, that was my first instrument for a coupe of years. “I can’t read like Steve Vai, he’s a reading monster.
Simply so, how do you play guitar like Joe Satriani?
How good of a guitarist is Joe Satriani?
Dallas Observer’s Darryl Smyers reports: JOE SATRIANI is considered by many to be one of the best guitar players in the world. Although excluded from Rolling Stone’s list of the top 100 guitar players of all time, Satriani has taught such legendary string benders as STEVE VAI and METALLICA’s Kirk Hammett.
How many hours does John Frusciante practice guitar?
Frusciante has gone on record saying that in his early days he practiced 12-15 hours a day every day.
How many hours of practice does it take to get good at guitar?
The More You Practice, The Faster You’ll Learn Guitar
He cites a study by Anders Ericsson, drawing the conclusion that you need 10,000 hours of practice at something before you become great at it.
How much did Joe Pass practice?
That’s a great interview with Joe Pass. The part where he said he practiced 7 – 8 hours a day from the time he was 8 or 9 years old until he was 14 or 15 is just incredible. How could a little kid sit still for that many hours every day?
What scale does Satriani use?
Satriani chooses E Lydian, E Aeolian, E Lydian, and E Mixolydian as the modes to use for each chord. The First chord, EΔ13, contains the 1st, 2nd, 6th, and 7th degrees of the E major scale.
Who is better Satriani or Vai?
And he looks a bit like an alien. But while Vai occupies a more holier-than-thou plane of existence, Satriani’s is an altogether more welcoming, groovy show – mixing enigmatic mystique with friendly rock’n’roll fun. You admire Vai, you enjoy Satriani. For that, he has to be the winner.