Charlie Hunter Podcast Episode 11: The Jim Campilongo Conversation
Charlie Hunter Podcast Episode 11: The Jim Campilongo Conversation
http://comparedtowhatpodcast.com/episode-11-the-jim-capmilongo-conversation/
http://comparedtowhatpodcast.com/episode-11-the-jim-capmilongo-conversation/

Comments
Charlie's reaction while you're playing "Minute Waltz" is priceless! haha
By the way, I am sure a lesson of your arrangement of "Minute Waltz" would be awesome! Please consider it if possible.
Rogerio
I need to do something. I'm 37 and I've been playing for 20 years. I'm ok, but I feel like if I don't make a push soon I'll never get to where I want to be musically. It seems like most good guitarists were good by the time they were 30.
Here's my take on practice...
This can be over 2 hours a day or 8 hours.
1.) “Breakfast” .... WARM UP with arpeggios and scales. Always try to have exercises in a musical context so apply the arpeggios and scales to a song(progression) “All the Things You Are” “Tennessee Waltz”, “Sleepwalk” etc. Tempo and meter aren’t important . Playing over a song progression will keep you from playing what you already know. This will “test” you. Apply scales to a song as well - (Major - Natural - Harmonic-Melodic Minor) Play all your scales in thirds.Always try to have small intervallic jumps , whether it be between chord voicings or scales.
2.) “Lunch” .....Learn a song and memorize the melody (otherwise you don’t really know the song!) Understand the chord progression and memorize it. Transpose it too.
3.) “Dinner” ....... Make a tape of the songs progression on a boombox or something that isn’t time consuming. Don’t get caught up in “production”. Play the melody and solo over the changes. Sometimes I try to apply a different approach to every chorus - Octaves -Chord Melody-Steel Guitar-James Burton plays Jazz- etc. etc. . When you memorize the song, put it on a list of songs you know.Run through that list every few days so you don’t forget them.
4.) “Dessert” ....Just play and improvise. Try and write something. Mess with your tone. Play Blues in E -Whatever! Sometimes I transcribe solo’s instead of learning songs but I try to keep my practicing and focus song/goal oriented. This is for two reasons:
A musician should/has to know a lot of songs! AND this give me a musical framework that challenges me.
What a trip reading it after not seeing it for ten years.