Been chewing on this lately since I’ve made a concerted effort to play WITH songs instead of mindlessly noodling without context but playing with songs. Which is a LOT more fun but a lot harder. All of a sudden I need to play in time to not sound like a hack. That’s harder than it seems. I started off figuring this out when I was learning the solos to Tie Your Mother Down by Queen. Got decent at hacking away at it without any context, but then picking it up with the music or a metronome and I got lost completely.
Figuring this out again recently with a couple songs that seem simple until you try to play with the recording (for me at least): Monkey Man by the Stones and Roxanne. Why?
Monkey Man: Keith Richard’s plays like 5 or 6 variations on one fm the main riffs of the song, all using a slightly different play on the same groove. All of them I can do easily in isolation, most of them easily with the song, but a couple of them of them are deceptively hard for me to do and stay in the groove.
Roxanne is a simple song, but the part that trips me up is the loooong pauses between verses. Sting is pretty lazy with starting things off again with “Roooooooooxanne” and it’s a pain to learn how to time things to kick back in on time with Stewart, Andy, and Sting (bass). Slowly learning to ignore singer Sting and count off after the song pauses between verses. Same problem before the chorus switches to the Eddie Cochrane thing.
Playing songs is much harder than playing tablature.