Guitar Tabs | Updates | News | Reviews | Interviews | Columns | Lessons | Community | Forums | Contests | UG.TV | My Profile
Ultimate-Guitar.Com - Over 200,000 guitar, bass, guitar pro and power tabs. Guitar community.
Six Stringed - Destiny blog
Sign-in or register NOW!

oriolesazb

Subscribe!
Contacting oriolesazb
Send message Forward
Add to friends Favorites
Add to group Block user
Sunday, January 27, 2008

Six Stringed - Destiny

Views: 24
Comments: 1

I sit in my music room, looking at the symphony of instruments that lie before me.  I see the cheap violin that I played for four years, but gave up because I no longer felt like practicing.  I see the grand piano that I played for eight years but stopped playing for the same reason.  Then I look down at my lap, and I see my guitar, and I remember why I stopped playing those other instruments.  I begin to play a Pink Floyd tune and smile recognizing why this instrument even after all this time still feels new to me.
    I carry my guitar down the creaky backstairs of a Cockeysville music store.  A kind-faced, middle-aged man greets me at the door furthest from the stairs.  I walk into the dim room, take a seat, and take out my guitar.  The three of us, him, my guitar, and I, sit as he lectures me about guitar basics.  He shows me a G chord, and awkwardly I try to finger it like he does.  The sound my guitar voices is murky, yet shows promise.  He acknowledges in a subtle manner that I need to practice; I agree without question.  But, during the following week I play for hours, but never practice.  On the rare occasion I did practice, I would play so many wrong notes that the guitar seemed to be telling me, in a dissonant tone that I needed to do as my teacher said.  At the end of the next lesson I would hear the same command, but still not bother to practice as he told me to.  This was not out of rebellion or angst, but because I found infinite joy in hearing the repeated twang of a simple song I had learned.  I preferred to bask in it's puerile radiance for hours on end than practice what my teacher told me to.
    I carry my guitar out of my mother's car and up to Al's front door.  The guitar is heavy, so when the door opens, I rush inside to put it down.  We chat for several minutes, but quickly succumb to our desire to play the instruments that lie by our sides.  We plug into his amps, turn up the distortion, and drown out everything else. 
His mother calls to us, "Turn that noise down."
Al sarcastically answers, "Okay mom," closes the door, and turns up the amps.
Guitar is not the focal point of our friendship, but it is a very important piece.  I remember how when we first started playing we could barely blend at all.  But now, after all these years playing together in friendship, and in music, we rarely hit a wrong note.
    I come home exhausted from a day of school, track practice, and musical rehearsal.  I walk at a slow pace to the music room, sit down and pick up my guitar.  In this tired state, what I hear come through the amplifier is insignificant -- I focus more on organizing my consciousness so I may be able to do my homework later.  The notes I play are slow, randomly picked, and rarely keep a sense of rhythm.  The guitar seems to sing a tune about soldiering on.  As I play, my thoughts become murky, turning into a background fuzz, my song picks up tempo, and I begin to feel the emotion my guitar sings.  After several more minutes my guitar has persuaded me to get to work.  I get up from the black chair I was sitting in, get my backpack and start my homework.
    There are periods where I rarely touch my guitar for several weeks.  The guitar sits, on its stand, ready to be played, but is not called upon.  When I do pick it up after not having felt its embrace for several weeks, I am reunited.  Not with the smooth touch of the wood, or the firm, defiant nature of the strings, but with my soul.  The guitar hums golden notes that ring clear in my memory and in my heart.  At this moment, I realize that all this happiness and comfort are available whenever I want.  Not specifically no my guitar, but on any guitar, anywhere.
    She greets me at the door with a big smile and open arms.  We march down to her basement and sit in her lime green, almost too comfortable chairs.  I pick up her guitar and start to awkwardly strum some chords.
    "What song is that," she asks.
    "Something I wrote," I answer quietly, trying to play it cool.
    "Can you play it for me?"  She asks, now sitting right next to me.
    I can not deny her request and proceed to play and sing a song about unspoken affection.  The guitar seems to say the right things, for she is giggling with pleasure.  I take note of this, singing and playing with more confidence.
    "I wrote that song for you," I say after I finish, shaking everywhere but on the fretboard.
    "I like it," she answers smiling more broadly still.
    These are the last words we speak to eachother for five minutes, the guitar has made both of us dumb.  But, soon, I play again, and we are able to talk.
    I sit at my computer with two feet on the gray-carpeted floor and in my hands, an acoustic guitar.  Looking at the paper I have just written, I begin to play.  I hear a pleading music teacher asking me to practice, I feel intense bonds of friendship, I am rejuvenated after a hard day's work, I gaze into that girl's big blue eyes.  I am home again, where I can control the music I hear, the music of my life. 
     

11:17 am - 1 comments - 0 Kudos - Report!
Comments
Preid wrote on Jan 27th, 2008 11:35pm

This is wall that no one will climb, sorry.

quote

Post your comment
Expand

About

Help/FAQ

Terms of Use

Privacy Policy

RSS Feeds  

Site Map

Link To Us

Tell A Friend

Advertising Info

Job Opportunities

Contact Us

DMCA

Ultimate-Guitar.Com ©