On Minimalism Guitar Lifestyle (Just Music) 10 Steps

photo by Karynsig
spanish-guitar-by-karynsigIsn’t it great when you can just focus on guitar playing without distractions.

Distractions are not only caused by Internet, TV and the people around you, but also from having too much stuff.

Too much gear (fx, pedals, etc.) or even thinking about gear will distract you from playing. Too much recording stuff, mixers and outboard effects will distract you from creating.

The last few weeks I got rid of a lot of stuff I haven’t used in over a year. I sold and gave away: Pickups, multi-effects, wires and pedals. I’m also busy scanning the tablature from my guitar magazines and books I will intend to use. The magazines and books will go away. It is great to know what you have and use what you need. I feel liberated.

I don’t say you need to lose every lovely piece of gear you have, but try keeping it to a minimum. Keep it simple. Get rid of what you don’t use. It makes life easier. It will give you piece of mind so there is only the music left to focus on whether you perform, compose, record or practice.

Wouldn’t it be great to simplify every aspect of guitar playing and feel free.

Having less gear also means you don’t have to worry about:

- maintaining your gear.
- carrying your gear.
- reading boring manuals.
- broken gear of parts.
- repairing your gear.
- wire problems or empty batteries.
- designing presets.
- losing presets.
- forgetting to bring certain gear with you to a gig.
- storage space (at home, on stage, in the studio).

Here are some useful steps to become a minimalist guitarist:

1 – Simplify gear. Get rid of gear you haven’t used for over a year (amps, cabinets, pedals, multi-effects, preamps, etc.), unless you are absolutely sure you are going to use it anytime soon.

2 – Less guitars. Get rid of guitars you never use. Sell them on E-bay or give it to someone who can really use it. Surprise a good friend or family member.

3 – Upload guitar magazines and tablature books. Scan all the good articles or tabs into your computer or laptop and give the magazines to someone else. Upload your tabs on Google Docs so you can reach them from anywhere you like.

4 – Minimal recording gear. Keep your recording gear as minimal as possible. Use a laptop, a sequencer and a small interface. Be effective and efficient. Be mobile.

5 – Keep recordings simple. Recording is about creating. Record a song in the least possible takes. Be the best you can be. Go for authenticity. Don’t lose yourself in editing. Keep your recordings as pure and live as possible.

6 – Get rid of rusty wires, worn picks & strings, anything useless and broken.

7 – Minimize your overall setup. Take the least possible guitars and equipment with you as possible wherever you are, wherever you go. Set yourself free at home and on stage.

8 – Essential guitar practice. Focus your guitar practice on what is necessary. Learn what you need to learn. Don’t goof around. When you practice you practice. Concentrate, play and breathe.

9 – Online music storage. For the advanced minimalist: Rip your CDs, save them on your laptop and Ipod. Give your CDs to music lovers. Save your music on an online storage www.Adrive.com so you can access your music from anywhere.

10 – Buy less. Love the minimal guitar lifestyle. Play and create.
When you buying something new, get rid of something else.

I appreciate your comments on this post. Thanx in advance.
Klaus Tol

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4 Responses to “On Minimalism Guitar Lifestyle (Just Music) 10 Steps”

  • Kevin Lucas:

    Klaus,

    Simplicity is a great thing when it comes to guitar playing and the lifestyle that comes with it.

    Thanks for the inspiration! I will be back reading your posts.

    Kevin Lucas

  • Hi Kevin,

    Thanx for your support.

    Keeping things simple has given me more time to play, practice and compose.
    It makes sure I don’t waste my time on things that don’t really matter.

    Back to basics.

    Kind regards,
    Klaus Tol

  • Klaus,

    Nice article :) Less is still more!
    I’m thinking you are right!

  • Hi Sebastian,

    Less stuff means more space and more time.

    Thanks for reading the post.

    Klaus Tol

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