Saw a brief clip of an interview with Steve Vai who, technically, is a brilliant guitarist. Can do just about everything on the guitar. Personally, I wouldn't pay 50 cents to see him perform as I don't like his music. But, he is a great player of the instrument.
In this interview, he said people ask him all the time about how he discovered he was a virtuoso on the guitar. Paraphrasing, he said he'd practice 9 hours a day as a kid for years - that's how you become a virtuoso.
Is he saying, in effect, with enough practice, anyone can be a virtuoso? In my definition, virtuosity goes beyond how mechanically good you are, which extraordinary technique can be learned with practice, imo. IMO, being a virtuoso involves an indefinable feel distinct from technique that can't be learned/practiced. There are 1000s of guitarists who can shred a million notes per second with impeccable technique but they aren't Steve Vai or Brian Setzer or Jeff Beck or other guitarists who posses that 'it' factor that separates them from other guitarists.
Is Vai correct that anyone can be a virtuoso with enough practice?
In this interview, he said people ask him all the time about how he discovered he was a virtuoso on the guitar. Paraphrasing, he said he'd practice 9 hours a day as a kid for years - that's how you become a virtuoso.
Is he saying, in effect, with enough practice, anyone can be a virtuoso? In my definition, virtuosity goes beyond how mechanically good you are, which extraordinary technique can be learned with practice, imo. IMO, being a virtuoso involves an indefinable feel distinct from technique that can't be learned/practiced. There are 1000s of guitarists who can shred a million notes per second with impeccable technique but they aren't Steve Vai or Brian Setzer or Jeff Beck or other guitarists who posses that 'it' factor that separates them from other guitarists.
Is Vai correct that anyone can be a virtuoso with enough practice?
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