People sometimes as me what my practice regiment is. They are always surprised when I say "creating and producing music."
Each week, I will pick 1 or 2 songs - that i would like to learn - and ask my drummer chum to lay down the drum tracks for me on MP3. I will then totally reconstruct that song from nothing more than just a drum track...guitars, bass, vocals and all, here in my humble studio.
I believe this keeps my guitar skills sharp, because I am really critiquing tone and technique, its expands my vocabulary of learned material and hones my skills as an engineer and producer - all at the same time.
At least once a day - usually right after my wife leaves for the office, I will knock out 1 hour of playing complete songs at stage volume - that's between 4 and 5 knob position on my DSL40C and I can tell you it is crazy loud.
I believe this keeps my ear sharp for how I sound during a live performance and how my equipment handles/performs at high volumes.
I often experiment with how the guitar and wireless system (Thanks Don O!) behave in different proximities to each other, to lighting, PC's, cell phones, and practice squeal control techniques when those issues are encounteted. I also practice transitioning from the wireless system to a backup cable in the event of a failure.
Just before a string change, I will snip either the 'b' or 'e' string and play entire songs/solos from our setlist with a missing string. I will sometimes play with the back of my index fingernail in response to a dropped pick with no immediate replacement available.
What's your practice regiment???
Each week, I will pick 1 or 2 songs - that i would like to learn - and ask my drummer chum to lay down the drum tracks for me on MP3. I will then totally reconstruct that song from nothing more than just a drum track...guitars, bass, vocals and all, here in my humble studio.
I believe this keeps my guitar skills sharp, because I am really critiquing tone and technique, its expands my vocabulary of learned material and hones my skills as an engineer and producer - all at the same time.
At least once a day - usually right after my wife leaves for the office, I will knock out 1 hour of playing complete songs at stage volume - that's between 4 and 5 knob position on my DSL40C and I can tell you it is crazy loud.
I believe this keeps my ear sharp for how I sound during a live performance and how my equipment handles/performs at high volumes.
I often experiment with how the guitar and wireless system (Thanks Don O!) behave in different proximities to each other, to lighting, PC's, cell phones, and practice squeal control techniques when those issues are encounteted. I also practice transitioning from the wireless system to a backup cable in the event of a failure.
Just before a string change, I will snip either the 'b' or 'e' string and play entire songs/solos from our setlist with a missing string. I will sometimes play with the back of my index fingernail in response to a dropped pick with no immediate replacement available.
What's your practice regiment???

