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VIEW FULL LIVE VERSION : do you warm up before you play?
Just out of curiosity, how many of us actually warms up before practising/gigging? Stretching
fingers, playing scales, string skipping, etc...
What sort of warm up do you do?
john turner 08-24-2002, 10:48 AM if you don't warm up before you play you run the risk of injury. furthermore, your first few songs will be your "warm up" and the performance will suffer accordingly.
l0calh05t 08-24-2002, 10:51 AM in a way i warm up before practicing: I play the easy songs first, but if planning to play something complex first I warm up... alot: string skipping, chromatics etc.
I always warm up, with an emphasis on careful stretching. Then some 1-2-3-4 exercises and arpeggios, and some stretched fingering (5 frets) exercises.
jaybo 08-24-2002, 11:10 AM On electric bass I warm up for a few minutes. I do scales up and down using all fingers starting slow and speeding up. I do them without stopping until I can start to 'feel it' then I stop a little and do it again. I usually don't warm up at all for practicing.
On double bass it's essential to warm up anytime you plan on attempting to play any kind of real music so I always warm up there.
melvin 08-24-2002, 11:32 AM I always do. I usually start out with a chromatic scale and playing scales with different intervallic variations then I play a couple of exercises that are in a book I have
BrettAM 08-24-2002, 11:46 AM Oui.
stephanie 08-24-2002, 03:13 PM Everytime!
Before I begin my practicing day, after tuning up, I always shake my hands out (gets the acid flowing...I keep forgetting what it's called). Then I play some scales. I was playing through the cycle of 5ths, 2 octaves up and down, but now I've changed to modes, still going through the cycle of 5ths, but I'll do 1 or 2 scales a day, going through all the modes of that scale. It gets my fingers working and my teacher long ago suggested this to warm up b/c I was always coming into lessons with cold hands and he told me I should go through the scales right before I leave for my lesson. So it's become a habit.
JT is right. If you don't warm up you are risking injury. I used to take dancing classes when I was little and it was crucial to warm-up. I mean, it only makes sense, right? You don't go running or play sports without stretching first, right?
savagelucy 08-24-2002, 03:17 PM sometimes i do 10 or so push-ups before playing, if my hands are cold, i guess it gets the blood flowing, or something. :D
but actually playing a do string skipping and stretch exercise, so my fingers are nice and limber.;)
Son of Spam 08-24-2002, 05:47 PM If I'm gigging, I will usually warm up at home/backstage where no one can see me, with the amp on low. I play a fretless, and have found it helps my tone, and precision if I warm up like most brass/reed instruments do, with long slow notes. Than I'll run through a few scales/arpeggios/chromatics and melodies of the songs we're doing that night.
Right before the show, (when most of my band is warming up, and there are people present) I might do chromatic scales, but its mostly for show and to psych myself out (I still get nervous before gigs, so I have to be constantly doing something.)
I SHOULD warm up. I think I'll start doing push ups and shaking the hands, that seems like a good idea.
I remember last practice I was at I guess I played for too long and my hand started hurting. However, the practice was more important, so when practice was over, I couldn't really move my hand without it hurting and some muscle in my arm swelled up real bad. It hurt and took 2 weeks to recover. I was pissed.
YoVicta 08-24-2002, 09:58 PM When I warm up, I usually do some scales, slap/pop octaves and different types of spider drills.
Sanger 08-24-2002, 10:46 PM To me warming up is on the literal level - I warm up my hands if they're cold, or I can't move them round the fretboard or pluck the strings nearly as fast as when they're warm. I also just play around the board a few times, just to see what kind of volume I have and make sure I'm plugged in....you may laugh, but it's saved me embarassment on more than one occasion :D
PollyBass 08-24-2002, 10:57 PM Yep, if i'm on a gig. at home, not really, don't need to.
funk_engineer 08-24-2002, 11:06 PM Yeah, I usually start with something slow, perhaps scales and fingering exercises. When I play horns I'm a tone junkie so I spend a lot of time to make sure I get the sound I want, so I'm used to it. If the room's cool at all, my hands just get stiff, so I have to anyway.
luisnovelo 08-25-2002, 02:00 AM Yes, of course. Next question please..
(that was an easy one ):)
vegaas 08-28-2002, 09:27 AM I always warm up with some scales, then I'll just start adding speed and feel.
I have a acquired a habit of washing my hands just before I play as well. It makes sense that the hot water would help me warm up and my fingers arent as slipery. It has also become a mental thing, when I forget to wash my hands right before I play, I seem play awfull.
Brad Johnson 08-28-2002, 09:51 AM I wash my hands and, time permitted, may play a little on the bass. I use a pretty light touch so even if I don't warm-up it hasn't been an issue. The main thing I try to do is get there early enough to relax before starting.
Jimbo 08-28-2002, 10:17 AM i do warm up before practicing with a band or on my own. and absolutely before any gig. i do so by playing thorugh some scales and increasing tempos. i also do a few dexterity exercises that i learned when i first started playing.
i think the most unique thing about my warming up is yoga. i go through some different routines before a gig somewhere backstage. you guys should really try it, freeing your mind and getting a good, even stretch throughout your body really improves my playing and keeps me at peace.
-jimbo
Roark Haver 08-28-2002, 02:11 PM As a drummer I warm up every time. I have to. If I hit the kit cold my time sucks, my feel sucks, my hands are tight, my ankles are tight, etc., etc.
I've taken the same habit to bass and it works for me. You would never see a horn player playing cold. You have to get your head into your instrument.
JT hit it right on the mark. If you don't, your first few songs will be your warm up, and they will sound like it.
Bassin' 08-29-2002, 08:19 AM The first song we typically do, in the band I'm in right now, is "Stir It Up" by Bob Marley and the Wailers. It's a real laid back type song that we've added a jam to the end of so it's pretty easy to warm up during the song.
EEbass04 09-04-2002, 10:56 PM you mean, sound check doesn't count?!;)
I just warm up naturally, I honestly don't think about it, I just do it. I pick up the bass, play something easy to get my hands into it to make stuff "easier" and I gradually work into harder stuff. Just the way my brains works, I don't have to tell myself to do it. Nothing specific I run over everytime, maybe just some song thats on my mind or some do-itty that was in my brain at school.
mans0n 09-08-2002, 12:44 PM I dont gig but do warmups kust for when i play alone at home
Nick man 09-14-2002, 11:41 AM I warm up by first by shaking and rubbing my hands to get the blood flowing, then going up and down the fretboard using all my fingers.
Usually I jam with the drummer before we start for fun, but it definetly helps me get ready for the actual songs since it gets my creative juices flowing, and I dont really play any set parts for most the parts, but rather just jam around the chords the guitarist are playing.
Peace
Nick
DigMe 09-14-2002, 12:06 PM Originally posted by vegaas
I have a acquired a habit of washing my hands just before I play as well. It makes sense that the hot water would help me warm up and my fingers arent as slipery. It has also become a mental thing, when I forget to wash my hands right before I play, I seem play awfull.
Otherwise known as "the obsessive/compulsive's warmup" :D
DigMe 09-14-2002, 12:08 PM I've found that for me warming up is especially crucial when I'm going to play some funky, grooving sixteenth note jams or something. I can play these for much longer if warmed up and if I don't I eventually just lose the groove...that's baaaaaad.
brad cook
Nick man 09-15-2002, 12:28 AM Oh I almost forgot.....
Though it really isnt a warmup, I take off my shoes and socks before I play.
Playing barefoot is a thing I must do. Im just more comfortable that way, and when we're on certain stages, I can really feel the bass and kick drums through the floor.
Peace
Nick
Originally posted by Nick man
Oh I almost forgot.....
Though it really isnt a warmup, I take off my shoes and socks before I play.
Playing barefoot is a thing I must do. Im just more comfortable that way, and when we're on certain stages, I can really feel the bass and kick drums through the floor.
Peace
Nick
I much prefer being barefoot myself, but I've gotten out of that habit...Played on a concrete floor once and I forgot and took my shoes off...ZAP!
I usually warm up at home by playing random songs three times...slow and stretching, half-speed, then normally...Before gigs, the guitarist and I do a mellow groovy jam or two.
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