I guess that makes two of us.
By show it easily, you mean go to the trouble of setting aside some time to record myself playing some piece that meets your particular standards. Time I could spend doing something I would actually enjoy more. Time I could spend working on something more important to me, or something that I actually need to do.
I say I can’t be bothered because I’m not bothered.
Nor do I believe you to be a dummy.
That’s not my position at all. I absolutely believe in innate, natural variation which manifests as differences in performance across every activity. I also believe that most people are absolutely terrible at accurately judging their own particular advantages or disadvantages. Some mistakenly believe that literally nothing is beyond them to their own detriment, and that accomplishing wild goals is their destiny, something they are entitled to only because of how badly they want it. Others with high potential believe they can achieve far less than they could.
All I’m saying is, keep an open mind and keep trying. Whoever you are, whatever your potential, the moment you stop trying, the moment you close your mind to the possibilities of what you might achieve, you deny yourself any chance you had of succeeding, however slim that chance may have been. Unlikely events happen all the time. People win lotteries. It could be you.
It’s honestly a fascinating subject in it’s own right, but it’s not related to fast guitar playing.
I never said there wasn’t. I even said that I felt Jason had a high degree of natural dexterity and a strong intuition for the guitar. I said I don’t believe any claims about freakish nervous systems, which I don’t.
No, you’ve posted a few scientific texts which suggest correlations which are still largely unexplained. You’ve recognized a coincidence between what they suggest and one particular example, namely Jason Becker’s guitar playing and his present condition. You’ve then taken the suggested correlation as evidence that there is a direct, causal link between Jason’s extreme playing and his present condition.
Correlation is not causation, nor is it evidence of such.
This guy. This guy gets it.
Correction taken. Very special people indeed.
Your story is exactly in line with the point I was trying to make.
That wasn’t my intention at all. I’ve just noticed a fairly common theme of “us and them” or “normal people” vs “special people” on guitar forums in the past, including here. I think it’s a dangerous mindset to start falling into, and I felt it made sense to discuss those feelings here. If I’ve derailed your thread from it’s intended topic, I’m happy to bow out and let you get the discussion back on it’s intended track.