1. Anyone know how to get a midi or wav or mp3 version of the Dwarf Fortress in game song?
2. What are the chances I will crash and burn, (audiences scare me )
3. How do you think I may do if I try this year
4. My guitar? (It was the best deal I could find)
5. ... think left handers are better at playing the guitar
6. Think I'm going to do it?
1. Answered
2. Public performance anxiety is hell on guitarists, because they rely on accurate and steady fingers that do what they're supposed to when they're supposed to. And slipping up tends to make you even more nervous, which makes your hands shake even more, and the spiral just continues downwards in a lovely little fashion.
Playing an instrument and performing onstage are two entirely different things. If you haven't done many public performances before, I'd have to be honest and say that chances of slipping up on the music are actually kinda high.
But if you make it with the crowd or not depends on how you deal with those mistakes. If you just try and rush through the thing to get it over with, or if you act ashamed of the faulty parts, things won't go all that well. However, if you keep a confident bearing (damn hard, I know, but it's still possible even if you're scared shitless) and make the
most of your mistakes, you'd be surprised how well that works out.
The audience likes to agree with whoever is on the stage. If you aren't into the music, neither are they. If you feel like you're screwing it up, they'll be thinking the same thing. If you're just chilling out and having fun, they'll follow along.
3. Honestly? I think you'd do quite well. If you've gotten that far on the DF song in such a short time, you've got talent. You can handle it. And the only way to get better at a stage performance is to perform on the stage... Practicing on your instrument won't actually help you that much when you're in the limelight.
4. Looks fine to me. I've got no experience with the brand, but it looks like a pretty standard beginner/relaxation guitar (every now and then I like playing a nylon-string just because it's
so damned easy). Unless there's a massive crack in it somewhere, I think you're good.
5. Debatable. As with any other lefty-righty thing. The left hand is supposed to be more closely connected to the right brain hemisphere, which controls creativity. Your left-handedness could then possibly be linked to a more highly-developed right hemisphere, meaning an increase in creativity. But that would likely apply itself mostly to coming up with new and interesting tunes rather than learning a tune that already exists. Right-handed left-brainers might have an easier time locking in the pattern involved in playing a song, as well as understanding the mathematical relations underlying the tones themselves.
If you're thinking about Jimi Hendrix, take a moment to think about how many famous right-handed guitarists you know of. Now think of how many famous left-handed guitarists you know of. Just because Hendrix was a god doesn't mean it was due to his left-handedness, as there would most likely be a hell of a lot more famous southpaw guitarists out there if it was.
6. Damn well hope so.