I've never used a metronome. What do you use a metronome for ? Seriously ? I thought a click track was just something to make sure a recording does not vary in tempo, are there other uses ?
I have a somewhat "inner" approach to improvising. By that I mean that I don't think about anything other than the scale i'm in, and I play to what I feel. It helps a LOT to have an inspiring backing track to play over, but usually if I have a clear mind then it all tends to flow out quite nicely.
You have to be able to get around your instrument quite well to do this though, so if you can play within your scales while 99% focussing on something else then that should be ok.
So how does it work? Basically I just muck around staying in the scale and also deviating out to other stuff, until I find something that sounds good. It would help if I had better pitch and chord recognition, because then I would be able to replicate anything that pops into my head. Also work a new chord or scale into your improvisation so that you can test it out in a practical situation. You can also build colours or feelings to scales/chords ... which helps for me sometimes I guess.
In a nutshell, if you can feel what you want to play and your fingers automatically play the right stuff, then you're set. And don't try and learn improvisation from a book or video. Just don't. You have to search within yourself for the right notes, otherwise it won't be true improvisation but rather something pre-planned.
I really don't agree with the "don't learn from a book" mentallity. Learning from a book or video doesn't negate the idea of improvisation. There are bad books out there that just give you the whole "learn these exact licks and play them every time you see a dominant chord...." type things, but even then there is valuable information to be taken from them. Anyone who can improvise well started off by stealing someone else's ideas first and applying them to their own satisfaction until they stole enough licks from enough different players to develop their own style. Transcription is the better way of going about this obviously, but there are great books out there (i.e. the Hal Crook book I've already mentioned) that simply lay out concepts for the player/student to work on. The information is in a lot more focused of a format and if worked through as the author reccomends, it'll yield much quicker and more efficient progress than someone trying to figure these things out with no direction whatsoever.
As far as the preplanned vs. true improvisation, you can split hairs on that forever. If you know anything about the tune you are soloing on, then it's going to be preplanned to an extent. If you have a scale or any certain arpeggios in mind, then the solo is planned out to an even greater extent. Free jazz is the closest you'll get to "true" improvisation but even with that, there are many hairs to split.
*not trying to attack here, just offering a rebuttal
Well I do agree with that also since its probably quite a borderline topic. I just find that I come up with good ideas when I work with licks I've done before, but I come up with totally awesome ideas when I forget about that and just let it flow out. Thats just from my experience though.
Well I do agree with that also since its probably quite a borderline topic. I just find that I come up with good ideas when I work with licks I've done before, but I come up with totally awesome ideas when I forget about that and just let it flow out. Thats just from my experience though.