Let's talk about music
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Re: Let's talk about music
How in God's name could you interpret it that way?
The reason I want to hear the best possible musician in a symphony is because it's known that the composer isn't around actually do it themselves.
The reason I want to hear the best possible musician in a symphony is because it's known that the composer isn't around actually do it themselves.
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Re: Let's talk about music
A composer couldn't play a symphony himself
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Re: Let's talk about music
Hey, it was tif's idea, not mine
But, yes, I would prefer to see Bach leading a cello quartet, but that ain't happening.

But, yes, I would prefer to see Bach leading a cello quartet, but that ain't happening.

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Re: Let's talk about music
Not with that attitude.
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Re: Let's talk about music
Those who don't like the Blues and aren't guitar players may not appreciate SRV. To everyone else, he was a legend.MRandall25 wrote:I was wondering the same thing.PensFanInDC wrote:
How is SRV not inducted already? First ballot?
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http://www.rollingstone.com/music/lists ... n-20111122" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
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Re: Let's talk about music
Ok, so I guess I don't like the Blues then.
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Re: Let's talk about music
http://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Talk:Stevie_Ray_Vaughan" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;Gaucho wrote:Ok, so I guess I don't like the Blues then.
Seems as though there are quite a few luminaries who disagree.
But hey, the world needs all kinds.
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Re: Let's talk about music
Yeah, I agree with Jack White that Son House is more interesting.
SRV was an excellent guitar player. I don't think that was ever up for debate.
SRV was an excellent guitar player. I don't think that was ever up for debate.
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Re: Let's talk about music
The entire quote dovetails with my prior point:
Jack White -Jack, you said in a previous interview that it’s easy to play like Stevie Ray Vaughan and difficult to play like Son House. Could you clarify what you meant by that?
Jack White -Jack, you said in a previous interview that it’s easy to play like Stevie Ray Vaughan and difficult to play like Son House. Could you clarify what you meant by that?
I guess what I meant was, the blues scale is one of the easiest things you can learn on the guitar. It’s the old cliché—“It’s easy to learn but takes a lifetime to master.” That’s where I was headed with that. I’m not impressed with somebody playing a blues scale at blinding speed, but I am impressed with Son House when he plays the “wrong” note. Somehow it’s more meaningful to me when I hear him miss a note and hit the neck of his guitar with his slide. I think the distinction you’re looking for is that Son House is not being superficial—he’s not just playing a scale. He means every last note and is projecting it. He’s not showing off his technique, he’s trying to create a real emotional moment.
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Re: Let's talk about music
Probably the best example I can think of where the technique is horrible, but the "soul" is through the roof.columbia wrote:The entire quote dovetails with my prior point:
Jack White -Jack, you said in a previous interview that it’s easy to play like Stevie Ray Vaughan and difficult to play like Son House. Could you clarify what you meant by that?
I guess what I meant was, the blues scale is one of the easiest things you can learn on the guitar. It’s the old cliché—“It’s easy to learn but takes a lifetime to master.” That’s where I was headed with that. I’m not impressed with somebody playing a blues scale at blinding speed, but I am impressed with Son House when he plays the “wrong” note. Somehow it’s more meaningful to me when I hear him miss a note and hit the neck of his guitar with his slide. I think the distinction you’re looking for is that Son House is not being superficial—he’s not just playing a scale. He means every last note and is projecting it. He’s not showing off his technique, he’s trying to create a real emotional moment.
The mistakes, which are plentiful, seem to even make it better.
[youtube][/youtube]
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Re: Let's talk about music
If we're going to quote artists, particularly those known for their guitar playing, you may want to read the final sentence of Eric Claptons comment "... And I had to leave just to preserve some kind of sanity or confidence in myself."CrossIcePass wrote:Probably the best example I can think of where the technique is horrible, but the "soul" is through the roof.columbia wrote:The entire quote dovetails with my prior point:
Jack White -Jack, you said in a previous interview that it’s easy to play like Stevie Ray Vaughan and difficult to play like Son House. Could you clarify what you meant by that?
I guess what I meant was, the blues scale is one of the easiest things you can learn on the guitar. It’s the old cliché—“It’s easy to learn but takes a lifetime to master.” That’s where I was headed with that. I’m not impressed with somebody playing a blues scale at blinding speed, but I am impressed with Son House when he plays the “wrong” note. Somehow it’s more meaningful to me when I hear him miss a note and hit the neck of his guitar with his slide. I think the distinction you’re looking for is that Son House is not being superficial—he’s not just playing a scale. He means every last note and is projecting it. He’s not showing off his technique, he’s trying to create a real emotional moment.
The mistakes, which are plentiful, seem to even make it better.
[youtube][/youtube]
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Re: Let's talk about music
Clapton is an even bigger bore. 

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Re: Let's talk about music
Wat?columbia wrote:Hey, it was tif's idea, not mine
I'm not presenting the notion, I'm refuting it.columbia wrote:If I go the symphony, then yes, I want to hear the best possible musicians (play someone else's art).
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Re: Let's talk about music
This head-up-you-butt approach to music annoys the unholy snot out of me. When people listen to a player with skill and only hear the technical chops and immediately assume that the player is devoid of 'feel', or lacking the ability to 'create a real emotional moment'. Most often this is propagated by people who don't what scale length their guitar is, or the difference what the guitar sounds like when tuning to A=440 vs A=444. That doesn't matter, because they 'feel'.columbia wrote:The entire quote dovetails with my prior point:
Jack White -Jack, you said in a previous interview that it’s easy to play like Stevie Ray Vaughan and difficult to play like Son House. Could you clarify what you meant by that?
I guess what I meant was, the blues scale is one of the easiest things you can learn on the guitar. It’s the old cliché—“It’s easy to learn but takes a lifetime to master.” That’s where I was headed with that. I’m not impressed with somebody playing a blues scale at blinding speed, but I am impressed with Son House when he plays the “wrong” note. Somehow it’s more meaningful to me when I hear him miss a note and hit the neck of his guitar with his slide. I think the distinction you’re looking for is that Son House is not being superficial—he’s not just playing a scale. He means every last note and is projecting it. He’s not showing off his technique, he’s trying to create a real emotional moment.
I assert that the reason they think this way is because they are incapable of functioning, musically, on that level and are intimidated and confused by it.
Are there players who only have chops and do genuinely lack musical sense? Of course. Yngwie Malmsteen immediately pops into mind. "I'll play Bach and Paganini as fast as I can! Whooo!" That's 99% of his playing. But I'll take guys like Steve Vai - who once fasted for nearly a week before recording a particular solo because the song was about what we sacrifice in the name of spirituality - over numpties like this House person (who's claim to fame is apparently being accidentally good) seven days a week.
Takes all kinds, of course. And you're welcome to the ones who stumble into greatness. I'll take the ones who do it on purpose.
Last edited by tifosi77 on Sun Oct 12, 2014 6:18 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Let's talk about music
Seems like a misunderstanding, as evidenced by your last sentence.
Last edited by Gaucho on Sun Oct 12, 2014 2:15 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Let's talk about music
In completely unrelated music........
Went to Steve Winwood and Tom Petty last night, along with 16,000 other white people. Not my forte, but it was enjoyable nonetheless. Musical highlight was hearing Windood sing 'Gimme Some Lovin' live. That song, that voice, so good. Overall highlight was seeing just how much Tom Petty was enjoying being high.
Went to Steve Winwood and Tom Petty last night, along with 16,000 other white people. Not my forte, but it was enjoyable nonetheless. Musical highlight was hearing Windood sing 'Gimme Some Lovin' live. That song, that voice, so good. Overall highlight was seeing just how much Tom Petty was enjoying being high.
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Re: Let's talk about music
Ive always wanted to see Petty live. Id enjoy seeing him and Fogerty play a tour together.
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Re: Let's talk about music
Extra Porous Pronouncement.CrossIcePass wrote:If we're going to quote artists, particularly those known for their guitar playing, you may want to read the final sentence of Eric Claptons comment "... And I had to leave just to preserve some kind of sanity or confidence in myself."CrossIcePass wrote:Probably the best example I can think of where the technique is horrible, but the "soul" is through the roof.columbia wrote:The entire quote dovetails with my prior point:
Jack White -Jack, you said in a previous interview that it’s easy to play like Stevie Ray Vaughan and difficult to play like Son House. Could you clarify what you meant by that?
I guess what I meant was, the blues scale is one of the easiest things you can learn on the guitar. It’s the old cliché—“It’s easy to learn but takes a lifetime to master.” That’s where I was headed with that. I’m not impressed with somebody playing a blues scale at blinding speed, but I am impressed with Son House when he plays the “wrong” note. Somehow it’s more meaningful to me when I hear him miss a note and hit the neck of his guitar with his slide. I think the distinction you’re looking for is that Son House is not being superficial—he’s not just playing a scale. He means every last note and is projecting it. He’s not showing off his technique, he’s trying to create a real emotional moment.
The mistakes, which are plentiful, seem to even make it better.
[youtube][/youtube]
Never liked Clapton much as his music doesn't have an edge. Maybe back with the Yardbirds but not with white-boy blues noodling he done since then.
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Re: Let's talk about music
Those are the only contenders? I always found EVH to be flash but nothing else. There are numerous other guitars in rock history that far exceed him. For example, any of the F's, Frith, Frissell, or Fripp. Did they have the legions of imitators? No, but they weren't looking for big hits which seems to be your criteria for musical greatness.tifosi77 wrote:EVH is simply the most innovative and creative guitarist of the rock era. Period. (Bring it, Hendrixphiles.)
Bill Frissell can make the guitar sing:
[youtube][/youtube]
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Re: Let's talk about music
Naked City had both Frissell and Frith as members:
[youtube][/youtube]
[youtube][/youtube]
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Re: Let's talk about music
Are they doing that on purpose?
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Re: Let's talk about music
Everything Naked City does is for a purpose. A reworking of Tennessee Flat Top Box:
[youtube][/youtube]
[youtube][/youtube]
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Re: Let's talk about music
1) Frisell is a jazz guy, so comparing him to rock players is difficult at best.
2) When making an argument about how great a guitar player is, it is not good form to post a clip where the bass player steals the number.
3) The statement "[t]here are numerous other guitars in rock history that far exceed [EVH]" is completely false. The only player in the last 50 years that even comes close to the EVH level of impact is Hendrix. I put VH on top because he's more my style of music, but I can certainly see the arguments for Hendrix. Everyone else is new packaging on old goods. None of the alternative players you cited are innovative.... in any way, whatsoever. Are they good, talented musicians? Yeah, certainly, especially Fripp. But so are millions of other players. What's new about their playing? Their sound may be out there, but again, that's just packaging. When you read bio pieces about Van Halen and Hendrix you see words like 'revolutionized' a lot. You don't read that about the 'F's.... unless you're on a King Crimson fan site.
And again, if all you hear when you listen to EVH is the flash, then that's a you problem, not a VH problem.
But that's not what we're really talking about here. So hits has nothing to do with contemplating a musician's ability in a vacuum.
I stand by what I said; Edward Van Halen is the instrument's most inventive and creative voice of the last 50-60 years.
2) When making an argument about how great a guitar player is, it is not good form to post a clip where the bass player steals the number.
3) The statement "[t]here are numerous other guitars in rock history that far exceed [EVH]" is completely false. The only player in the last 50 years that even comes close to the EVH level of impact is Hendrix. I put VH on top because he's more my style of music, but I can certainly see the arguments for Hendrix. Everyone else is new packaging on old goods. None of the alternative players you cited are innovative.... in any way, whatsoever. Are they good, talented musicians? Yeah, certainly, especially Fripp. But so are millions of other players. What's new about their playing? Their sound may be out there, but again, that's just packaging. When you read bio pieces about Van Halen and Hendrix you see words like 'revolutionized' a lot. You don't read that about the 'F's.... unless you're on a King Crimson fan site.
And again, if all you hear when you listen to EVH is the flash, then that's a you problem, not a VH problem.
Having hits certainly doesn't hurt in evaluating the impact of one player versus another. A player who has sold x millions of records and is a household name is almost by definition going to be more influential than avant garde/jazz players who most people reading this thread would have to Google to learn anything about.Factorial wrote:No, but they weren't looking for big hits which seems to be your criteria for musical greatness.
But that's not what we're really talking about here. So hits has nothing to do with contemplating a musician's ability in a vacuum.
I stand by what I said; Edward Van Halen is the instrument's most inventive and creative voice of the last 50-60 years.
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Re: Let's talk about music
Why does everything have to be a competition?
Also, no offense, but saying that Fripp is not innovative is almost as questionable as saying that "this House person" is a "numpty".
Also, no offense, but saying that Fripp is not innovative is almost as questionable as saying that "this House person" is a "numpty".