T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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157.1 | Personal Tastes! | VIKING::BUSENBARK | | Wed Feb 04 1987 10:40 | 23 |
| Now it would seem we get into a discussion of what makes a musician
or a Technician. Depending on my mood I find a lot of other guitarist's more
interesting than Dimeola who I last listened to in the 1970's when he was with
Chick Chorea. Dimeola is definately a Technician as his music reading capabilit
ies are incredible and near perfect.
To paraphrase what Larry Carlton has said is that studio players are
indeed technicians first and musicians second.I would classify Dimeola in this
group as a technician whereas Bill Connors who was replaced by Dimeola was more
of a musician. For those who don't read music may be considered a "pattern
player". As I think Alan Holdsworth falls into this category.
Music reading is not a prerequisite for either but it helps to under-
stand what,when and where everything fits.
BTW, Larry Carlton's new album "Last Night" is quite good and has some
nice phrasing. It was done live in LA.
So,What I'm saying is this:
Technician = Lots of scales!
Musician = Lots of phrases!
Phrasing to me is what I would rather hear and play, but that's
just my taste's
|
157.2 | He is a muscian | CSA4::OPERATOR | | Wed Feb 04 1987 10:54 | 9 |
| Maybe i'm not in a position to reply in Dimeola's defense, but i
just bought his album scenario and the MUSIC is incredible. He
is not just standing out front and playing a million notes per second
like some guys do. The music on this album is a combination of
keyboards and guitars with both playing an equal roll. So while
i sat here and read your reviews of Al's playing -- calling him
a technician all i could think of was his composition on this album
-- he is a MUSICAIN!!!
Dave
|
157.3 | Bah! | ERASER::BUCKLEY | | Wed Feb 04 1987 11:01 | 21 |
| This is a good arguement. Personally, I see a lot of negitive attitudes
towards the more technical players. Why is it as soon as someone
plays a fast scale, lick, whatever...it's immmediately labled "No
feeling" ..."Useless Trash" ..."Just pure technique, no musical
value"??? You going to sit there and tell me that the great works
by Nicollo Paganini was a bunch of technical horsesh*t?? His music
contains some of the sickest, most technical stuff to date, but
it still *is* music and you can't take that away from him. I just
think it's a totally onesided view of music...slow is great, fast is
trash. EX. Eric Clapton is god...his solos have SO much feeling,
they say so much...Al DiMeola is a clown, all he does is play fast
phrygian modes, BFD, that's not music. Well, that attitude doesn't
wash with me! I feel a musician can express himself with speed to
a degree. Should not a *true* musician be able to play as slow AND
as fast as they want...providing the melody and phrasing is there.
I state Bach and Mozart's works as good examples of `lots-of-notes'
that *work* and make music.
What does separate a musician from a technician?
WJB
|
157.4 | | BCSE::RYAN | Fingerpickin' and grinnin' | Wed Feb 04 1987 11:09 | 17 |
| The point is, being able to play fast doesn't necessarily make
you a good musician. On the other hand, neither does refusing
to play fast:-). Playing fast is simply a skill which can be
used to serve the basic goal of making music that sounds good.
It is a useful skill, but not nearly important as having a
good ear and a good understanding of melody, harmony, and
rhythm. The complaint of the base note (which I agree with) is
with those "musicians" to whom speed is the most important
thing, and that's how I would classify DiMeola and Malmsteen.
Musical skill lies in the mind and the ears, not in the
fingers.
I'd defend Morse, but I'm sure Dave Blickstein will
momentarily make that superfluous:-).
Mike
|
157.5 | Let's call the whole thing off | COMET2::STEWART | | Wed Feb 04 1987 11:19 | 30 |
| Interesting way to approach an old subject. This has been hammered
around in various places before. If I understand what you are saying
then the bottom line statement is that quantity is NOT quality.
I don't think you'll find disagreement with that as much as you
will the difinition of the word quality. After all, quality is
in the ear of the beholder, so to speak. Just because you don't
like Al DiMeola doesn't mean that everyone else must not like him,
too. Areas of personal taste are wide open for bitter arguement.
You say tomato, and I say tomahto.
I do, however, disagree with the statement regarding the guitars
design as an instrument for accompaniement. That sounds too limiting.
Like any other instrument, it's potential is in the hands of the
user. Check out some early baroque and classical guitar concertos
and you will find that it is not just an accompaniement.
Also interesting that you use non-guitarists, Cole Porter and Kurt
Weill, as support in your arguements. Kurt Weill is one of my hero's
and I don't dispute his musicallity in your arguement but he was
not a guitar player. Django Reinhardt was a guitarist. And, he
used speed in his technique. Not merely as a means to an end but
as a form of interpretation.
Anyway, I'm sure that the guitarists you mentioned feel that they
are very musical in terms of their technique. And, just because
I don't like Eddie Van Halen doesn't mean that the rest of the world
should hate him, too. It just means that my personal taste doesn't
drift down the same river.
=ken
|
157.6 | don't read this | SKYLIT::SAWYER | | Wed Feb 04 1987 12:22 | 56 |
| well put, ken...you saved me some typing....:-)
when asked why he played a particular piece so fast segovia
replied....
because i can!
lots of you people keep bringing up the pro and con arguments
of musicians and technicians.
the slowest guitarist in the world is GREAT if he's an
ARTISTE'
got that?
remember it.
same holds true for the fastest.
you're welcome.
musician/technician don't mean hoss feathers if the artist
aint at home.
i like being a musician and am quite happy/proud of
my musical abilities.
i also like being something of a technician and am
happy/proud of these abilities....
i work daily/weekly to increase my musical/technical abilities.
but my most cherished (though possibly false) belief is
that i'm an artist.
this you don't work for.
either it's there and finds a way out or....well, perhaps it
isn't there..?
i have no idea how (sorry to keep using you as an example,
compadre) fast or slow karl moeller is but I recognize the artist
that is resident in the flesh.
max lambert couldn't play the lead to i can see for miles
but he can pick that 12 string to move your soul....
i don't consider myself FAST and i know there are lots of
things i've never mastered as a musician/technician....but i
believe i play with taste...so i don't worry very much about
speed....
people been listing their top favorite solos over the years...
in this notesfile and MOST of them weren't exceptionally
fast. They were, however, extremely tastefull and moving.
|
157.7 | Do you hear what I hear? | VIKING::BUSENBARK | | Wed Feb 04 1987 12:39 | 22 |
| Ok I've got an extra 8 bucks I will give "Scenario?" a listen unless
someone wants to give me a money back guarantee? :^>
I had a teacher once tell me that anytime I get the urge to play
any scales or modes fast to try to sing what I was playing in order to
control phrasing,point being that if you were play similiar the way you speak.
Try setting a metronome to about 208 unless you do some serious vocal practic-
ing you could not keep up. Well I couldn't!
From a theoretical standpoint I find it hard to really know where I'm
at in a chord progression if just blow away a couple octaves of scales and or
patterns. Unless I can predict what is next from the sheet or hear the key
change.
No I don't hate Dimeola I just don't hear what he hears as I'm sure
he hears Bach,Mozart and Pagnini differently from me. But Bach,Mozart are a
far cry harmonically from anything I've heard lately.
Yes,fast playing has it's place when used tastefully and I'm sure that
Dimeola if he chose to he could do a "slow hand" solo. Like I previously
stated I'll give him another listen.
|
157.8 | You doth protest too much | DREGS::BLICKSTEIN | Dave | Wed Feb 04 1987 13:22 | 13 |
| re: .0
In reference to Steve Morse, I'll just say that if you think that
"playing a lot of notes" and speed are the most important aspects
of Steve's playing, it suggests that "playing a lot of notes" and
speed are the only things that YOU are able to appreciate in Morse's
playing.
Actually, my guess is that you just aren't very familiar with Morse.
Your criticisms of him are among the last things I would have ever
expected anyone to criticize Morse for.
db
|
157.9 | Caffeine and Practice | BIZET::LOWRY | Nuke the Smurfs | Wed Feb 04 1987 13:46 | 7 |
| I am reminded of an interview with David Glimore in which he said
that he realized that he could not play fast, so he worked on
playing the *right* notes instead of playing fast notes.
Al DiMiola is a split case. He plays fast, but he can also play
some passages that curl your toes. I only wish someone would teach
him another scale besides the minor scale...
|
157.10 | | RICKS::CALCAGNI | | Wed Feb 04 1987 15:15 | 6 |
| My, my. Such taste, such manners, such restraint! Why is it that
this same discussion in the MUSIC notes would have my terminal about
ready to melt by now? Guitar noters, give yourselves a pat on the back.
This is an excellent note.
/rick
|
157.11 | practice makes better | SKYLIT::SAWYER | | Wed Feb 04 1987 15:45 | 5 |
|
about .0....
what DOES practice make?
|
157.12 | simply put | DREGS::BLICKSTEIN | Dave | Wed Feb 04 1987 16:32 | 2 |
| Practice reduces the gap between what you can hear in your head,
and what you can play with your fingers.
|
157.13 | Practice makes what, if you please | ASTRO::VINCIULLA | | Wed Feb 04 1987 17:04 | 8 |
|
yes!!!
that's what i would like to know what does PRACTICE MAKE.
MARC
|
157.14 | Practice Makes Permanent. | BIZET::LOWRY | Nuke the Smurfs | Wed Feb 04 1987 18:05 | 2 |
| That's all. Nothing else.
|
157.15 | if the shoe fits. | HAMSTR::PELKEY | Loco boy makes good | Wed Feb 04 1987 18:16 | 13 |
| I like both styles. I like to hear the nice crisp fast licks.
I like to hear the nice melodic hooks too.
I dunno, but if you fit speed or taste where it belongs, it
doesn't matter whcih notes were 1/32 notes and which were
1/4 notes, etc.. Malmsteen is a good example of speed, but
man, I feel what he's doing. On the other hand, some of the
melower guys, do some great stuff.
For me, it just has to fit. I can play fast, but I also hope
that I can find the nice melodic hook I hear in my head to fit
a particualr place in a song. Technician/musician ? Just
play.
|
157.16 | Re .15: Me Too | ERASER::BUCKLEY | | Thu Feb 05 1987 09:09 | 2 |
|
WJB_Louder_n_Faster ...Right Stevie K???? (^;
|
157.17 | no, i won't | SKYLIT::SAWYER | | Thu Feb 05 1987 11:59 | 6 |
| which brings us back to square one.....
is louder-faster = better?
right wilfred?
|
157.18 | Magna-Cum' flatu | HAMSTR::PELKEY | Loco boy makes good | Thu Feb 05 1987 12:15 | 24 |
| re:17
<is louder-faster = better >
Da point is moot Rik ! DOES IT FIT.
One very important issue asside louder,faster,better,slower,etc...
How many times have you guys wathced as a guitarist went right
off the deep end. What I mean is played beyond his abilities, and
failed miserably. You gotta stay within yourself. Don't play over
your head. Don't be intimidated cuz Guitarist A just punched a
new door in the wall, (If he did, he was too loud anyway) Don't
try to run your fingers into next no-ever cuz Guitarist B just made
new meaning to the word lighting. Do what you've been doing for
the last x-years. That's you. Don't be a copy-cat. Yeah, you
gotta have influences, that helps you to learn, but you can't be
a carbon copy of another guitar player. Stay inside yourself.
With a little bit of help from the rest of the band, and a dash of
adreneline, you'll do just fine.
Right boys ?
(now pass me the suntan lotion....)
|
157.19 | The Plain Truth | DREGS::BLICKSTEIN | Dave | Thu Feb 05 1987 15:44 | 34 |
| > How many times have you guys wathced as a guitarist went right
> off the deep end. What I mean is played beyond his abilities, and
> failed miserably.
This reminds me of a dream (or rather nightmore) that I frequently
have. Although it may be a dream, it is actually just a slight
exageration of a common experience.
In the dream I walk into a music store, and am immediately inundated
by the sound of 23 teen-aged guitarists, each hacking out their
own version of "Eruption" or some other sorta pyrotechnical display.
(Does this sound familiar to anyone else but me??) Most of
them are playing well beyond their current level of skill (i.e.
they are playing very sloppy), and all of them seem to be out to
impress each other.
> Is louder-faster better?
The louder, the better. Unquestionably.
On this issue of "faster". Every guitarist has a set of things
he's good at. These things combine to make up his guitar vocabulary.
The larger your vocabulary the better.
Speed is a valuable asset to have, but there are other assets that
are just as valuable if you're goals are truly musical and artistic.
HOWEVER.... if you have some other goals, like trying to make money,
trying to impress people, etc. I'm sorry to say that it is my opinion
that YES, the faster the better. That's what seems to impress people
these days. The plain truth is that speed is a very marketable
commodity.
db
|
157.20 | Practice - From your head to your hands. | THEBAY::RYAN | | Fri Feb 06 1987 00:49 | 2 |
| Musician/Technician ref: Check out what Larry Carlton has to say
on his 'STAR LICKS' video. A perspective on the BIG PICTURE.
|
157.21 | Solution Set for Aesthetics 101 | CAD::BERRETTINI | The saints have compasses | Thu Feb 20 1986 08:52 | 42 |
| > I don't think you'll find disagreement with that as much as you
> will the difinition of the word quality. After all, quality is
> in the ear of the beholder, so to speak. Just because you don't
> like Al DiMeola doesn't mean that everyone else must not like him,
> too. Areas of personal taste are wide open for bitter arguement.
> You say tomato, and I say tomahto.
>... Anyway, I'm sure that the guitarists you mentioned feel that they
> are very musical in terms of their technique. And, just because
> I don't like Eddie Van Halen doesn't mean that the rest of the world
> should hate him, too. It just means that my personal taste doesn't
> drift down the same river.
I never suggested all personal taste should flow down the
river. I am always amazed that whenever a discussion of
aesthetics gets started on the USENET or in a notesfile, there
is always someone who says, "How can you say that everyone
should think like you?" or "I'm sure that no matter what you
think of performer X, he sincerely believes in what he's
doing." The intent of criticism is not to deny that. The
worst thing you can say about somebody is "they mean well.";^)
Seriously, I'm taking as a given that these are only my
opinions -- what else could they be? Does somebody think that
maybe I'm cheating and looking at the answers in the the
Teacher's Guide? ;^)
> Also interesting that you use non-guitarists, Cole Porter and Kurt
> Weill, as support in your arguements. Kurt Weill is one of my hero's
> and I don't dispute his musicallity in your arguement but he was
> not a guitar player. Django Reinhardt was a guitarist. And, he
> used speed in his technique. Not merely as a means to an end but
> as a form of interpretation.
Quite a few guitarists draw their some of their inspiration
from non-guitarists -- Charlie Parker and John Coltrane have
frequently been cited as influential by guitarists. I
mentioned Django to show that I was not "Anti-technique" or
some silly thing. I would just like to see more discussions of
guitarists that are driven to a different viewpoint (e.g.,
Robert Fripp, Fred Frith)
Penn Jacobs
|
157.22 | courtesy of Guitar World | PNO::HEISER | Bo knows Satriani?!? | Mon Jan 15 1990 15:32 | 11 |
| Steve Vai's 5 good reasons not to practice:
1. There
2. is
3. no
4. good
5. reason!
|