T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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800.2 | WHY NOT? | CRISTA::FICHERA | | Mon Aug 29 1988 09:56 | 15 |
|
GOOD TOPIC!
The GP that's doing most of the solos, I would refer to as the Lead
Player. But if this said lead player can not do his part as a rythm
player,how much is he really worth. If both guitar players do their
equal share it would be nice to see the album cover read:
1ST LEAD GUITAR
2ND LEAD GUITAR
as it appears on BACHMAN TURNER OVERDRIVE albums.
FVF
|
800.3 | blast from the past | BOEHM::SUDAMA | Living is easy with eyes closed... | Mon Aug 29 1988 11:30 | 17 |
| As .1 said, these terms are really fallout from the past. In the
60's it was very common to have one guitar play only rhythm (chords),
and the other play only lead (solos, and melodic lines). Playing
lead meant more than just playing solos. In much of the music of
that era there were little or no keyboards, and the music was made
more interesting by having one of the guitars play arpeggios, riffs,
patterns, etc., while the other guitar comped chords. Listen to
any of the early Beatles, Stones, Yardbirds, Animals, etc., for
examples of this. I think today it is more common to have this kind
of thing done by synthesizers.
When Hendrix, Cream, Led Zeppelin, and others came along the
distinction between "rhythm" and "lead" largely went away. So it
all depends on how the music is structured, but I'd say for the
most part the term "Lead guitarist" is simply an ego booster.
- Ram
|
800.4 | | SCOMAN::WCLARK | smilin' on a cloudy day | Mon Aug 29 1988 11:47 | 3 |
| whoever plays faster gets to play lead
:-)
|
800.5 | tie the picks to my weed eater.... | TYFYS::MOLLER | TAICS / You Are Number 6 | Mon Aug 29 1988 12:30 | 11 |
| Wow, I play fast, but it sounds awful!! Does that count?? I play in
a 2 person group with Keyboards, Guitar (me - a double neck 6 string
and Bass guitar) & all sorts of electronic gizmos. Previous to that
I always considered myself a rythem guitarist, since I don't improvise
all that well (some nights much better than others). By default, I'm
now the lead guitar player of the group. How do you solve this delemma?
we play lots of songs that have nothing but short & well worked out
solo's. It's easy to be the lead guitarist, just form a one person
band (with todays electronics, it ain't too tough), and play guitar.
Jens
|
800.6 | Wish we could forget about "Rhythm" and "lead" | DREGS::BLICKSTEIN | Yo! | Mon Aug 29 1988 15:07 | 27 |
| Far be it from me to define "Lead" and "Rhythm".
I confess that I have well-formed ideas of the difference between
lead and rhythm, but it's a distinction that I've always tried
to get away from.
I have a great preference for ensemble type arrangements over
"lead" and "rhythm" type arrangements.
My favorite musicians are all people who have shunned writing
"rhythm" and "lead" parts in favor of writing music where each
part contributes to a greater whole than any one part "holding
down" the piece.
While all these guys "take solos", to me, when I listen to Steve
Morse playing with the Dregs, or Steve Howe playing with Yes,
or Keith Emerson playing with ELP, I don't hear "rhythm parts".
I hear all the instruments playing in something much more akin
to "ensemble playing" than rhythm & lead rock'n'roll.
There's a compositional complexity that comes with that.
You rarely hear Howe or Morse playing chords at all, and when
you do it's totally different from the way you'd hear a "rhythm
guitarist" play chords.
db
|
800.7 | slowhand | WMOIS::MACKAY | | Mon Aug 29 1988 15:36 | 20 |
| I once did a solo gig where I sang and played acoustic guitar. I
strummed and picked and was the 'fastest' until Scotty (now deceased,
God bless his rock n roll soul) joined me on his SG. He could really
wail out out a powerful solo while 'following' the progressions that
I set up. I always considered him the lead guitarist when we got
together because he did some solos that I couldn't at the time.
Never thought about the term until I started jamming with a bass
player who says they used to debate the topic at Berklee all the time.
I think it's a carry over from orchestral arrangements where you
have lead instruments in each section and that the term loses some
of it's meaning when applied today...I agree with earlier discussion
about the Beatles, etc..
......Interesting what BTO did with 1st and 2nd.
......Also interesting about the egos.
John the Guitarist who plays melodic solos but doesn't burn up the
fretboard with lightning speed.
|
800.8 | | WMOIS::MACKAY | | Mon Aug 29 1988 15:51 | 5 |
| I just read .6 and I agree completely. If the music is done well
each instrument contributes to the total arrangement. Perhaps the
term lead guitarist is just to give credit to the guitarist whose
solo's stand out the most ? Like a John Fogarty of CCR who calls
himself lead guitarist.
|
800.9 | more rambling | STRATA::WCLARK | smilin' on a cloudy day | Mon Aug 29 1988 16:24 | 13 |
| I hope everybody realizes I was just kidding about the fastest
player being the lead player. Some bands seem to have one (or
more) players who do more of the solo work (e.g. the Dead,
CCR, Lynard Skynard.) Some 'guitar heroes' tour with a second
guitarist who is mostly there to play rhythm - check out Johnny
Winter And "Live" with Rick Derringer playing backup to Johnny.
BB KIng usually has a backup guitarist, too. Some people like
to be the lead player - kind of a specialized job. Some people
like to sing lead and play backup chords. BOC used to have the
whole band playing lead for one song.
When EC was touring in the early eighties with Albert Lee, was
Lee the Rhythm Guitarist? I wouldn't say so!
|
800.10 | Parts is parts... | DREGS::BLICKSTEIN | Yo! | Mon Aug 29 1988 17:53 | 14 |
| .6 was pretty vague about "ensemble playing". It's hard to define
really, but one aspect of it is that whereas in a typical rock
R&L (Rhythm and Lead) format, you listen to the Rhythm guitar
entirely for chords.
In ensemble playing, the chord (if any) is more suggested by what
everyone is playing and unlike R&L there doesn't even HAVE to be
a suggested chord.
Often, there are single note parts that aren't the melody, nor do
they function as any part of a chord. They're just part of the
composition.
db
|
800.11 | my definition | IMBACQ::MOREAU | hope I'm sleepin at nuclear time | Wed Aug 31 1988 10:53 | 5 |
|
Lead Guitarist: A guitarist with an atomic weight of 207.19, atomic
number 82. Usually into heavy metal. ;^}
Dennis
|
800.12 | Sounds right | MARKER::BUCKLEY | The right don't see the light | Wed Aug 31 1988 10:56 | 3 |
| I like Dennis' definition!
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800.13 | Regular or unleaded ? | WMOIS::MACKAY | | Wed Aug 31 1988 15:17 | 1 |
|
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800.14 | I DON'T KNOW!!! | CASV02::GOSS | TWO WEEKS!!!! | Thu Sep 08 1988 10:49 | 12 |
|
I guess drummers must have a lead drummer like genesis...
A lead singer who does most of the singing etc.
A lead guitarist to me means the same as the above, the guitarist
in the band that does the most leads...not to say the others can't
but probably not as often... HELL I don't know that's just my opinion.
Know I tell ya something ya don't see to often is a lead guitarist
that sings while playing hot leads like Hendrix. I read an interview
with Clapton who admits that he had no idea how Jimi did this. I
imagine it's like trying to play the drums ( not just an easy beat)
and trying to sing at the same time, it's gotta be tough!!!
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800.15 | Is there no justice in Rock 'n' Roll??? | SCUBBA::KARRFALT | Sleepin' late and smokin' tea... | Fri Dec 09 1988 15:51 | 16 |
| An interesting example of this dilemma(sp?) is Aerosmith. Joe
-the showboat- Perry is a very limited guitarist compared to Brad
(great name) Whitford. All of the earlier A'smith albums titled
Joe Perry as "lead guitars" and Brad Whitford as "rythmn guitars".
I would be willing to bet that a good portion of the studio lead
work (especially the melodic stuff) was actually played by the
"rythmn guitarist". In concert they play about 50-50 each. The
major difference between the two is that mysterious aura known as
"Stage Presence". Brad is content to stand in the background, out
of the limelight (such as John Paul Jones) while Joe prefers to
jump around and play (very simple riffs) while singing duets with
Steve Tyler (when the're not in a huff and throwing bottles of Jack
at each other).
Brad Karrfalt
|
800.16 | | BUSY::JMINVILLE | The thrill is gone | Mon Dec 12 1988 17:20 | 5 |
| In a recent interview I read someplace, Joe Perry named
Brad Whitford as his favorite guitarist. Nice compliment I
thought.
joe.
|