T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1709.1 | 97% of population..... the shower... | CSC32::H_SO | | Fri Mar 09 1990 21:41 | 10 |
|
I like Eddie Van Halen's stage attitude, myself. Sometimes I think
he "acts" like a dork, but he looks like he's having fun ALL THE
TIME!!!
Way I see it, if I can't play it with smile in the music or on my
face, it's too hard for me to play :-|
J. who's_serious_only_in_the_shower
|
1709.2 | Get SERIOUS! | CSC32::G_HOUSE | Fearless | Sat Mar 10 1990 18:11 | 23 |
| Wipe that grin off yer face and get serious, J! This is music, and
it's like totally serious, ok?
"So you're a serious musician, eh? Well where's your scowl?
...and what are you doing here at rehersal on time???"
re: Kevin
I'm with you, man. I'm also getting sick of that phrase. I think if
a salesman told me I wasn't "serious about my sound" just because I
objected to the price of something, I'd be advising him that he must
not be too serious about selling one with that kind of attitude
(followed promptly by finding the way out).
I had one guy tell that I couldn't demo amps or effects with his PRS
guitar "'cause I might scratch it". Needless to say, they didn't sell
any amps or effects (or PRS guitars) to me.
Please excuse my rambling, I'm hyped about going to see Joe Satriani
tonight!
Greg
|
1709.3 | Serious equipment has nothing to do with a good tone | TELALL::BUCKLEY | TNT on I-25 at 85 | Sun Mar 11 1990 13:01 | 2 |
| EVH may be a "serious" musician, but equipment wise I think his live
tone sounds like dog doo. So much for the bradshaw system!
|
1709.4 | Yahoo! | SMURF::BENNETT | Flicker Flicker Flam, POW! | Sun Mar 11 1990 16:06 | 11 |
|
For $1200 I'm serious enough to go for 10 used Kent guitars
and 6 Kustoms w/green metalflake.
It's a world of hype out there. It'd be nice to crack into the
scene totin' a Rokaxe and a T-Power amp sounding for all the
world like Satriani's $50,000 rig. ;-)
Did anybody see Neil Young on SNL with the Tweed TV Champs?
Charlie_B_with_cheap_Rickenbacker_and_Hecho_en_Mexico_Champ_12
|
1709.5 | I'm Serious!!! | AQUA::ROST | Bikini Girls With Machine Guns | Mon Mar 12 1990 08:32 | 15 |
|
It's easy to slag on people who use the word "serious". I once had a
similar salesman experience. It's kind of stupid to say that someone
who has to make price compromises or has chosen *not* to try to be a
rock star isn't serious about their music.
As far as "serious" in band ads, I think it's legitimate. C'mon, all
of us have probably worked with some bozos in the past. You know, you
drive 30 minutes to rehearsal and the singer blows you off because he
wanted to go to the movies. Or you show up for a gig and one of the
members says he has to go home to do his hair (!!!) and misses the
entire first set. To me, "serious" means no bullshit. You show up on
time and you do your thing to the bst of your ability.
Brian
|
1709.7 | Serious = NO Bull! | FDCV07::DADDIECO | That's Just The Way It Is ..... | Mon Mar 12 1990 09:31 | 20 |
| RIGHT BRIAN!
Use any word you like - ("serious" is a good one) - but the bottom
line is that any collection of musicians who want to do more than jam,
will never put their act on a stage for pay (for some "serious" bucks)
if there's one member of the grouping that has less than a willingness
to get beyond the "are we having fun yet" attitude. If every member of
the band ain't "serious/comitted/dedicated/pick your adjective", then
that member(s) will drag the rest of the ensemble down and the band
will (over time) rise only to the lowest level of commitment among the
members.
Fun is fun and serious is serious and yes - they can co-exist but
everyone needs to be on the same level regarding
goals/objectives/attitude and yes - seriousness - - that's why (I
believe) we will always see those types of expressions in ads - because
when it comes to "putting your act on stage for bucks", it takes a
serious effort and hard work. Anything less is just non-competitive.
d.
|
1709.8 | definative..... | ROYALT::BUSENBARK | | Mon Mar 12 1990 09:48 | 32 |
|
Serious: 1.Grave in character,quality or manner;sober.2.Sincere
earnest.3.Concerned with important rather than trivial matters.
I've put up with my fill of "serious" musicians along with there
drug habit's,bad attitudes,musical inability,egomania,and just plain
lack of professionalism! Unfortunately there are lot more of these type
of "serious" musicians than the other.
Beside's if you were really "serious" you'd leave DEC and do
nothing but music... right? :^)
hey kevin.....
Personally,if any salesperson treated me with that kind of
attitude,I'd go find some other music store to do buisness with,they
all like the green stuff and there are alot of them who want to stay
in buisness. Or was it just one salesperson out of several? If that's
the case,and this has been the case with me,I just avoid that salesperson.
Then again having "serious" hardware is an opinion,it's really
a matter of what you need is reliable and consistent week to week with
some degree of maintenance yearly. This is taking into consideration
that you either get "your sound" or "everyone else's" out of your hardware.
I'd like to think that regardless of what I spend,that my hardware
that it is reliable and I sound good using it.
re -1
YES!!!
Rick
|
1709.9 | | VLNVAX::ALECLAIRE | | Mon Mar 12 1990 10:31 | 21 |
| Nobody's eveer given me a hassle about being serious.
Maybe it's the Orange Wig.
Do you love to play?
Or do you play so people will notice you?
I mean TheHotShots of the Guitar world, some guys who alot of people
hold in high regard I have NO respect for, they rest on thier fame and
don't grow.
When looking for a sound, the idea of High Cost Equipment
is irrelevent. Why blow two grand on a rack when you get a sound
you want with 100$ Former smashed up Kitty Parts?
A serious guitarist will not let other people, salesmen, other players
tell him what to do.
Better to slay an opponents head off with a smile than a fierce
expresison. But to do so is NOT fun.
Arnold Shwarzenegger writes about one of his heros in bodybuilding,
Sergio. When he went up against him in competition he knew he could
either remain a fan, and lose, or destroy his hero and be the victor.
Neither do I think because you play in a band, don't play in a band,
make money, don't make jack can you be called serious or not. SoWhat?
|
1709.10 | An Attitude | ELESYS::JASNIEWSKI | This time forever! | Mon Mar 12 1990 11:27 | 11 |
|
I think what they're asking for has to do with attitude. There are
just so many "Let's get all F***'d up and make loud noises" players out
there in the real world... The verb "Jam", as in the provberbial
phrase "Lets Jam!" comes to mind.
When someone is asking for a serious player, they want someone
who's doing it for more mature reasons than that, perhaps something like
"accomplishment"? Their fun is intrinsic to the process -
Joe Jasniewski
|
1709.11 | | PELKEY::PELKEY | Dangerous Distortion, Serious Sustain | Mon Mar 12 1990 13:42 | 27 |
| Ah, the drone and drivel of marketing hype!!!
So, if you want to be serious, then you'll purchase all the stuff
that "ONLY SERIOUS MUSICIANS" purchase, and what you do to get that
stuff is another point......
Add another two naems to the list in this case, and there naive, and broke.
as far as the band thing goes, anyone can still apply... You wont
know someone is serious till you're there for a while anyway. that
goes for both the person trying to hook in, as well as the band lookin
for someone. I've seen many bands who touted them-selves as being serious,
and they were anything but..
Stuck up, snobbish, and clicky were better adjectives...
Serious Musician:
One who tries, one who practices, (alone, at least daily, or close to it
as possible...) one who listens, one who plays well with others, one who never
thinks there's nothing left to learn, above all, one who notices and doesn't
begrudge the better musicians.
That is my definition. It aint got much to do with equipment...
|
1709.12 | marketing, who needs them?! | PNO::HEISER | rock & roar | Mon Mar 12 1990 13:46 | 7 |
| Speaking of marketing hype, how about those 24 fret guitars? Is it
really necessary to alter the scale for 1 or 2 more frets?
I understand the advantage of being able to play up there if you
NEED/WANT to, but most don't play up there.
Mike
|
1709.13 | What really is "serious"? | CSC32::G_HOUSE | Fearless | Mon Mar 12 1990 13:48 | 30 |
| re: .10, others
I know what you mean about having someone there that's not really into
it, but reading that kind of ad still kind of gripes me. I think that
it has something to do with the connotations I read into the word
"serious" in that context. "Dependable" or some other word has a much
more friendly ring to it to me.
As to how "serious" a musician I am? Hey, I try to show up to practice
on time and know my parts before I get there. I never miss a practice
without having a good reason and letting the others know in advance. I
try to keep a good attitude about myself and my band. I also enjoy
having good quality equipment that works reliabily and sounds good.
Does this make me a "serious" musician?
I also bust up laughing at almost every practice. I love playing, but
I know that my ability is not always the best (or even where it sound
be). I'm not a real fast or a real clean player. I'm also
inconsistant, I have good days and bad days. I also realize that I am
not and probably never will be a professional musician (ie earn my
primary income from performing music) so my job comes first. You have
to have priorities! Do these things make me a less then serious
musician?
Greg
(Sorry J., the last couple of weeks have been very demanding on me.
It's not exemplary. I prefer to know the songs before practice and
all).
|
1709.14 | | VLNVAX::ALECLAIRE | | Mon Mar 12 1990 14:08 | 11 |
| re -2
I thought the 24 fret thing was kindof bogus,
but I have one know and like them tremendously.
It wouldn't deter me from interest in , like a LesPaul,
but having the frets up there I use em.
I do some of the one string classical excersizes all the way up,
from 17 frets on the Ramirez G string
to 24. The frets being so small you have to adjust to the lack of
space, but it'll seem like nothing after a while.
The there's the Washburn wih 29 frets for Real Hi Notes
|
1709.15 | i think... | MPGS::MIKRUT | Avoid the Noid! | Mon Mar 12 1990 14:11 | 5 |
| I think the idea of the 24-fret guitars was to be able to complete
the 4th octave without having to bend the high E string up a whole
step at the 22nd fret.
cheers/mike
|
1709.16 | Change scale length? | CSC32::G_HOUSE | Fearless | Mon Mar 12 1990 14:18 | 7 |
| re: Mike
The scale length isn't usually altered for a 24 fret neck, just that
the neck is a little longer and the distance from the last fret to the
bridge is a little shorter.
Greg
|
1709.17 | life's too short for stress.... | RAVEN1::DANDREA | Frog lickers unite! | Mon Mar 12 1990 14:38 | 5 |
| I'm a serious musician......I'm deadly serious about having FUN!!
FWIW,
Steve D.
|
1709.18 | Serious is in the eye of the beholder... | WEFXEM::COTE | Bain Dramaged | Mon Mar 12 1990 18:27 | 26 |
| I would think that "serious" is not a binary state. A serious guitar
player may live, eat and breath guitar, but not be into the performance
aspect of music. Just playing alone to the best of their ability may
be all the justification and feedback they want or need. Unfortunately,
performance is sometimes touted as the end-all and be-all of music and
as the loner goes thru the process of discovering it's not, some people
get 'burned' as they persue their own grails. Is this person not
serious? Or are they simply not dedicated to *your* goals.
I think it's great when a few people can put a band together and work
towards a common musical goal out of *desire*, not some sense of
obligation. Is a musician not serious if they've gone thru more bands
than underwear? Some definitely deserve the adjective. Others may
simply have a different take on what constitutes 'serious' and it's
healthy for even that to change over time.
I like .17's attitude. If it ain't fun, why bother? Some bands are just
simply TOO 'serious' for my taste. Bizness, bizness, bizness... I
often wonder if they're serious musicians or axe-slinging accountants.
Strive to know yourself, persue your OWN goals, and don't hurt anyone in the
process. What could be more serious than that?
Edd
P.S. Of course, some people really *are* jerks!!
|
1709.19 | | DECWIN::KMCDONOUGH | Set Kids/Nosick | Mon Mar 12 1990 19:22 | 35 |
|
The "Serious Guitarist" ads rub me the wrong way 'cuz they imply
that I'm some kind of slouch if I don't have XYZ piece of gear. It's
the 'ol sales approach...first identify a problem and then supply a
solution.
Problem: You must not be a serious musician (therefore a dweeb) if
you don't have an XYZ.
Solution: Buy XYZ and you, too, can be a serious-kind-of-guy.
(It's the same thing with cars. If you don't drive the latest hot car
you might as well be driving your dad's conestoga wagon.)
I once told a salesman that I didn't use any effects, just went right
into the amp. That rocketed me to the front of his "serious" list for
sure. Either that or he looked outside to see what kind of donkey I
rode in on.
I could almost read the look on his face...."Hagstrom guitar, Peavey amp,
no effects. Probably plays in a polka band." From that moment on, if
I'd asked to try an amp, I would have been given some very "unserious"
guitar to try it out with.
Now, all those REAL musicians moonlighting as salesman are serious, fer
sure!
8-)
Kevin
|
1709.20 | | TCC::COOPER | MIDI-Kitty-ADA-Metaltronix rack puke | Tue Mar 13 1990 09:12 | 21 |
| A good point was made. "If it's no fun, why bother ?"
Thats my whole attitude. I don't care about money, what somebody plays
(unless it sounds like total sh*t, and it has an impact on the band, or
is unreliable), or what they look like.
I don't even care if the person is not the greatest musician in the world
(hell, I'm not..I'm a hacker!). It's all in the spirit. If "Dude A" is
playing is heart out and putting forth 110%, and "Dude B" is a better musician
but thinks his poops don't stink, then I'm ampt to go with "Dude A".
I figure Dude A is gonna get better, and won't slow down... Dude B on the
other hand is already "too good for us" and will probably grow stagnant and/or
bored...Ergo, he won't learn anything new... Dude B will soon be surpassed
by Dude A.
It's all attitude. We can all learn something...Even if that something is
keeping time or playing the simplest of lix. If you stop learning new stuff,
you may as well hang it up.
FWIWW,
jc
|
1709.21 | My beef is with the readers of those ads | DREGS::BLICKSTEIN | Conliberative | Tue Mar 13 1990 12:12 | 14 |
| I don't react to these ads. My reaction is to the folks that
spend more time, energy, and money trying to improve themselves
through equipment rather than learning their instrument or music
in general.
I see a lot of folks who I truly believe spend more time in music
stores than practicing or even just "thinking" about music instead
of electronics.
Equipment doesn't impress me. What impresses me is best described as
"ambition" - striving to do something "better" or "different" or
"totally new".
db
|
1709.22 | Ads, Ads, Ads | SMURF::BENNETT | Flicker Flicker Flam, POW! | Tue Mar 13 1990 16:07 | 31 |
|
I enjoy the ads. I'll enjoy them even more 25 years from now when
I look thru and see the things we're buying up today that look
tomorrow what Kasino amps and Silvertones look like to us today.
My comments about kents and kustoms was really half tongue-in-cheek.
The thing that re-activated my interest in playing and performing
was watching 1 more Bono plays Jesus video on eMpTyV and wondering
why not only the ads but the performers had become so Self-Serious.
Ever see a pair of really anxious parents in the music store on
Dec 19 bringing a JEM777 to the counter for 12 year old Johnny
at home that's just gotta have one cuz Steve sez so?
It's a rip-off, it has the young fellers by the balls.
So get out there are make a name for yourself with yer old used
Harmony, OK?
I'm into the guitar + amp = music bit myself, at least until
DSP256s and ARTSGEs start popping up used for $90, I recon that's
be soon.
Did anyone see the Signature Series Giveaway #11(?) ad this month
that talks about the Soldano guitar head?
"With knobs that REALLY DO GO UP TO 11!" !!!!!
I think I'm ready for a Twister Sister marathon.
Babbling_at_Spit_Brook
|
1709.23 | Are you serious about YOUR tone??? ;^) | DNEAST::GREVE_STEVE | If all else fails, take a nap... | Wed Mar 14 1990 16:42 | 20 |
|
.21
Hmmmmm... you raise a good point for me Dave... but how the hell do
I get rid of this "tone" sickness??? I practice a couple of hours each
day, but I'm beginning to get a little psycho about sound!! I figured
that my new gold lace pickups would "fix it" forever, but I'm still not
quite satisfied ( the problem now is that my high E string has one hell
of a lot less volume than the other 5 strings.. sigh, dbii might have
been right, maybe I should have just gone out an bought a plus to begin
with) anyway... all this sound stuff is part of it right??? I know
guys (no kidding) that are completely nuts about it, one guy I know
punishes his guitar for sounding bad, by leaving it out in the car all
night.. sick, huh??? When will this preoccupation with the sound go
away, so that I can concentrate solely on my chop-eroos???
Steve
|
1709.24 | Not serious, but willing! | CSC32::H_SO | | Wed Mar 14 1990 22:34 | 31 |
|
re: .13, Greg.
Now, here's a serious musician in my eyes *AND* one that I could get
along with!!! (That's a combination you can't beat! I just hope that
he says same about me!)
So what if you have $10,000 spent in music equipment? It doesn't mean
jack s**t if no one wants to practice with you! And so what if you're
the next Yingyang prodigy? What if no one wants to work with you cause
you're so *SERIOUS* that no one else matters in your eyes, and no one
else's ideas are good? The way I see it, we are a band! They are
not my slaves and rather, they are my friends! I thank heavens
everyday that I don't have to put up with any ego during practice. You
do your thing, and I 'll do mine and see if it works together and if
not, change it. I am not a bass player and don't know bass, therefor
I will not tell the bass player what to do and vice versa.
Being "serious" to me means that I am willing to put time and money,
doesn't matter how much of either, to get the task done, and hopefully
an extra yard. It also means that I am willing to be at each of the
practice unless I have other pressing engagements. I am also willing
to have fun! Usually I have fun because being in a band has always
been a dream of mine, and even if we sound terrible, I am getting a
big kick out of getting together! One time I had tears standing in
my eyes while during an original and we sounded really good and it
hit me, "We are starting to sound like a band!"
Well, better quit before I write a novel!
J.
|
1709.25 | The standard Steve Morse sermon | DREGS::BLICKSTEIN | Conliberative | Thu Mar 15 1990 10:18 | 40 |
| Steve,
If you put a couple of hours a day into playing, you are definitely
not the type of person I was referring to.
re: .-1
> Being "serious" to me means that I am willing to put time and money,
I wouldn't say I really disagree with the sentiment, but perhaps with
the statement.
"Serious" to me isn't measured by time and money, although they may
be correlated.
To me "serious" means that you're willing to invest "effort".
In addition to time and money, effort is measured by your willingness
to "think" about music.
That is, spending $10K on a rig, and playing 10 hours of exercises
everyday doesn't make you "serious".
You are serious if you frequently ask yourself questions like:
o What do I want to do
o How can I learn to do it
o What works, what doesn't
o Why can't I do it?
o Am I challenging myself
BTW, I didn't invent this. It's the single biggest thing I've learned
from Steve Morse is that the "secret" of of playing is that it's
mainly forcing yourself to use your brain every bit as much as your
hands and fingers - possibly more so.
I think that one thing has allowed me to excel even only playing
(and spending) half as much as I used to.
db
|
1709.26 | | SUBURB::COLEJ | A Very very very boring accountant. | Tue Apr 03 1990 17:51 | 10 |
| To me, a serious guitarist is
1. Someone Who practices a lot and wants to get better, while still
playing for the love and not the sake of it.
2. someone who changes his strings at least twice a month.
Juju
xxxx
|
1709.27 | buht | SMURF::BENNETT | enjoyment of the performing... | Tue Apr 03 1990 17:56 | 6 |
|
> 2. someone who changes his strings at least twice a month
There are some serious blues players that prefer to change strings only
*when they break*. I like mine slippery brand new fresh but I hate to
change 'em so they go every month or so... after they get black & nasty.
|
1709.28 | All of us are individuals | CSC32::MOLLER | Nightmare on Sesame Street | Tue Apr 03 1990 19:16 | 34 |
| I remember reading that Eric Clapton does't change strings until
they break either (This in Guitar Player, somewhere around 1979).
I'm fairly serious about guitar & I change my strings once a year
(after all New Years gigs), whether they need it or not. I play
with very light guitar picks & they usually last 8 to 10 gigs
also. Last year I played 47 gigs & only had 2 strings break (these
are GHS .008 or .009 boomers).
So What's serious? I practice almost exclusively on an acoustic
guitar, but I almost only ever play on an electric live. I've been
doing this for at least 10 years. I started playing in 1964 & I still
own my first guitar (but don't use it much for live work anymore),
a Gibson SG with 'soap bar' P90 pickups.
I'd say that serious is a state of mind. I think a lot about music,
but there is alot that I don't like. I rarely practice anything that
I play out live, prefering to work on things that I like to play
at home & working on styles that may not directly benefit my live
work in any way. Serious to me means more along the lines of how
you relate to your instrument and how you make it talk for you.
The instrument itself is no more than an extension of your method
of communication, no matter what brand it is. As always, I play
what I like, and don't play what I don't like on my own time.
At a gig, I play what pays. I try to make the 2 align where possible,
but it's not always possible. There are a lot of serious guitarists
who do things different from everyone else. No list of things to
do will make everybody into a 'Serious' guitarist. As long as I'm
happy with my efforts, then other opinions are just opinions. I'd
suspect that other 'Serious' guitar players might think in a similar
fashion. I'm always working on new stuff, because I want to, and
for no other reason.
Jens
|
1709.29 | | CSC32::H_SO | | Wed Apr 04 1990 22:00 | 5 |
|
Good points, Jens! Now, is that written in 2 pieces of stone by the
way? ;-)
J.
|
1709.30 | | IOENG::JWILLIAMS | Welcome to the Bush League | Thu Apr 05 1990 13:31 | 4 |
| I go through strings like no one's business. If I didn't use a thin
pick, I'd rip the strings right off the bridge. I work up a serious
sweat whenever I play.
John.
|
1709.31 | Death to my strings ... | ASAHI::SCARY | Joke 'em if they can't take a ... | Thu Apr 05 1990 23:58 | 7 |
| I change mine after every gig or at least once a week. My sweat should
be contained in thick plastic containers ! Powerful stuff ... plus I
play pretty hard.
Scary
|
1709.32 | Location may effect your mileage | CSC32::MOLLER | Hit by a truck; Licence # RDB31A | Fri Apr 06 1990 13:13 | 12 |
| >> I change mine after every gig or at least once a week. My sweat should
Humidity is practically non existant here in Colorado Springs.
10% (or less) relative humidity is fairly common, and 40% (or
greater) is extreamly uncommon. This is a semi-arid area; more
like a desert than one might imagine. (I thought I would die last
time I was in Boston during the summer, it was so humid). This
might have an effect on how sweaty my hands are & general string
life. (Note: Humidity is this low in many of the western states,
including southern California, where I lived before moving to
Colorado.)
Jens
|
1709.33 | | PNO::HEISER | WBLM rocks Cliff Island | Fri Apr 06 1990 13:30 | 4 |
| Arizona is the same way. Humidity only hits 40% when monsoon season
hits in August. The norm is 0% - 20%.
Bad part is dry skin ages faster ;-)
|
1709.34 | | ASAHI::SCARY | Joke 'em if they can't take a ... | Fri Apr 06 1990 17:25 | 5 |
| Here in Greenville, SC it's usually never lower than 80%. Sounds like
a rain forest compared to you guys ! 8^)
Scary
|
1709.35 | | UPWARD::HEISER | WBLM rocks Cliff Island | Fri Apr 06 1990 18:24 | 7 |
| You know they say the dry air makes your skin age faster too, but I
don't believe it.
If you could see what I see in Phoenix or Southern Cal. in the summertime,
you wouldn't believe it either ;-)
Mike
|
1709.36 | yeah, but..... | RAVEN1::DANDREA | Frog lickers unite! | Mon Apr 09 1990 10:29 | 5 |
| RE -1
Looking without touching will make you age faster....it's the anxiety!
Steve d....|)
|