T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
2918.1 | I Wanna Jam It With You | TROOA::BUCKTON | STEVE BUCKTON @TBY | Thu Apr 21 1994 14:45 | 17 |
| I do this all the time. My faves..not in order
Johnny Winter (anything)
Dire Straits - 1st Album & Communique
Cream - Disraeli Gears
Jeff Beck - Beckola
Stones - Let It Bleed
I can go on and on. But..I got a new band and it's working out real
good so the stereo jamming has gone to the back of the line.
Steve
TBay
|
2918.2 | | TECRUS::ROST | Motivation: what good is it? | Thu Apr 21 1994 15:44 | 10 |
|
Ventures - Play Along With The Ventures
John Lennon - Two Virgins
An Evening With Wild Man Fischer
Anthony Braxton - For Alto
Thurston
|
2918.3 | | DREGS::BLICKSTEIN | Light to dark, dark to light | Thu Apr 21 1994 15:52 | 6 |
| Good Rats - "Tasty" and "Rats to Richs"
Blackfoot - "Flyin' High", "No Reservations"
Billy Cobham - "Spectrum"
Bad Company - anything
Mott the Hoople - anything
SRV - lots of things
|
2918.4 | | RICKS::CALCAGNI | I Got You Babe (Slight Return) | Thu Apr 21 1994 15:56 | 10 |
| I like this idea for a topic; there ARE albums that just seem made for
playin along with.
Was doing this one just last night:
Derek and the Dominoes Live (the newly re-issued one with extra
tracks)
/slowfoot
|
2918.5 | | GOES11::HOUSE | Aren't you glad I asked? | Thu Apr 21 1994 16:10 | 9 |
| At various points in the past I have enjoyed playing along with:
Hendrix - Band of Gypsies
Ramones - Ramonesmania
CCR - Best of..
Devo - Are We Not Men
Rolling Stones - some early best of compilation
many others...
|
2918.6 | | SPEZKO::FRASER | Mobius Loop; see other side | Thu Apr 21 1994 16:23 | 7 |
| Sesame Street Live - the Sesame Street Players
Toughie: "C is for Cookie" - needed a capo at the 5th and 21st frets!
C. Monster
|
2918.7 | | FRETZ::HEISER | no D in Phoenix | Thu Apr 21 1994 16:26 | 1 |
| Southern Steel - Steve Morse
|
2918.8 | | GOES11::HOUSE | Aren't you glad I asked? | Thu Apr 21 1994 16:27 | 1 |
| C'mon Mike, can't you play anything even remotely difficult?
|
2918.9 | how's this? | FRETZ::HEISER | no D in Phoenix | Thu Apr 21 1994 16:40 | 1 |
| Cinammon Girl - Neil Young
|
2918.10 | | LEDS::BURATI | cluck? | Thu Apr 21 1994 16:42 | 1 |
| Probably anything by Jimmy McGriff.
|
2918.11 | Gotta learn those songs someday! :-) | SSDEVO::LAMBERT | I made life easy just by laughing | Thu Apr 21 1994 16:45 | 3 |
| My band's demo tape.
-- Sam
|
2918.12 | | 67STNG::COOPER | Let The Light Surround You!! | Thu Apr 21 1994 19:04 | 2 |
| Hmmm... I like to Jam with anything by Judas Priest, and anything
by Tesla... And a couple of select Queensryche toons.
|
2918.13 | "Eyes Of A Stranger" | COMET::LAURICH | | Fri Apr 22 1994 01:47 | 7 |
|
Ditto on the Queensryche tunes! If you want to go crazy just
do Mind Crime. Anything by Testament or Satch is good too.
Jeffy
|
2918.14 | I jam air guitar with Steve Morse and the Hellecasters.... | NAVY5::SDANDREA | Plonk, Roost, and Jam, what a country! | Fri Apr 22 1994 11:05 | 22 |
| this is so predictable....everyone's replies could have been written by
their buddies.........
You guys would never have guessed, but I like to jam along with:
All of EC's stuff from Cream to Derek & the Doms
SRV
Bad Company
Allmans
Eagles
Doobies
Lynyardy Synyardy
Warren Haynes
|
2918.15 | My Picks | POLAR::KRESIC | | Fri Apr 22 1994 11:07 | 11 |
|
Here's a few of mine:
1/ B.B. King - "Live At The Regal"
2/ Dire Straits - "1st" & "Making Movies"
3/ John Mayall w/Eric Clapton Bluesbreakers
4/ Allmon Bros. - "Live At Filmore"
5/ Eric Clapton - "Money & Cigarettes" & "Derek & The Dominoes "
6/ CCR - "Best Of"
7/ Stones - "Exile On Main Street", "Sticky Fingers", "Goat Heads Soup"
|
2918.16 | | POWDML::BUCKLEY | Raptor -- Rules the Skies! | Fri Apr 22 1994 11:08 | 6 |
|
Yngwie Malmsteen albums!
1) Steeler
2) Alcatrazz - No Parole
3) Rising Force!
|
2918.17 | Foghat! | ADROID::foster | Spelling originals since 1960 | Fri Apr 22 1994 11:38 | 1 |
|
|
2918.18 | these guys rock...heh..heh.heh | RICKS::CALCAGNI | I Got You Babe (Slight Return) | Fri Apr 22 1994 11:49 | 3 |
| Machine Head!
"you're lazy, you just stay in bed"
|
2918.19 | | BIGQ::DCLARK | pathetic | Fri Apr 22 1994 12:26 | 3 |
| Sabbath, dude. I put .008's on and tune down 3 half-steps.
Also, fer real, Just One Night by EC is my favorite jamming album.
|
2918.20 | | TECRUS::ROST | Motivation: what good is it? | Fri Apr 22 1994 13:33 | 12 |
| Re: .19
Yo, Dave...just spotted at Apple Country Market at the bottom of the
hill below HLO2....
A Sabbath *comic book* scripted by Geezer hisself!
Seriously...couldn't quite bring myself to spring the $3.95 for it,
tho.
Waiting for Mahvishnu meets Dr. Octopus....
|
2918.21 | it's over, dude! | RICKS::CALCAGNI | I Got You Babe (Slight Return) | Fri Apr 22 1994 13:51 | 3 |
| Hey Rosty, you know you're old when you can't justify 4 clams for a Sab
comic book!
|
2918.22 | a few past choices, and some new ones too! | BLASTA::Pelkey | Life aint for the squeamish | Fri Apr 22 1994 14:49 | 22 |
| Wow, Sabbath,, Machine head... brings back teen-age memories...
some vynil I wore out as a spry lad...
Boston (1st album)
Beck, (Blow-by-blow)
Areosmithy (get yer wigs)
Deep Purple (all of em.. was a blackmore freak)
Hendrix, (Just buy one, then buy another one, then buy another one..)
Sabbath, (Oh yea, like all of them too. Mom hated Sabbath!....)
some Cd's I would a wore out recently if they was still vynil...
Gary Moore (Still got the blues)
Larry Carlton (on Solid Ground)
A bunch of Steeley Dan (Thanks to Cote!)
- actually I found "a Decade of Steeley Dan" covered a lot of
ground..
|
2918.23 | Deep Forest | LEDS::BURATI | cluck? | Sat Apr 23 1994 12:58 | 3 |
| Actually one of the best albums I've come across for this is something
called "Deep Forest". It has some nice grooves on it. You can play all
over and around them. (It's also great to just listen to.)
|
2918.24 | | BIGQ::DCLARK | pathetic | Mon Apr 25 1994 07:57 | 3 |
| re .20
I'm there, dude
|
2918.25 | | RICKS::CALCAGNI | I Got You Babe (Slight Return) | Mon Apr 25 1994 09:03 | 4 |
| "Deep Forest"? Is that some sort of field recording of pygmy chants
overdubbed with new agey/world music backing? (at least, that's how I
recall it described)
|
2918.26 | | LEDS::BURATI | keep talking | Mon Apr 25 1994 09:54 | 21 |
| RE: Deep Forest
Sort of. New agey? No. World music? Mmmmmaybe.
This guy (whose name I don't recall) built these cool rhythm grooves
around vocal phrases that he lifted off some Ethnic Sounds series CD
ROM. I mean he actually turned out real "songs" this way, not just
chants and rhythm loops. It's great stuff for layering guitar licks
onto. It's a lot of fun to just listen to also.
Being somewhat familiar with the process for going about assembling such
compositions, I can barely fathom the amount of work that went into this
album. I was highly skeptical when my wife showed me what she bought.
She was in a record store shopping for classical CDs and heard it
playing and loved it.
I don't think that I can adequately describe it here. I don't know what
to compare it to.
--Ron
|
2918.27 | Ron's pick (with a bullet! <da-dum>) | RICKS::CALCAGNI | I Got You Babe (Slight Return) | Mon Apr 25 1994 10:27 | 3 |
| Hmmm, I saw this last week and decided to pass on checking it out, but
if *you* like it then perhaps I'll reconsider...
|
2918.28 | | LEDS::BURATI | keep talking | Mon Apr 25 1994 10:31 | 4 |
| > if *you* like it then perhaps I'll reconsider...
Well \rick, it ain't like ANYTHING else in my album collection. (BTW, I
hate "new age", if that makes a difference. Yanni makes me yawny.)
|
2918.29 | | ROCKER::KNOX | Rock'n'Roll Refugee | Wed Apr 27 1994 13:08 | 12 |
|
my favs to beat my bass...
Any Steely Dan (I got most of the charts, helps to keep up sight-reading)
Any Larry Carlton
Jeff Beck "Blow by Blow" and "Wired" (licks to live by!!)
/Billy_K
|
2918.30 | | DREGS::BLICKSTEIN | Light to dark, dark to light | Wed Apr 27 1994 13:35 | 17 |
| > Any Larry Carlton
I echo that, but particularly "Room 335".
Another great album to jam to is "Spectrum" by Billy Cobham.
First, it has some AWESOME playing by the late Tommy Bolin on it (by
FAR his best IMHO). Second the guitar is panned hard to one side
so you can pan it to the other side and just jam to the backing tracks
which are HOT!
I love the SOUND of his guitar on this one too. Moreso than any other
album I've heard, this makes your stereo speaker sound as if it was
the guitar amp. You can almost imagine Bolin in the room with a cord
running to your speaker.
Other great bands to jam to: Blackfoot and the Good Rats
|
2918.31 | tone recipe | RICKS::CALCAGNI | I Got You Babe (Slight Return) | Wed Apr 27 1994 13:55 | 4 |
| Re Tommy Bolin: I always liked his tone too and I remember once reading
him describe how he got it. The main ingredients: vintage Strat, bass
control on the amp turned all the way up.
|
2918.32 | | TECRUS::ROST | From the dance hall to hell | Wed Apr 27 1994 14:15 | 4 |
| But Rick, what about those Explorers I saw in pics of Bolin? Maybe
those were only for slide.
Brian
|
2918.33 | Tommy Bolin: So sad to waste such talent | BRAT::PAGE | | Thu Apr 28 1994 11:43 | 26 |
|
Tommy Bolin really was a great guitarist-- a "player's player", I
think. And one of the great "hired gun" guitarists of the '70's; he
played on a wide variety of albums and was able to sound great at
them all.
The Billy Cobham record was definitely a highlight. I liked his
first solo LP "Teasin'" alot, although there were a few uninspiring
tracks.
On the other hand, there's an import album recorded with Deep
Purple, "Live In Japan" I think, which was recorded during the
height of his heroin addiction... the story goes something like
he scored some bad heroin while on tour and it really messed up his
arm for a while. This recording is from a gig at that time and his
playing on it is atrocious.
Glen Hughes, fellow Deep Purple member and good friend of Tommy's,
is also a favorite of mine... loved his vocals. His album with Pat
Thrall (called "Hughes/Thrall", oddly enough) is a great rock LP.
Brad
(thinking alot about the damage heroin has done
after watching "Turning Point" last night.)
|
2918.34 | Made In Japan-Tommy B. | POLAR::KRESIC | | Thu May 26 1994 11:09 | 12 |
| The "Made In Japan" CD (double live album) just has Ritchie Blackmore
playing guitar on it. The guitar playing (as well as the band's
playing) is really quite good. Tommy Bolin didn't play on this one,
he wasn't mentioned in the liner notes. It's kind of strange what
heroin did to various artists. The Stones seemed to put out there
best CD's (Sticky Fingers, Goat Head's Soup) while Keith Richards
was heavy into heroin. I think Keith has cut back and is just into
booze and cigarettes these days.
Keep On pickin' and grinnin'
|
2918.35 | | GOES11::HOUSE | Aren't you glad I asked? | Thu May 26 1994 11:19 | 4 |
| He's not talking about "Made In Japan" (a classic). I think the one he
means is "Live in Tokyo" or something, done several years later.
gh
|
2918.36 | | ABACUS::PAGE | | Thu May 26 1994 13:56 | 12 |
|
That's right, the live Deep Purple album I was referring to was
not "Made In Japan", it was a more obscure import LP-- "Live In Tokyo"
could be the correct title, I still haven't gotten around to digging
out the LP at home.
I think "Made in Japan" features both Richie's best playing and
Ian Gillan's best singing. "Live In Tokyo" is a whole other story...
Brad
|
2918.37 | | TECRUS::ROST | From the dance hall to hell | Fri May 27 1994 08:24 | 7 |
| Re: .33
What is your data on Bolin's heroin use? I recall at the time of his
death there was no such talk, he died from taking some sleeping pills
after drinking all night.
Brian
|
2918.38 | ___ Wild Dogs ____ | SOLVIT::SNORAT::OLOUGHLIN | The fun begins at 80! | Fri May 27 1994 08:36 | 9 |
|
Last few: After hearing Bolin's "Teaser" album, which I liked alot,
I paid a little attention to the info surrounding his death. Along
with what Brian said, booze and sleeping pills, there was also a
small pharmacy stock residing in his belly that night. Basically
the guy partied himself to death. Play & pay.
Rick.
|
2918.39 | Tuning Help | UBOHUB::LUNNS | | Tue Jul 05 1994 04:58 | 12 |
| I read with great interest the replies to this note but I have always
been puzzled why many of my favorite albums seem to change tune
between tracks.
With the exception of 1 or 2 Eric Clapton records, namely - Money and
Cigs. and Survivor, most of my classic rock and blues records vary
slightly between tracks requiring all sharp or all flat adjustments to each
string.
I've got a quality hi-fi - does anyone else have these problems and if
so what Albums would you recommend, or is it my hi-fi ?
|
2918.40 | Spectrum by Billy Cobham | DREGS::BLICKSTEIN | Light to dark, dark to light | Tue Jul 05 1994 09:02 | 11 |
| One of my favorite albums to jam along to is "Spectrum" by Billy Cobham
with (the late) Tommy Bolin on guitar.
The tunes are basically long jams and the guitar is panned all the way
to one side so if your turn the balance knob the other direction you
get a world-class band to jam along with.
And the tunes on it are really HOT! It's mostly jazz artists, but
IMHO that album definitely rocks.
db
|
2918.41 | Somewhere between E and Eb... | PAVONE::TURNER | | Tue Jul 05 1994 09:54 | 9 |
| re: .39
Yeah, I've had this problem too, especially with older records (i.e.
records recorded 20-30 years ago). I put it down to approximate tuning
equipment, or even minor importance attached to the whole question of
tuning to concert pitch.
Sure is infuriating though!
Dom
|
2918.42 | | TECRUS::ROST | That O.J., what a cut up! | Tue Jul 05 1994 11:54 | 9 |
| re: .39, .41
Some records have the speed tweaked on purpose. It used to be common
to bump up the speed on singles to make them more "danceable". A good
example can be found on the James Brown "Star Time" box; the full
version of "Papa's Got a Brand New Bag" is considerably slower than the
single version (both are included).
Brian
|
2918.43 | ex | SPESHR::WAIBLE | | Tue Sep 06 1994 10:00 | 19 |
| tuning to albums was always abother until I finally invested in a pitch
controlled turntable. That's invaluable now. I think some of the
problem as was pointed out might have been players simply taking
whatever guitar wasclosest in tune and tuning everything to that. Also
the recording process invovled a lot of steps that could have acounted
for drift (one tape machine to the mastering machine to whatever other
steps might have been invovled). I know playing along with my who
albums alwaysrequired pitch adjusting the turntable. HMMMMMmmmm.
I wonder if the really noticable pitch variations have been transferred
to cd. Of course jimi Hendrix as well as a lot of modern day players
tuned to eb to save a little on vocals.
If i really want to jam with something or have to learn it, I copy it
to tape and use my Ibenez RP100 which has a pitch control and little
mixer built in. pretty nifty for doing hard rock jamming and homework
at 11:30pm when the rest of the house is asleep!!
---Fred
|
2918.44 | Variable-speed cassette? | DECWIN::RALTO | | Wed Sep 14 1994 11:55 | 15 |
| re: last few, pitch control
Do these turntables and cassette players with pitch control do their
thing by varying the speed of the drive, or by some electronic means?
Aside from that, in a related area, it would be nice to have a
cassette deck where I could adjust the actual speed over a fairly
wide range (say, 2X). I've got some old reel-to-reel tapes from
the mid 60's that were recorded on a cheapo direct-drive recorder
where the recording speed was, uh, "proportional" to the battery
voltage, which was usually decreasing. If I could copy them to
cassette and then use such a variable-speed deck, it'd be great
to hear some of those again. Anyone ever hear of such a beastie?
Chris
|
2918.45 | | GOES11::HOUSE | How could I have been so blind? | Wed Sep 14 1994 12:18 | 5 |
| Yes, the ones I've seen adjust the pitch by changing the speed of the
drive. I haven't seen any with a real wide range though, usually just
goes a few steps.
Greg
|
2918.46 | | SSDEVO::LAMBERT | Sam, Subsystems Engineering @CXO | Wed Sep 14 1994 12:39 | 7 |
| I believe one of the "session trainer"/practice amp/headphone amp things
has a full � speed reduction. The name Ampeg comes to mind, but I could
be way off. Check a recent Musician's Friend catalog, or similar, and you
may find what you're looking for.
-- Sam
|
2918.47 | | MPGS::MARKEY | Oooh baby, you smell like... food! | Wed Sep 14 1994 12:51 | 21 |
| >I believe one of the "session trainer"/practice amp/headphone amp things
>has a full � speed reduction.
However, as far as I know it is not variable. A switch selects full or
1/2 speed, with nothing in between.
On the other hand, several dubs between two cassette decks with
variable speed could achieve any desired pitch ratio, even if
you can only go plus or minus 10 (or 15) % at a time.
Be forwarned though that halfing the speed drops everything by
a full octave and makes the song twice as long. For the purpose
stated (restoring off-speed recordings) this should not be a
problem... but if anyone is considering buying one of these
things because it will make it easier to learn songs; well,
there's a significant trade-off involved. Especially if you
happen to be a bass player. You start geting down to where
you can't discern the pitch of notes... it's just a bunch
of low frequency crud.
Brian
|
2918.48 | | FRETZ::HEISER | Maranatha! | Wed Sep 14 1994 14:55 | 1 |
| "Donny & Marie's Greatest Hits" as performed by Steve Morse
|
2918.49 | You make a good point there Mike | DREGS::BLICKSTEIN | db | Wed Sep 14 1994 15:07 | 3 |
| > "Donny & Marie's Greatest Hits" as performed by Steve Morse
Yes, this proves that Morse can make ANYTHING sound good.
|
2918.50 | | FRETZ::HEISER | Maranatha! | Wed Sep 14 1994 15:30 | 1 |
| forgot to mention that this is for drummers.
|
2918.51 | | SSDEVO::LAMBERT | Sam, Subsystems Engineering @CXO | Wed Sep 14 1994 15:47 | 4 |
| Wouldn't it be better to cover Karen Carpenter's music instead, then?
-- Sam
|
2918.52 | | POWDML::BUCKLEY | why do we have to fall from grace? | Wed Sep 14 1994 15:49 | 3 |
| >Wouldn't it be better to cover Karen Carpenter's music instead, then?
Music to starve by??
|
2918.53 | Reelin' in the tears | DREGS::BLICKSTEIN | db | Wed Sep 14 1994 16:05 | 1 |
| Mike's still reeling from Deep Purple replacing Satriani with Morse.
|
2918.54 | Morse is selling out | FRETZ::HEISER | Maranatha! | Wed Sep 14 1994 16:41 | 2 |
| It shows Morse is fed up with playing for no $$ in small clubs like
Rhythms all his life. He wants what all the great players have.
|
2918.55 | "Gonna miss ya" | DREGS::BLICKSTEIN | db | Thu Sep 15 1994 09:02 | 17 |
| Ah, Mikey... you just insist on throwing stones from inside your glass
house without even opening the window.
I mean it's one thing to tour with Deep Purple (Morse is the only
guitarist on the planet good enough to be described as "having his
talent wasted being with Deep Purple").
But if you look up "selling out" in the dictionary, it will tell you
that selling out is defined by touring with Mick Jagger, which
Satriani did before his doomed stint with Deep Purple.
I mean... Mick Jagger... Mike. Mick Jagger! Remember him Mike?
He's the guy who convinced the Stones to try disco when it was
popular!!!
db
|
2918.56 | Same old story, same old song and dance, my friend | GOES11::HOUSE | How could I have been so blind? | Thu Sep 15 1994 09:49 | 11 |
| > I mean it's one thing to tour with Deep Purple (Morse is the only
> guitarist on the planet good enough to be described as "having his
> talent wasted being with Deep Purple").
Given that Deep Purple have done basically nothing in the last 10
years, and most of their memorable material was done 10 years before
that, I'd say that most guitarists capable of playing the material
would be wasting their talant playing those same old songs time and
time again with them.
Greg
|
2918.57 | | USPMLO::DESROCHERS | Mine's made outta unobtainium! | Thu Sep 15 1994 09:57 | 9 |
|
re: .55, db - er, let's see now. Just who was the slug that
Satch replaced on that Jagger tour?
Some no talent slug, for sure. Had to have been.
Anyone remember...
|
2918.58 | 3-way battle | DREGS::BLICKSTEIN | db | Thu Sep 15 1994 10:21 | 6 |
| > re: .55, db - er, let's see now. Just who was the slug that
> Satch replaced on that Jagger tour?
Pat Martino?
;-)
|
2918.59 | Good timing on that catalog arrival | DECWIN::RALTO | | Thu Sep 15 1994 11:50 | 12 |
| re: pitch control cassette players
Thanks for the info, several replies back there. I think I've found
something pretty close to what I'm looking for, in the Summer/Fall
Musician's Friend catalog. It's an Ibanez tape player with pitch
control, with lots of other goodies (you can plug your guitar into
it and even add distortion and chorus, if I recall), not bad for
$130. If I need to, I can make repeated slowdown/speedup dubs as
one of the replies suggested, as well.
Thanks,
Chris
|
2918.60 | learned it in a guitar store | FRETZ::HEISER | Maranatha! | Thu Sep 15 1994 13:22 | 7 |
| db, Satch toured with Jagger way back before the "Surfin'..." album
came out.
I'll give you this much: nobody could play "Smoke on the Water" quite
like Morse. BTW - where are you going since you're gonna miss me?
Mike
|
2918.61 | | DREGS::BLICKSTEIN | db | Thu Sep 15 1994 13:35 | 7 |
| > db, Satch toured with Jagger way back before the "Surfin'..." album
> came out.
I think you've got your facts wrong. I'm pretty sure he toured with
Jagger recently.
db
|
2918.62 | Yawn | SSDEVO::LAMBERT | Sam, Subsystems Engineering @CXO | Thu Sep 15 1994 14:28 | 8 |
| re: <<< Note 2918.60 by FRETZ::HEISER "Maranatha!" >>>
> BTW - where are you going since you're gonna miss me?
Somewhere else, hopefully.
-- Sam
|
2918.63 | | FRETZ::HEISER | Maranatha! | Thu Sep 15 1994 14:30 | 1 |
| If he did, then he's done it twice.
|
2918.64 | | TAMRC::LAURENT | Hal Laurent @ COP | Thu Sep 15 1994 14:42 | 3 |
| Geez, guys! Enough already! I feel like I'm back in sixth grade!
-Hal
|
2918.65 | ;-) | DREGS::BLICKSTEIN | db | Thu Sep 15 1994 16:08 | 3 |
| > I feel like I'm back in sixth grade!
HE STARTED IT!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
|
2918.66 | NYAH | POWDML::BUCKLEY | why do we have to fall from grace? | Thu Sep 15 1994 16:18 | 2 |
|
DID NOT!!!!!!!!!!!!
|