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- Newsgroups: alt.guitar
- Path: sparky!uunet!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!magnus.acs.ohio-state.edu!bgsuvax!edwards
- From: edwards@andy.bgsu.edu (Bruce Edwards)
- Subject: Re: Improvisational focus (WAS: Re: Blues Soloing [help!])
- Message-ID: <BxzGvs.7nM@andy.bgsu.edu>
- Organization: Bowling Green State University B.G., Oh.
- References: <2258@deadmin.ucsd.edu> <1992Nov17.213326.24418@col.hp.com>
- Distribution: usa
- Date: Thu, 19 Nov 1992 21:55:02 GMT
- Lines: 40
-
- In article <1992Nov17.213326.24418@col.hp.com>, rstern@col.hp.com (Richard Stern) writes:
- >
- > 2) Almost all guitarists get in ruts, but we get in *our own* ruts. The
- > first time I realized this was when I got complimented by a guitarist
- > whom I respected and considered way better than myself. We got to talking
- > and come to this important fact: we all get somewhat bored with our own
- > playing, since we hear ourselves over and over. But those same licks may
- > sound fresh to someone else. And that player is probably sick of his/her
- > licks, but they sound fresh to you.
- >
- > Richard Stern
- > rstern@col.hp.com
-
- Man ... ain't it the truth. I don't know how many times I've been playing with
- someone and beating my fingers to a pulp trying to pick something up that
- they're doing thinkin' this is great stuff, I wish I had more stuff like this.
- Then I start to fire off some tired old licks of mine and it's, "Hey, stop man,
- what's that you're doin' there?!" I'm thinking, "What? This little thing? It
- ain't nothin'!" We used to what we play and familiarity breeds comtempt. That's
- why you have to play with as many people as you can. Particularly the blues.
- The blues is more like an oral tradition would be in a non-literate culture.
- Its bits and pieces of this and that, licks, tricks, scams, posturing and
- tone, tone, tone, tone, tone. I get to play with Big Jack Reynolds every
- once in while (I won't go into his 'blues pedigree' but he used to blow harp
- riffs back and forth cross the street before supper with Sonny Boy in Detroit
- and John Lee Hooker mentions him on the liner notes of his new album). Big
- Jack's guitar playin could be described as incredibly monotonous if you
- weren't listening very carefully, you watch him play and say to yourself
- I see every single note he's playin, it ain't no big deal .... until you
- try to make that sound then you realize it ain't how many notes, or how
- fast you play um it's tone, tone, tone. And as I heard Big Jack say to a
- young wanna-be poking around Jacks stuff after a gig ... "It ain't the
- amplifier son" ;-)
-
- edwards@andy.bgsu.edu
-
- --
-
- edwards@andy.bgsu.edu
-
-