Showing posts with label offerings of sound. Show all posts
Showing posts with label offerings of sound. Show all posts

Monday, January 25, 2016

Fishman Makes Tele Pickups

Greg Koch is the funniest man in music these days, and here he's showing off the new Fluence pickups from Fishman. I couldn't make them sound as good as he does, but he certainly makes a case for them here.

I might want a PowerBridge up in there, too.

Thursday, February 5, 2015

Blowin' Through

Listen to this



On the suggestion of John Bohlinger, I'm taking the Jazz Improvisation course from Coursera. I've taken MOOC courses before, but always tend to peter out before the end, because I never carve time out to do it.

My gig prep time is similarly lazy, in that I maybe listen through the song a few times before practice, play at practice, and go back to the points where my failure to prepare stand out, and learn to nail those parts. Just-in-time rehearsal, so to speak.

I had the title before I hit record. The big difference between jazz and rock music is that, with rock, if you determine the key to the track is G major, you can play G major all through the song, no matter where. If there's a gear-change modulation, we've moved from G to A, and I can play there for the rest of the song.

With jazz, not so much. Instead, you're given chord changes, and what you play depends on what chord is going on at the time. At least, that's the rule for pre-modal jazz. I'm not sure what the rules are for Kind of Blue through Pangaea/Agharta, but that isn't important for this post. Line is, when John Coltrane passed out the chords for "Giant Steps", they didn't know the tempo was going to be that fast, and pianist Tommy Flanagan fell off.

A rock player can be distinguished in a jazz context by the way he things "I'll play in G" (or, because of horn players, Bb) and not pay attention to the specific chords going through. "Blowing through the changes", I'm told they say.

I was going to try to not do that. I went through the chord sheet and at least tried to sketch out what scales were usable where, to pull a Gmin7b5 into an arpeggio (G-Bb-Db-F) and get some clue as to what to do. Then, I plugged into my recording rig (for the second time in my life), figured out how to tell the Mac to use the USB input and not the mic, how to tell GarageBand I want to hear myself and the track, learned the keyboard shortcuts, and recorded the above.

First, man that's fast. Not faster than I can play, but faster than I can think, and there weren't clear signposts saying "You're on the F minor now". My saving grace is that you can go crazy with chromatic notes with jazz, where most musics I play, that's not so good. "If you play a sour note", the line goes, "play it again, play it like you meant it, and people will think you're playing jazz."

I have been trying to play to other jazz on occasion, especially "All Blues", and I'm finding that the tools I go to for most everything just don't work there. The brightness of the bridge pickup is too harsh, distortion and overdrive give a growl, and there's no reason to growl. Neck pickup into a clean amp is all the music needs, and that's all I gave it, and those lessons carried over into this. I could use more engineering, because the direct-to-board playing gave me a percussive click on picking that was not remotely welcome. So, I knew what to sound like, but jazz tone is not jazz playing.

Ultimately, though, I blew through the changes. I didn't even blow through the changes. Or maybe I acquitted myself reasonably well and I'm just too self-critical. Tell me, I'm listening.

Wednesday, November 5, 2014

Cover Me Up


"Cover Me Up" by Jason Isbell.

Arranged and performed by Cameron Mizell.

Played on a Telecaster, like all songs should be.

Tuesday, August 20, 2013

Lap Steel Synth


I've been curious about getting a guitar synth setup and putting it on a lap steel for a while. This shows me that it'd be everything I'd want and more. The "Crazy Vibrato Opera Singer" patch, if used with single notes and not chords, seems like it'd be all the setup you need to simulate theremin playing.

That is, if you're playing it like Clara Rockmore, not Jimmy Page.

Monday, August 19, 2013

Tommy, John and Pedro: Sultans of Swing


I have always loved this song, from the first I heard it. I've not heard of Pedro Javier González before, but I know that John Jorgenson is a Hellecaster and that Tommy Emmanuel was given the coveted by c.g.p. by Chet Atkins himself, so he's among great company and acquitting himself well. 

Tuesday, November 6, 2012


While I don't like the guy's potty mouth, I do like his very sitar-like fretless Tele.

Don't let the video title fool you, it isn't a Fender guitar, much less Fender Custom Shop guitar. Plus, Yakkety Sax.

Friday, October 26, 2012

Double Stops from Scotty Anderson


Scotty Anderson is easily the best guitarist you haven't heard of. Or, maybe you have heard of him. Lucky you, then. This is taken from Arlen Roth's old Hot Licks video series, which included two great mindbenders from Danny Gatton.
Video re-added

Wednesday, October 17, 2012

Choisir le Poulet

iowa91 is a picker from just outside Paris (and not Paris, Texas), and she certainly has some licks down. 

Thursday, August 16, 2012

Stepping Up My Game

There's further religious and philosophical connections to all this, but as a quick and dirty definition, praise songs are the fast songs and worship songs are the slow ones. And this week, the two praise songs have intros that, when I showed up at practice on Tuesday, I didn't know.

Song 1, "You Are Good"

I don't have the time -- I do, but in my hands, not in my head -- but here's the tab.
TAB
e|---------12--14-------|-------12------------
B|-14--12---------------|-----------14--------
G|-----------------11---|---14----------------
D|----------------------|---------------------
A|----------------------|---------------------
E|----------------------|---------------------

Song 2, "Reaching For YOu"

I don't have this one remotely as together as the other, which is somewhat ironic, as the other song was assigned to another guitarist, who has stopped showing up to practices. Again, my attempt, with repeated noted cut.

Rather than try to do the tab, I think I'll just link in this other vid.


So, I'll try got get together what this guy has totally together, by Sunday.

Sunday, May 13, 2012

Duck Dunn




Donald "Duck" Dunn

Bassist for Booker T. and the MGs

1941-2012

Rest in peace

Wednesday, April 11, 2012

Steve Lukather is Cool and I Love the 21st Century

First, let's start with this: I've been thinking I needed to dream up something to say here. I never thought it would be anything like this.

I saw a link on Facebook today, of Eric Skye doing a solo fingerstyle arrangement of "All Blues".



Let's be clear: Miles Davis' Kind of Blue is one of my favorites, and "All Blues" is one of my favorites from Kind of Blue. Beyond that, I've been wanting to get a smaller bodied guitar because I want something less boomy and more punchy than my dreadnought.

I love it. I need to listen to the real take, not just the discussion. Plus, I need this or at least this, but that's not really actionable today. What is actionable is pulling up versions on Spotify and putting them into your queue.  This included one with Larry Carlton and Steve Lukather from No Substitutions, Live in Osaka.

Ever have something rub you the wrong way? It did me, and I tweeted about it.

Listening to Larry Carton and Steve Lukather take on All Blues. I like guitars w/ gain. I like jazz. I don't like said guitars in jazz.

A justifiable position, if a throw-away position. Re-listening to the track on Spotify, I'm finding it far less objectionable. And it's a tone issue, not a playing issue. Clearly, both are top players.

 Here's some Larry and Steve from YouTube, but not the same track.



This lead to a discussion with friend-of-the-blog and fellow Clarence White fan Adios Lounge (@adioslounge), basically ending with the thought that Western Swing and Redneck Jazz are great. We hold these truthes as self-evident.



That is the greatest of ease, isn't it?

But it doesn't stop there. Because, I follow Steve Lukather on Twitter, so he was able to find this conversation and reply via DM, which I won't quote because I can't link to it.

In the 20th century, you harsh on music you have problems with to your friends near you. At the turn of the century, you harsh on and discuss music you have problems with to your friends around the world. In the 21st century, the person you harsh on, a person who played on one of the first albums you ever bought, responds to you.

I love the 21st century. And I still need to find Eric Skye's take on "All Blues". No, wait....

Saturday, January 14, 2012

Riding With The Wind



Steve Vai.
Orianthi.
Joe Satriani.
And, coming in at the 6-minute mark with the guy with the camera-phone not knowing where to look, the amazing Tony MacAlpine.

All going through Hendrix' great song, "Little Wing".

(Seriously, look up Maximum Security. It is about my second favorite shred album, still after all these years.)