Chris Weber
MLT Club MemberForum Replies Created
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But he spent time rocking out too, which opened him up to a much bigger audience.
I think I need a hat and some shoes like that. Here he’s covering Rick Derringer.
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A lot of people would call Johnny Winter a bluesman
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In addition to the Cream song that Jung mentioned, they also covered Robert Johnson’s Crossroads. And Clapton played in the rock band Yardbirds, before playing with John Mayall’s Bluesbreakers.
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and “You Shook Me”.
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The list of old time rockers who didn’t play a blues song is probably shorter than those who did. A lot of songs fell in both categories.
Led Zeppelin I had 2 Willie Dixon Songs on it. “I Can’t Quit You Baby”
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I have a couple guitars, but I’m a keyboard player first so I would bring a keyboard.
The board I’d pick is my Yamaha Mox8, which is the newest one I have. It turns 10 years old this year. I bought it to have a more modern keyboard, and since I didn’t have one with 88 keys. Yamaha is good at mellower piano and acoustic style patches, which works if I only get one – I’m still a piano guy at heart.
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This reply was modified 2 years, 11 months ago by
Chris Weber.
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This reply was modified 2 years, 11 months ago by
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Chris Weber
Member28/03/2023 at 07:05 in reply to: MLTs amazing Interpretation of music and Glenn GouldThanks. That was fun.
With respect to what GG said, I think there are differences between musical genres. I think you may follow classical music more closely than I have, although I was brought up with it and always a fan. I didn’t know until a few years ago what a cadenza was, for example. Improvisation – in classical music?!
The music I’ve spent most of my time following in recent years is jazz, and other improvisational music when I was looking for something to see live.
I always thought Jazz is kind of in the other direction from classical, the musician is expected to place his own stamp on what the composer provided. It is highly improvisational. How many times has a different type of piece, for example, a show tune, been turned into a jazz piece, even a standard. And sometimes it’s just, you state the theme, go off on whatever solo you want to, and then come back to the theme.
Thinking of Gould’s love of Bach reminds me of another Bach lover, Hilary Hahn, who is a favorite of mine. Seeing her live is definitely on my short list of music to see.
What you leave out is just as important as what you put in. Finding the right way to cover a song is a great test of artistry. It should be recognizable, but still say something new, and respect the original. Easier said than done.
I am not sure the average listener appreciates the incredible importance of the arranger. I remember watching Dr. John play “Right Place, Wrong Time” solo in a bar. A great rendition, fistfuls of keys is what I think of that style, but then you compare it to the one he released on his album that was a big hit, which is very different. That’s the arranger. The Twins always have great arrangements.
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Threads like this remind me that I still have a lot of the site I haven’t seen yet. I’ve only been a member for 5 weeks, and Mother Nature took a couple of those away this winter.
That’s just a great video. Of course, it helps being in a place where “point camera in random direction” yields yet another incredible shot.
Every time I watch the Once Upon a Time Video, one of my favorite songs and videos, I have a reaction when I see how close they are to the edge of the wall of that caldera.
Fortunately they always end up okay(!). Reminds me of sitting on the rim of the Grand Canyon way long ago.
Putting on my Marketing hat, I think Turismo de Islas Canarias should be paying Team MLT for spreading the word about these beautiful islands.
Thanks for posting that.
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Or Crossroads, penned by Robert Johnson.
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I bought my first guitar around 1971 – a Sigma, maybe the same kind you had. In college, one of my friends managed to drop it and cracked it around about half of the rim. I got it fixed, and also had them lower the action!
It made a big difference, it’s much more playable. I paid $150 for it, and a few months ago I looked up to see if they still made them, and they do, and they still sell them for $150.
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Chris Weber
Member29/03/2023 at 18:34 in reply to: MLTs amazing Interpretation of music and Glenn GouldI expect everyone here is biased in favor of great music.
My only problem with Beethoven is the same as with Brahms, why only 1 violin concerto?
Wikipedia says the same violinist, Joseph Joachim, who revived Beethoven’s concerto also gave input to Brahms for the cadenza on his concerto 34 years later. And Joachim liked Beethoven’s better too.
Interestingly, in the entry for his concerto, at the link below, Wikipedia also quotes a piece by Robert Philip that says “it was the practice in the early twentieth century to vary the tempo considerably within a movement”. Which might pertain to the differences between Gould and Bernstein.
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Chris Weber
Member29/03/2023 at 06:03 in reply to: MLTs amazing Interpretation of music and Glenn Gould“Glenn once said what is the point if you are just mimicking exactly how everyone else played a piece.”
Exactly. Imo, people should hear Gould as well as Bach.
Hahn has videos on YouTube of Brahms’s Violin Concerto from when she was around 20, 30 and 35 years old. She had her first major performance when she was 13.
Her 20 year old performance was excellent, the 30 year old one I thought significantly better, and 35 better yet. She seems to keep getting better, as far as I can tell.
The age she started playing serious concerts is about the same as the Twins. I’m looking forward to hearing the Twins in the future and seeing where they take it.
You mentioned Bernstein being unhappy with Gould’s tempo. I looked for other violinists playing that same Brahms Concerto. Hahn finished in 42 minutes. Jascha Heifetz took 34 minutes.
Heifetz was flying. Maybe back then it was common to play it faster, or common for him, I don’t know, but that’s quite a difference. Other modern violinists I found were closer to Hahn’s time than Heifetz’s. Isaac Stern took 42 minutes, and Itzhak Perlman 45.
So I guess Gould’s not the only artist who varied the tempo.
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Chris Weber
Member29/03/2023 at 04:51 in reply to: MLTs amazing Interpretation of music and Glenn GouldIt’ll be interesting to hear the C3 on an MLT song. I’m very much looking forward to that. Rudi seems to use organ patches frequently. In the Raise Your Head video I see him with 2 keyboards, the upper one I don’t recognize, but the bottom one appears to be an M-AUDIO controller. Not sure what it’s driving. But they both have organ sounding patches.
Any artist as good as Rudi deserves to have the best tools to pursue his art, and its awesome that now he has that.
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I found a pic of Lanzarote night sky on the web, but I don’t think it’s as good as that shot of the Milky Way at the end of the Starman video, where it’s not hard to imagine he’s up there looking back.
I was only at the Grand Canyon for an hour. I sat quietly near the rim and just absorbed it. But not at night.
I live in Michigan where there are a handful of designated “dark sky” parks which are each on the shore of a Great Lake. I haven’t been to one yet, but I’ll get there.
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Sounds like you know more about Cage than I do. I just remembered hearing of him and some things he’d done. Wonder how many tickets he sold for the gig until 2640.