Jump to content
Why become a member? ×

peteb

Member
  • Posts

    4,073
  • Joined

  • Last visited

  • Days Won

    3

Everything posted by peteb

  1. [quote name='algmusic' timestamp='1321397681' post='1438793'] A fair comment, but I would bet money that 99% of songs written are governed by what key the singer wishes to sing. The other 1% was when the writer was a guitarist or bassist who sung. It's all about the range of the singer. I think people forget the musicians are not at the forefront of the songs. it's the singer and the melody. I also think playing in a different key has a lot to do with how good the player is to execute the song, but it may have something to play in it. [/quote] I do not think that it is necessarily correct, especially in rock songs that are written around a guitar part that is dependant on open strings For example, try playing Whole Lotta Rosie in 'C'
  2. [quote name='chris_b' timestamp='1321187411' post='1436175'] [size=4][color=#222222][font=Arial]It is usually the vocalists. Most of them are so restricted in what they can do with minimal technique that we all have to work to their limitations. I have never yet played with a vocalist who said play it in your key. [/font][/color][/size] [size=4][font=Arial][color=#000000]Guitarists are the next limiting factor in a band… but that’s a different topic![/color][/font][/size] [/quote] To be fair, what a singer can do is limited to an extent by their physical capabilities rather than just technique and a lot of guitar parts are very dependant on the use of open strings! The only time I have ever considered getting a 5 string is because of people calling out songs in strange keys!
  3. I use an iGig double bag, which is great with plenty of protection & loads of storage, etc Cost more than £50 thru! It is also quite heavy when fully loaded but is still a great piece of kit that makes life much easier.....
  4. From the recent Esquires Blues Weekend in Bedford
  5. PS. on another note - someone said that Huw Lloyd-Langton isn't well - does anyone know what is wrong with him? I'm mates with his cousin (another good guitar player btw) and Huw seemed a nice guy when I met him....
  6. My own contribution to music is relatively modest - I've played in a few decent bands who never set the world on fire and I've played with some very good players, a few of whom have also played with guys you may have actually heard of! A lot of my mates at school were into Hawkwind so I heard a fair bit of them, was even dragged to see them live, and I always thought that they were fu@/in awful! However I have no problem if someone else likes them You ought to learn to recognise a jocular remark when you see one!
  7. [quote name='algmusic' timestamp='1319630921' post='1416595'] I think I'll have to disagree.. It's based on the a point of reference, it's seen a benchmark like an SM58.. People say Fender Jazz or P so people get an idea of the type of sound... I think Sadowsky sound very nice, but they are not fenders.. I wouldn't buy a Sadowsky because I want fender that's better, because it isn't. I'd buy Sadowsky because I like it or fender because I like that bass. Really Sadowsky should have made up there own name.. Funny stingrays, sterlings and Rickenbackers don't seem to have this problem [/quote] I agree that a Fender Jazz or P is certainly a reference sound and they are design classics, but I would still say that many other builders do 'Fender' better than the original (having owned a few at various times). A lot of people want something with a Fender look and feel, but want it to be better built and perhaps have the option of a more 'refined' and 'modern' version of the Fender sound, to quote Doddy. There is still a certain appeal to a Fender and I must confess that I have succombed and bought a rather beautifull looking s/h US jazz recently - but it has cost me a fair bit of time and money to get it to play and sound anything like as well as my other basses!
  8. The truth is that Fender don't do Fender that well! Sadowsky et al take the basic idea / look and execute it a he'll of a lot better than the original...!
  9. I was a bit sceptical about a bass costing that much and I can't imagine ordering one anytime soon, but I played a 4 string Fodera at a jam session a while ago and it was certainly the best bass that I have ever played!
  10. [quote name='Pete Academy' timestamp='1319391168' post='1413547'] Saying that, my fondest memory of Hawkwind was the naked dancer with the big norks. [/quote] By far their greatest contribution to the music world!
  11. [quote name='mcgraham' timestamp='1319456249' post='1414216'] Someone also mentioned the guitarist using two guitar amps. Good idea! Another suggestion is to use a delay pedal set to a single uber-short delay - like one repeat at 40-70ms and at about 60-70% level of the original - to duplicate the guitar signal into the same amp (or even the other amp), but slightly offset from the timing of the original. This is a cheap and easy way to give the effect of double tracking but live. You can then also get away with lower gain levels from the amps while still getting a heavy sound, which then gets a slightly fuller guitar sound because the guitar has more natural 'cut' at the lower gain settings. [/quote] This - I used to play with a guitar player in a 3 piece for many years that did just that - always sounded huge!
  12. You do have to 'fill out' the sound - to do that you have to leave spaces (if that makes sense)
  13. [quote name='chris_b' timestamp='1319284753' post='1412225'] [size=4][color=#222222][font=Arial]It sure is competitive. [/font][/color][/size] [size=4][color=#222222][font=Arial]Ideas? How many of you sing? You need good vocals and good BV's. You need flexibility in your choice of numbers. Don't buy pedals that make you sound mush, get a keyboard player who sings. [/font][/color][/size] [/quote] Good BVs will help a lot and I personally would not rely on pedals to fill out the sound
  14. You will have to learn how to fill things out - you can get away boosting your low mids a little as you now only have one guitar to compete with, try playing more octaves, be more selective about where you mute - but not to the point of leaving no gaps at all Your remaining guitarist will have to adapt his style more, as he now has to fill in more of the sonic spectrum I have nearly always played with just the one guitar player and would probably have to adapt to be less overpowering if I were to play with two!
  15. You need to know your modes and scales, etc but what you really need to do is to develop and then trust your ears! Don’t be afraid to listen and even steal from other players – everyone who’s any good has done it, especially in the blues! To take my earlier example, if can play the turnaround that Roscoe Beck plays in Talk To Your Daughter properly, you can then slow it down and play it over the turnaround of Red House, amending it where necessary so that it sounds right. Then it is no longer Roscoe Beck’s part anymore – it’s yours!
  16. It seems that you can play the basics that pretty much all blues bass players use but want to understand why what you are playing is the right thing Just a suggestion if you don’t want to go down the teacher route – get on youtube with a bass and a pair of headphones handy and pick some accomplished player that you rate playing a blues song and learn their part note for note, a bar at a time if necessary. For some reason I’m thinking of someone like Roscoe Beck playing with Robben Ford, maybe ‘Talk To Your Daughter’ (not too simple but still recognisable as a 12 bar), but obviously it could be anyone who takes your fancy. Once you have got the line down and can play it pretty well then try taking it apart and analysing it, working out which mode he uses over each chord, when he uses a chromatic run, plays a lick, etc. Once you think that you have worked out what makes the part work, try playing a simple blues that you know (maybe ‘Red House’ or whatever) and see if you can incorporate bits of the part you have just learned into the way you play ‘Red House’ (or whatever familiar track you choose) Then pick another song from another player and do the same thing again!
  17. I was generally pretty good at auditions (mainly cos I’m not bad at picking up songs up pretty quickly) and have been in a few bands that have done a lot of auditions. I would say that the main thing is obviously to learn the material properly. Don’t be afraid to ask to run thru the more complicated sections and check riffs, etc. Make sure that you play the song rather than showing off, but if you do get a chance to show your chops a bit, go for it – remember that you have to stand out from everyone else they try out. But don’t ruin their songs by overplaying! Also, try and sell yourself without being a dick about it. If you look the part without it seeming that you’re trying too hard – well that can’t hurt either! They are going to have to work closely with you over a period of time so it obviously helps if you can get on with them so be friendly, reasonable, etc Always remember that you can be the best player that they see but if you’re not what they are looking for they will go for the guy who seems to them to be the best fit, so don’t take it personally……
  18. [quote name='Delberthot' timestamp='1318803795' post='1406445'] I thought I was going to be reading a story about a guy who beat up Michael Jackson but its the other Jaco and a different type of beating [/quote] [size=4][color=#222222][font=Arial]No, the Michael Jackson story (allegedly) concerns a very well known producer...!![/font][/color][/size]
  19. Seems a bit too good to be true! Anyone here tried one??
  20. [quote name='Soliloquy' timestamp='1317559137' post='1391737'] I really used to hate getting back from a gig stinking of stale cigarette smoke. Then the following morning unpacking my gear to find that too stank of stale cigarette smoke. It's soooooo nice now it's banned in pubs etc. [/quote] Just a shame that there's no bleedin' audience now!
  21. [quote name='skankdelvar' timestamp='1317381687' post='1390090'] It's good to know you're out there for the rest of us. Far too many arse-kissing amateurs (like me) cave in to these wine bar managers and their egregious bleatings of 'Please turn it down'. Before you know it, the rebellious flame of Rock and Roll[sup][size=1]Tm[/size][/sup] flickers and dies. And then we might just as well be jazzers.[/quote] I know that you were trying to be ironic but you do actually have a point there!
  22. [quote name='Dr.Dave' timestamp='1317326268' post='1389615']If I'd wanted to compromise I'd have joined a cub band and made a lot of cash - but I didn't. We explain to all venues new to us what we are and what we do. If that's not what they want we all shake hands and we don't play there. If we get asked to turn down at a venue we do so - we don't want to upset anyone - but we let our feelings be known as we took trouble to explain what sort of band we are before we took the booking , and we never play there again.[/quote] Well said sir! Pretty much what I was trying to say but articulated much more concisely........
  23. [quote name='dave_bass5' timestamp='1317238551' post='1388598'] So what is your approach? [/quote] Seeing as you asked……….. Until recently I was playing in rock covers band that played the bike rally circuit and had quite a decent local following around the music pub venues. One of the things that several people said to us was that they liked us was because “it was just like watching a ‘proper’ band at St Georges” (the local concert hall)! Now we were playing pubs and not concert halls so there were obviously certain compromises to be made, but watch defines bands at that level is where you draw the line and refuse to compromise too much! We always had a decent PA, some lights and played proper live arrangements (including harmonies) at a proper stage volume, not excessively loud but enough to make everything sound right and louder than many other (but not all) pub bands! Most landlords loved us because we got a decent crowd and those who didn’t – well we just didn’t play at their pubs (I should say that we were by no means unique and there were 3 or 4 similar bands in the area that had a similar approach and always got an audience) I now play in a band that plays in a different genre and travels around a bit, not quite as loud but as it now has the same drummer it’s in the same ballpark. I’m just about to set off to my 5[sup]th[/sup] gig in 7 days (and one of the days off involved a ferry and a 500 mile drive back from a gig), so I’m not exactly short of gigs! Fairy nuff if you’re happy playing social club gigs thru an agent – that’s great and obviously different rules apply – but I did that (very briefly) and like you said, found it a bit soul destroying. I’d rather be down the pub! [quote name='Monckyman' timestamp='1317248838' post='1388774'] I wouldn`t rise to it, it`s a wind up. Some folk here obviously earn their rent in other ways and can afford to have "integrity" involved in their Classic Rock Covers band. ok. [/quote] That’s a f***in dumb statement if you don’t mind me saying so! I make a few quid from music but it is by far the leeast significant part of my income compared to my day job. I’m hardly likely to expect to make a decent living from playing rock covers in pubs! As far as integrity goes….. the rock band always thought that we were four aging rock musicians keeping our hand in by playing a set based on Van Halen covers with the odd bit of nonsense thrown in (a HM version of a Britney Spears song complete with a guitar solo nicked from an old Dio song anyone?) - I don’t any of us were too bothered by integrity – doesn’t mean that we should strive to be crap!
  24. [quote name='dave_bass5' timestamp='1317232307' post='1388494'] LOL. Thats just your opinion, which of course you are welcome to. Im happy doing what im doing. [/quote] Which is cool....! But not an approach that I would be prepared to take...........
×
×
  • Create New...