VS: [Harp-L] VS: Stevie Wonder
This is an on-going debate with no final answer. Probably it would be Little Walter on harp.
> -----AlkuperÃinen viesti-----
> LÃhettÃjÃ: Richard Hunter [mailto:turtlehill@xxxxxxxxxxxxx]
> LÃhetetty: 23. marraskuuta 2006 2:05
> Vastaanottaja: harp-l@xxxxxxxxxx
> Kopio: Haka Harri
> Aihe: Re: [Harp-L] VS: Stevie Wonder
>
>
> "Haka Harri" wrote:
> <Stevie sure is a great harmonica player but I'm surprised
> that everyone on this
> <list agrees on him being "best on earth" . Wonder has an
> incredible 45
> <year career as a multi-instrumentalist, but from a purely
> harmonica point of view
> <it is hard to justify him as THE best. No matter what your
> musical preference, how
> <would you compare him with the likes of James Cotton, Rod
> Piazza, Kim Wilson, Rick
> <Estrin, R.J. Mischo, Mitch Kashmar, Howard Levy, Jason
> Ricci, Toots Thielemans and
> <others who are specialists in this instrument? This is not
> to underestimate Stevie
> <Wonder as a harmonica player but a reminder that there are
> players out there who,
> <with any criteria, are in the top .2%.
>
> I agree with just about everything in the statement above.
> Playing music isn't in essence
> a competitive sport, where one player is provably the best of
> all. (Although it's often so
> in a commercial sense. Larry Adler liked to tell people that
> he was indisputably the best
> harmonica player in the world. Whether or not it was
> true--and there are arguments
> to be made either way--it was good for Adler's career.)
>
> However, I do think it's true that Stevie Wonder is the most
> talented overall musician to have ever
> achieved prominence as a harmonica soloist. He can do all of
> the important things--play
> multiple instruments (some brilliantly and all at a
> professional level), sing, compose, arrange
> and orchestrate, etc., etc.--at a world class level. Granted
> that we could say the same of
> Howlin' Wolf, Sonny Boy II, and Little Walter. But I would
> say that Stevie's output shows
> greater variety than any of these. Little Walter redefined
> Chicago blues, especially the
> blues instrumental; Wonder has redefined certain genres more
> than once, and he
> has played harmonica (as leader and session player) in an
> amazing variety of musical styles,
> always sounding perfectly in the groove regardless of the context.
>
> Of course, all the above is meaningless, because like I said,
> playing music isn't a competitive sport. It's
> by way of saying that I'm totally in awe of Stevie Wonder.
>
> Regards, Richard Hunter
> hunterharp.com
>
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