[Harp-L] re: Rick Dempster, Respectfully Contextualizing Michalek's opinins on blah, blah
Hi Rosco;
Thanx for your response. First, I just want to point
out that I was responding to Roger Boyce's post, which sprang from
discussion about placing Chris Michalek's opinion (and by implication,
as I read it, opinion generally) in context.
It was a pretty broad kind of post, with general
opinion's about musical trends in general. I certainly have nothing to
say about Chris, as I have not heard him. My server blocks just about
all MP3s, so I have to buy stuff, unless it's on Myspace or Youtube
(even then it get's blocked sometimes)
However, I've heard many examples of players using OBs
and generally trying to take the diatonic into new territory, and I was
talking about that general trend.
As to the example of 'Body & Soul', I chose this number
as an example of a jazz ballad that calls for some long, sweet sounding
notes, which are always a challenge when playing OB/Ds. I could have
chosen any number of tunes; I wasn't choosing it because I regard it as
some kind of benchmark of difficulty (not to say that it's easy) I have
had a crack at it in 12 keys on the diatonic (and the chrom, too, I
might add). The bridge is the hardest part.
I've noticed a tendency to be taken literally on this
list, when I'm speaking metaphorically. Perhaps I'll have to get used to
adding 'smilies'.
I am not saying either, that playing OBs must
necessarily be proven in the field of jazz to be acceptable, either.
Perhaps I could have said; "the day I hear someone play - on a diatonic
- a credible version of, say, 'Wildwood Flower' in Eb on a C
harp"..............now I haven't tried it mind you....perhaps Tinus will
run us up an MP3 showing that this is in fact the best possible position
for the entire Carter Family songbook, I don't know.
All I'm trying to say, as a fellow struggler who has a
healthy respect for everybody's efforts in reaching for the next rung, I
continue to have doubts.
Even 'true believers' can have doubts; it's a way of
trying and affirming one's faith.
Cheers,
RD
>>> <Roscoharp@xxxxxxx> 9/09/2006 0:00:32 >>>
Rick Dempster writes:
"The overblow thing seems to be an important ingredient; damn
things sound so awkward and ugly that it's easier to get away with it
in
freak-out type material, or takes on eastern scales that most
westerners
expect
to sound weird anyhow. The day I hear someone play - on a diatonic - a
credible
version of, say, 'Body and Soul' perhaps, with good improvisation a la
Lester,
perhaps, and with the tone of Charlie McCoy playing 'Ruby', that will
be the
day
when I can feel that all this messing around with overblows has
amounted to
more
than an outlet for idle curiosity. Somehow I doubt that day will come.
(I'm
sure
I won't be the blowing at its dawn either)"
Hey List,
I guess Rick doesn't like the sound of overbends??
That's okay, anybody can like or not like anything they want.
But...um... Rick, FY I - improvising over the chords to Body & Soul
(I
think it's Eb,D,Dm,-just about the hardest modulation to play on
diatonic!) is
not why I play overbends. It's easy to set up that kind of straw
horse
argument to try to make a point, a la: "The day I hear Toots play a
convincing
version of Roller Coaster on chromatic is the day I'll accept it as a
blues
instrument."
You'd have to listen very carefully to tell where the overbends are on
my
recordings, which are plain old rock/pop. (Not " freak-out type
material".) No
one has ever said they sounded awkward & ugly, but it's true I can't
play the
changes in B&S. (Yet.) So what? How did using overbends get
intrinsically
mixed up with playing jazz or playing in all twelve keys? I can play
pretty
comfortably in seven or eight positions (depending on the tunes,) &
overbends
are necessary to make the scale & interval ideas I want to use in the
music I
play. I have way more trouble getting half step bends to sound right
than I do
overbends.
When you say you haven't heard Michalek yet, well, then, you haven't
heard
him. Like the other poster who slammed Michalek the other day, how can
you
criticize something you haven't heard? (See my long post #45003, near
the end)
Next to Howard Levy, I would say Chris is the best OB player out
there. His
overbends don't stick out to me.
Incidently, I've personally heard Levy play the s**t out of Body &
Soul.
Raised the hair on my arms. Rick, maybe you wouldn't dig it, but I
sure did!
There are probably a few others who can play B&S. Maybe even Chris.
Maybe
George Brooks. Maybe one of those South American whiz kids. Maybe a
bunch of
folks. .
BTW, I've been enjoying harp-l a lot lately. Thanks to all the
posters &
especially to the administrators (you sexy boys).
Later,
Rosco
_may.be au.gust_ (http://www.maybeaugust.com/)
download or stream live recordings: _may.be au.gust_
(http://www.maybeaugust.com/Live.aspx)
_______________________________________________
Harp-L is sponsored by SPAH, http://www.spah.org
Harp-L@xxxxxxxxxx
http://harp-l.org/mailman/listinfo/harp-l
This archive was generated by a fusion of
Pipermail 0.09 (Mailman edition) and
MHonArc 2.6.8.