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#138245 - 08/24/01 09:01 AM
Re: At What Temperature Does a Keyboard Melt?
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Senior Member
Registered: 02/04/01
Posts: 2071
Loc: Fruita, Colorado, USA
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Hey guys,
I just got back from the Monerey area. My buddy Sonny G has been there for ten years playing keyboard and singing full time. He and a couple others swear that for the most part other than a couple of days a year the temperature hardly ever goes over 75 degrees and hardly ever goes below 62 degrees.
Don't look for Scott Yee to confirm this: (he doesn't want the competition). Just kidding Scott!!! Scott doesn't have to worry about me moving there because in the area I was in Pebble Beach, Pacific Grove, Salinas, Carmel, Monterey the cheapest thing I found was $1250 for a studio apartment.
Uncle Dave, Donny, Fran is the climate on the East Coast even close to the West Coast as I described. If so, I'll come look it over. But how's the rent or cost of a 1000 sq. ft home? HA! HA!
I liked my area in Western Colorado until I made the trip last week. We have a three month summer here and it cools down some in September. But can you even imagine 62 low and 75 high maybe 350 or more days a year. Sounds like paradise to me.
Anyone have some Prozac to share? I never tried Marijuna. (is this spelled right?)Maybe that would help this depression also that I'm going through. ha.
Sulking, Boo PS No smoking in the whole state of California in any public place. All they need to learn to do is boil Crawfish and it would really be a literal paradise.
[This message has been edited by brickboo (edited 08-24-2001).]
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I'm not prejudiced, I hate everybody!! Ha ha! My Sister-In-Law had this tee shirt. She was a riot!!!
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#138248 - 08/24/01 06:35 PM
Re: At What Temperature Does a Keyboard Melt?
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Senior Member
Registered: 12/01/99
Posts: 10427
Loc: San Francisco Bay Area, CA, US...
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Intimating? Boo, I didn't find Sonny intimidating at all. On the contrary. Although Sonny is certainly an accomplished pro pianist, he seems easy going, friendly, and a 'lot of fun' to play with. I enjoyed watching/hearing the chord voicings and substitutions (including many rootless) he played. It's great to admire accomplished musicians like Sonny, but it's also important not to become intimidated by them either. I always look forward to the opportunity to performing with good pro musicians as a way to learn and grow by sharing musical ideas and bouncing off each other. What a HIGH ! Frankly, I'd rather hear a guy improvise playing a few notes 'played well' (saying something) rather than a guy playing 'lots of frivilous notes' just to show off his chops. One of my wise teachers once told me that: "it's the space 'between the notes' which count just as much as the notes themselves". I've noticed that younger musicians tend to play 'lots of notes' to impress, but that as we mature, we realize that it's not the 'quantity', but the 'quality' of the notes played. Maybe there's a similarity (to sex) here. OK, enough philosophy for today.
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