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#232565 - 04/18/08 05:30 PM
What are "Pro" instruments?
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Senior Member
Registered: 12/06/99
Posts: 2133
Loc: Muskegon, MI
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It seems like this arranger/home/pro instrument discussion has become a hot topic for many on this forum. I will be the first to admit that talent and ability and proficiency are the most important aspects of being a musician. As Cassp has shown by posting the link to the video of the Casio player, the instrument matters very little.
To all who think that arrangers are home instruments and not professional, perhaps they should remember that pianos are home instruments. Here is a quote from Wikipedia about the Hammond organ, "Hammond intended his invention to be a substitute for pipe organs, a replacement for the piano in middle-class homes, and for use by radio stations."
There you have it, pianos and Hammond organs are home instruments. Go ahead and tell Steve Winwood and Ferrante and Teicher that they are playing "home instruments".
One of the best jazz guitar players in Detroit used to play on a plastic guitar that he purchased from Montgomery Wards, and many played on amps purchased at Sears. I guess that makes them non professional players because Sears marketed their instruments to the "home" user
The last job I played was a trio job, drums, keys and trumpet. I used my G70 and my PK-5 pedals and never once turned on the arranger. I will play solo this Sunday at my mom's nursing home and use the arranger 100% of the time. My "home" keyboard is very versatile and that is the key for most of us.
It's not the tool you use but how you use it.
Tom
_________________________
Thanks,
Tom
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#232567 - 04/18/08 06:26 PM
Re: What are "Pro" instruments?
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Senior Member
Registered: 10/15/05
Posts: 1433
Loc: Niceville, FL USA
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Hi Guys - You're so right! I have worked a lot of conventions and from my perspective, what they want is entertainment and atmosphere. I have worked by myself as well as w/balloon twisters and fortune tellers within 100 feet of me. One of the conventions I am doing will have two massage tables and a caricature artist going. Many groups could opt for a DJ, but my experience has been that a live musician tends to enhance the atmosphere.
In the past, many of the folks I worked with in duos and trios either used mini-disks which they created from midi files (reliant on the quality of the sound card used when the mini-disks were recorded), or played midi files directly from a laptop, often with a 'less than optimum' sound card. With the arrangers, we have access to considerably better sounds as well as the ability to make the songs our own and to have complete control over where the song is going to go.
Arrangers have given me an advantage. They make me more marketable and a more versatile musician.
Randy
[This message has been edited by saxxman (edited 04-18-2008).]
_________________________
------------------------------------- Randy
PA4X, SX900 (Baby Genos), Roland U-20, L1 Compact, Way 2 Many Saxes
"My computer beats me routinely at chess - but it's NO MATCH for me at kick boxing!"
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#232573 - 04/19/08 02:55 AM
Re: What are "Pro" instruments?
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Senior Member
Registered: 07/21/05
Posts: 5387
Loc: English Riviera, UK
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Hi Tom Your definition of home is certainly unique, While there are a few pipe organs in private homes (As I understand the definition of home) 99.9% are in Concert Halls, Theatres, Churches, Colleges etc, and I don’t think these would classed as homes. Or am I missing something Bill
_________________________
English Riviera: Live entertainment, Real Ale, Great Scenery, Great Beaches, why would anyone want to live anywhere else (I�m definitely staying put).
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