Originally posted by John DiLeo:
Maybe you can tell the difference but I dont think the average listener in the audience really notices the difference you mention regarding all the technical nuances.
John, I guess if you are planning to only learn what the 'average' listener notices, you might as well forget about learning the correct chords, words and melody for a song, as well...
The audience doesn't often know WHY it likes one player over another. The technical details are beyond them. But like they say "I can't tell good art from bad, But I know what I like.."
They don't need to understand how, or why you are doing something. They just need to like it. But if you base your learning about what YOU think the audience does, or doesn't understand, you are making a big mistake, IMO. It is easy to make false assumptions about what non-musicians like or not.
Let's face it, if these bends, or any other technical performance 'trick', are performed by those 'greats', including, of course the 'greats' on the instrument that you are emulating, well, they are not playing them because they go over a non-technical audience's head. They play them because a great bend, at the right time and place, is a EMOTIONAL experience that needs no technical knowledge whatsoever.
The technical knowledge, that's OUR job. We do the work, so they don't HAVE to think about it.
Anyone, by the way, that thinks that bending while you are playing a LH chord section is as good as when you are NOT, there's an easy test you can do. Record into your sequencer JUST the backing for a song you like to solo over. Now, play back the backing, and use the audio recorder (or another track in the sequencer) to record yourself playing the solo.
Now do the same thing, but play the chords and the solo at the same time. Listen to the two. Count how many times you were in the process of doing a bend when the chord changed, on the SMF backing version. You already know how many times you did it while you were playing it all live... ZERO!
For most players that learned in bands, you never have to think about this, but if you learn on arranger, you have to start using the sequencer, even if it is simply a copy of what your LH would have done, anyway, and you can finally get to understand the MASSIVE difference between playing bends when YOU (or the music) need them, and playing when you have a spare second to jump to the wheel and back.
Night and day, I'm afraid.
To be honest, most of the really juicy bend opportunities come DURING chord changes. That's what makes them so expressive - they transition from one mode to another. And these are the very ones you cannot do in arranger mode, so it's easy to assume that they are not as important as they are. But give the arranger a rest, sometimes, and just let your emotion allow you to play what YOU want, not what the arranger MAKES you play, and you can start to understand why all the REAL instrument players that you are emulating use those bends in the first place. Guitar players, sax players, violin players, fretless bass, horn players, you name it. If it CAN be bent, the good players DO...
Don't sell your audience (or yourself) short, John...