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#260317 - 03/24/09 09:18 AM
Do you LIKE what you play?
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Senior Member
Registered: 01/02/04
Posts: 7305
Loc: Lexington, Ky, USA
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I'm talking about the material, not the instrument.
Frankly, I'm luke-warm, at best about the material I have to play to work regularly.
First, I'm not an entertainer, so I get my satisfaction from the playing part of the effort, not the entertaining.
Second, there is literally no way to play my preference; hard-line jazz, around here, and work regularly.
Third, the work is playing quietly, taking a back seat to an over-priced ham sandwich.
And finally, the only thing that doesn't drive me up the wall is playing "Cool Jazz", which, is often re-processed rock tunes, played with a slightly different attitude and approach. Think Masquerade, I Love You More Today Than Yesterday, Let's Stay Together, Here, There and Everywhere, Lady Blue and similar material. That's acceptible to me, but not ideal.
Don't get me wrong-I'm happy to be involved in the business. The reason this has come up is, I have a chance to demo for a manufacturer of a new amplifier and one of my favorite guitar manufacturers. Work would be at music store-sponsored work-shops and trade shows. Money is good, but the travel schedule would mean that my normal playing schedule would have to change dramatically.
After working for 50 plus years in the "trenches", this would be a major change.
Question: do you like what and where you play? Other than achieving instant star/millionaire status, what would you alter to make your involvement in muasic more fulfilling?
R.
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#260318 - 03/24/09 10:19 AM
Re: Do you LIKE what you play?
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Senior Member
Registered: 01/16/02
Posts: 14376
Loc: East Greenwich RI USA
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Originally posted by captain Russ: I'm talking about the material, not the instrument. .........
Question: do you like what and where you play? Other than achieving instant star/millionaire status, what would you alter to make your involvement in muasic more fulfilling? R.
I like MOST of my gigs, but for me, the ones where I can inter-act with the audience are the BEST ... in the CC gigs where I'm 'wallpaper' (playing second fiddle not to a 'ham sandwich', but more likely a filet mignon... ), I try to develop a rapport with the staff, and inter-act with them as the night goes on ... but even at the CC gigs, invariably SOME people will say "thanks, the music was great, thanks for playing ______(fill in the blank with whatever song they particularly liked) ", even though I've wondered if anyone was listening ... If I could change anything, it would be that I would take the time to really STUDY music, and learn to play JAZZ, even if just for myself ... t.
_________________________
t.
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#260319 - 03/24/09 10:28 AM
Re: Do you LIKE what you play?
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Registered: 04/25/05
Posts: 14266
Loc: NW Florida
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The music itself... not a thing. Whether it is rock, reggae or country, as a performing musician, the enjoyment for me comes from the best execution I can bring to the material, regardless of what it is. The venue, or management, or other musicians in the band, etc.... well that's another story! But I have always felt that, with 24 hours in a day, if what I play for the 4-8 hours I am onstage doesn't satisfy (even when the paycheck DOES ), that still leaves 16-20 hours a day for me to play what I want at home... But as a keyboard player in a live band (or anyone that erases enough SMF tracks to present a challenge, or uses the minimal amount of arranger they can), you are expected to cover absolutely EVERYTHING that the bass/drums/guitar can't cover. That's a LOT of stuff at one time. If doing this live isn't enough of a challenge, I don't know what is! Maybe I'm not the biggest Shania Twain fan in the world. But I really don't have much time to worry about this as I try to cover a fiddle part, a pedal steel part, a piano part and an organ part ALL AT THE SAME TIME... And then, night off, I can always take my horn and go jam some jazz or whatever I feel like to get my other jollies. I've played almost everything there is, and the only thing that bores me is working with other bored musicians... Can't STAND that!
_________________________
An arranger is just a tool. What matters is what you build with it..!
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