|
|
|
|
|
|
#381177 - 01/11/14 12:47 PM
I had my guitar theory lesson last night ...
|
Senior Member
Registered: 12/01/99
Posts: 12800
Loc: Penn Yan, NY
|
Meaning: I played with that band of older fellas that teach me SO much each time I go out with them. I'm the baby of the group at 58 (by almost 20 years!), and I feel like I should be paying them for letting me study on the bandstand. I'm the token "Rocker" because of vocals (and SOME guitar stuff), and the set list, while standard ... is like taking a theory lesson every song. As a guitarist, I rarely played with a keyboard player over the years - lemme tell ya - it's a challenge to re-voice chords to stay out of his way! Add the facts that I'm transposing and trying to sing at the same time and you have another "sunny day in Philadelphia." I'm very grateful that they put up with my fumbling ... sometimes I feel like I'm playing with mittens on. My standard approach to solo guitar has always been to fill up the spaces and make all the rhythm ... not so in the band scenario. I have to accent different beats, fill in little signature licks (Johnny B Goode, Rock around the Clock etc) and it's very challenging. After 40 years of mostly running the show, it's a pleasure to not have to drive the bus ... so to speak. I'm posting this to remind us all to step out of our comfort zone once in a while and experience the thrill of experimentation, and creativity in a new way. Whatever way that is - it's a task well worth the effort. Last night, 2 of the 4 of us had a digital harmonizer attached to our mics ... me and the keyboardist - MAN, was THAT FUN! We did some things that sounded like the cast of Les Miz was behind us. My harmonies were triggered by the guitar chords and the keyboard guy has a Korg PA1xPro with a TC built in. So ... let's count - 4 live singers, 2 in my pedalboard and 3 more in Paul's Korg. We had a nine piece vocal ensemble going at times! Fun, fun, fun ... and Daddy never took the T-Bird away.
_________________________
No longer monitoring this forum. Please visit www.daveboydmusic.com for contact info
|
Top
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
#381204 - 01/11/14 03:33 PM
Re: I had my guitar theory lesson last night ...
[Re: Uncle Dave]
|
Senior Member
Registered: 12/01/99
Posts: 12800
Loc: Penn Yan, NY
|
BTW - talking about gear ... I might have posted this before, but it's worth repeating for the newcomers. First, I have to tell you that this keyboard guy is the absolute BEST I know - plays beautiful chords, fantastic bass lines and he's the nicest guy you'll meet. With that said .... he's fussy and SLOW to change. His rig includes:
Korg PA1xpro on bottom - all piano and comping comes from this slab Korg 13 on top (very BULKY, homemade steel rack, I might add) for organs, brass and other "color" sounds and triggers midi signal to one of 2 full size modules to his left One is a Roland that is dedicated for bass, I think, and a Korg that must have some sentimental value, cuz it's older than the 1x, I think. It might even be an O1W. AND - and i5m on top of the module stack for the very sparse drum beat/arranger pattern that they use on a few (very few) tunes. 3 volume pedals (HUGE Morley, metal ones), 2 sustain pedals, mic stand .... geeze.
With his chops ... almost any current arranger would sound fantastic, and even if he NEEDS the second slab for dexterity - he certainly doesn't need the THREE modular tone boxes that he carries. He plays all his sounds (including bass) through a stereo EV rig with a Mackie mixer that is a powerful full range PA in itself. It's SO overkill that I feel sorry for him every time I look at it. He's 78, and lugs all this bulk around. I MUST educate him to the newer, "more hip" ways of the force. He's such a great player ... he could do the job with his PA1x as the main chord source and buy a new "whatever" he likes to play all the other sounds, sequences and midi trigger parts.
He could leave all 3 modules home, scale down the mixer/rack and cut his setup/teardown time in half.
Paul might like the BK-9 piano sound and he'd be able to relinquish the tone modules and drum machines. Add a PA3x on top for great control of vocals and color sounds and he could streamline his rig into a major powerhouse. LIGHTER, prettier and better equipped than anything he's ever had. He has a pretty hard touch, wonder why he never got a weighted action 88 as his controller.
The more I think of it - I think he should get a PA3x76 for his "go to" axe and trigger vocals from it. Then, he could get the Roland for the extra sounds on top - better esthetics, and more control from the sliders on the Korg.
_________________________
No longer monitoring this forum. Please visit www.daveboydmusic.com for contact info
|
Top
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|