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#430656 - 04/12/17 07:11 AM
Re: Piano vs. Arranger in solo gigs.
[Re: guitpic1]
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Senior Member
Registered: 10/20/09
Posts: 3228
Loc: Dallas, Texas
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I will attempt to combine both an acoustic piano and my arranger this Sunday for an Easter brunch at a hotel. They requested Great American Song Book Standards,Bossa Novas, and popular music from the last few decades. They also requested no drums, because they previous drummers were too loud. Also they wanted a trio (all instrumental), so I hired an amazing acoustic bass player, and vibraphonist. I'll keep my arranger on my left hand side, and run some light rhythm patterns and occasionally some guitar auto accompaniment. The bass player also plays great jazz guitar so I may play some LH bass too. I'm sure we'll go all "natural" too, with just the acoustic piano, bass and vibes. I'm looking forward to it, and hope it goes well!
Edited by montunoman (04/12/17 07:12 AM)
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#430662 - 04/12/17 11:23 AM
Re: Piano vs. Arranger in solo gigs.
[Re: Stephenm52]
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Senior Member
Registered: 11/12/08
Posts: 2445
Loc: Bluffton/Hilton Head SC USA
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[ I'd been trained as a pianist and always felt more comfortable at a piano, I found it easier to play more expressively on piano than an arranger. Based on posts here by a couple of guys who purchased the Roland Fp90 I got on this kick that maybe I'd enjoy one and it get me back to spending more time on pIano. No one has an FP90 to demo and I just don't want to buy one without playing one..........fast foward to this morning when I remembered I had a Casio Privia PX400R that has been in storage in a gig bag for the last 7 years. I set it up and gotta say for a $499 instrument ( purchased about 10 years ago) it's decent albeit the keys being a little noisy as Beakybird wrote in another post about pianos. I'm not really sure what my point is but I don't think I'll buy an FP90, at least not today. ------------------------------- Stephen At the music store I teach at I teach on an older model Casio. To the students its OK because none of them have a great instrument at home. Recently things got moved around and I now have ( for the time being ) a Roland FP30. The students who are mostly beginners noticed the improvment immediately. Maybe the owner is putting out bait to sell more. Now the FP30 is a big jump up from the older Casio but still far behind the FP90. The point is for getting back into things your older Casio may be OK for awhile, but if you ever make the jump to the FP90 you will appreciate the BIG difference in sounds and touch. I also bet , like me, you will spending more time at the Piano again. Lots of stores do offer a return option these days but I don't think you'll use it if you buy one.
Edited by Bill Lewis (04/12/17 11:25 AM)
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Bill in SC --- Roland BK9 (2) Roland BK7M, Roland PK5 Pedals, Roland FP90, Roland CM30 (2), JBL Eon Ones (2) JBL 610 Monitor, Behringer Sub, EV mics, Apple iPad (2) Behringer DJ mixer
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