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#450282 - 04/12/18 09:38 AM
my Monday night startling discovery
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Senior Member
Registered: 10/23/06
Posts: 1661
Loc: USA
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I made a startling discovery. I was playing on Monday night at a large catering house. I did strolling accordion in the “rooms” while a guitarist OMB played the main lobby.
So I’m going back and forth and each time I passed the guitarist I made note of what he was doing. He was a real nice fellow so at the end of the gig we talked about his equipment. He had the latest: Bose L2, a suitcase full of brand new foot pedals in a tray on the floor, etc.....really nice sound. Good singer, picked great 60’s and 70’s songs…..I just liked his whole presentation.....not to mention he was getting paid $500 for the gig.
So what was my “discovery.” You know how I’m always going on about “breaks and fills” in your music? I suddenly noticed, this fellow had none. Then I noticed no rhythm machine, or so I thought. He pointed to one of those new units that pack (?) rhythms into a small package about the size of an overseas postage stamp and he had it attached to his mike stand. I mean I wouldn’t use one of those if they gave them out as free samples! But, I have to say, he sounded real good just using that little unit.
What I’m saying is I learned a lesson. When you’re playing for an audience……NO ONE NOTICES the technology of your rhythm machine.....they’re just busy listening to the melody. If you’re doing recording, then, yes, the rhythm track IS important. But.....only to the listener and to YOU.
Interesting observation by me, but I’m not sure what to do with that now. I suppose you can’t really play your best without proper backing, but.....I’m really worn out of all this “comparison talk.....which keyboard, microphone, software, etc is better. Even though I have a PA3x I’m still playing my 20 year old Roland arranger and no one even notices it could be classified as a genuine antique by now.
The plus side of playing an “antique” is that you work harder to make your musical presentation completely palatable. I guess it’s something like “technology or skill”.....which works best for you and which is more practical?
I have to re-think everything now. This is a world where no one really notices or cares about anything anymore.....bad singing, bad sound system, bad beat boxes. And then there's how you dress, bad food, potholes, foul language, did all of someone’s teeth fall out?..... In the music world, where "no one notices or cares," I think the answer is to buy a simple Korg Microarranger that does it all, cheap, you can carry it in your lunchbox, and it even tells you where your wife is on a Saturday night!
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#450307 - 04/12/18 04:35 PM
Re: my Monday night startling discovery
[Re: Mark79100]
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Senior Member
Registered: 11/12/08
Posts: 2445
Loc: Bluffton/Hilton Head SC USA
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This has been discussed before and Zuki's list is right on. I would change # 2 and 3 but it can work either way. People just want ot be entertained and generally don't care how you do it. If the Guitar Players songs hit the mark, if his voice was good, guitar playing adequate, then we finally get to the drum machine. See where I'm going with this.? Lots of the equipment we go crazy over is more for us than anything else but we need to be happy with what we're using. You strolling with the Accordian is a great entertainment factor in the right situations. Different ways to entertain.
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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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