3 questions, where do I start, eenie meenie miami MO!
Its a slow day at the office today, MO
#1: Is using transposer buttons live "cheating"?
Is a Kbd player who can play well in every key (a rarity!) or
at least play equally well in 5 or more commonly used keys a better musician than someone who resorts to the transpose button? If a singer(or yourself) wants to call a tune in B, let's say..because it falls perfectly for the vocal range..yeah, they(or you) would sing it up or down a step or a half step if they are pros, but it's not quite the same just because they can sing it up or down.. would you use the transposer or ask them to please call a more common key?
NO unless you are a contestant in a musician skills competition and the judge is grading you on several categories with 1 category being "transposing skills" , or you are performing a recital.
#2: Is using the arranger kbd bass tracks along with the
drum tracks cheating, or at least wimpy compared to playing one's own LH bass lines? or does the fact that
using full pianist mode with arranger bass track permits
one to play more of kbd and own voicings?
NO unless you are a contestant in a musician skills competition and the judge is grading you on several categories with 1 category being "left hand technique" , or you are performing a recital.
background:
I am a pro jazz saxophonist/vocalist who ....
So all that above leads to philosophical question #3:
who cares about questions 1 and 2 ??
MIAMI MO
The judge at the annual musician skills competition or the ticket buyers to the recital performance are probably the onle ones that care about #1 + #2
I don't think the general public, that usually goes out to have a good time and hear some 'good' music, not necessarily a 'good' musician taking the spotlight with a master musician performance, care or even knows.
Like you with sax, MO, I played trombone many years. A 1-note at a time, acoustic instrument.
I would practice my bone lines in the basement. to songs made popular by top-of-the-chart bands (like CHICAGO Blood, Sweat and Tears, Herb Alpert etc) people that happen to be around at the time didn't take notice. It was no biggy, a kid practicing his trombone. But when I played real-time, along with the song on the record player, they would actually get into it with enthusiasm. Nobody came up and asked me who I thought I was fooling. They just enjoyed hearing the nice full sound of a song/MUSIC that they could relate to and kind of identified me as part of the enjoyment they had.
(Maybe I played the record too loud and they did not even hear my contribution to it
)
Another 'old days' story, related to playing and musicianship:
I had a friend who for years, strictly studied/played classical piano. I was at his house one day and he asked me to play something on his piano. I was an accordion player, never a piano player, but i fumbled a bit with some left hand while playing a decent right hand melody. As I was playing, I remember feeling embarrassed because I knew the caliber of his musicianship, but I was totally taken by surprise when I finished the song and looked at him. He had this look of amazement and then his nose wrinkled up and he blurted out with disgust, 'I wish I could do that'.
The MUSIC made is what this piano master heard/listened to. He had chops that allowed him to play high-speed double arpeggio type stuff all day long, and immediately shift into a beautiful delicate Brahams piece.
I can't tell the name of the song I played or you routees will say his focus was on the message/words to that song
I think the point i'm trying to make is that a musical entertainer puts up front, a sound/note/lead/vocal/melodyline, whatever you want to call it. Its the piece that the listening and/or dancing audience usually associates with. And the percentage of the music making that comes thru the aid of auto-accompaniment and bass-line algo-rhythms is probably only important to that lurker in the back of the room by the exit sign, who popped in to hear what other musicians in the neighborhood are up to.
Just a viewpoint of mine, in general, which even I don't agree with for ALL circumstances in playing/performing/entertaining to the public.
[This message has been edited by MrEd (edited 08-17-2006).]