The universal truth that all humanity has been searching hi & lo since time began. And we never felt that the answer was within our grasp. We are omnipotent, we went to the Moon, we fly with impunity. And yet, in our collective heart we know this to be a brave face towards mortality.
Here it is:
Be Selfish to Extremes.
Share Everything.
Follow these two things and you will be healthier and happier.
I was leaving a venue in which I heard music of my generation, done my way - No, not FreeBird - Watermelon Man...ala Herbie, by a four piece band in their kiddie fedoras?!
I was so impressed I began to enjoy myself.
I walked into an alley with a group of young people, one of whom had a joint.
"Nothing for me?" I asked.
He gave me the rest of his joint. We traded skin and parted. Sharing. Be it random or most intimate. If you are lucky enough to know intimate exchange...you are favored, blessed, well looked after.
Why we hippies shared everything...it was fun! It was so cool to share my food and since you have some weed, we'd take care of each other.
But those moments are what make life - Mick said it...Life's just a cocktail party, on the streets...
And the mix, is up to you!
Be a wallflower your entire life, or get up and dance.
I am out of breath, I dance so much.
Wednesday, August 29, 2012
Tuesday, August 14, 2012
My Inner Emelda
There are many accessories that guitarists have use for.
Picks
Strings
String Winders
Patch Cords
Straps
Most of these objects have very little to do with fashion...with the one exception of straps.
Levi is one of the larger manufacturers of guitar straps.
Of every material, length and price.
And like Emelda Marcos, I have a collection of straps that far outweighs my needs as dictated by the number of guitars I have at any given moment.
Why?
Certainly NOT because I like the way they look. I couldn't care any less. I don't see them. They are to hold my guitar, the more securely, the better. The best strap I owned was a gawd awful looking Ernie Ball strap that was stiffer than a Victorians collar. It was a gaudy, silly looking thing.
Gold color with black outlined stars and the name "Ernie Ball" done the same as the stars.
I was disappointed when it finally broke.
I buy straps because of how long they will last. The stiffer, the more hard plastic, the better I like it.
I also need a strap that has a range of adjustment. I like my guitar held rather high, so the minimum strap is more important than how low it'll go.
I was recently playing at a fair setting and the bass player spoke about the strap I had brought.
"Dude, it doesn't go with your shirt."
I was ready to dismiss the thought when it struck me.
I do dress for gigs. I look good when I play dress up - don't we all?
So if I care about my own look, shouldn't I try to match the strap, much as I would match my shirt and tie?
Yes, it is low on the priority list, but it does mean something.
Picks
Strings
String Winders
Patch Cords
Straps
Most of these objects have very little to do with fashion...with the one exception of straps.
Levi is one of the larger manufacturers of guitar straps.
Of every material, length and price.
And like Emelda Marcos, I have a collection of straps that far outweighs my needs as dictated by the number of guitars I have at any given moment.
Why?
Certainly NOT because I like the way they look. I couldn't care any less. I don't see them. They are to hold my guitar, the more securely, the better. The best strap I owned was a gawd awful looking Ernie Ball strap that was stiffer than a Victorians collar. It was a gaudy, silly looking thing.
Gold color with black outlined stars and the name "Ernie Ball" done the same as the stars.
I was disappointed when it finally broke.
I buy straps because of how long they will last. The stiffer, the more hard plastic, the better I like it.
I also need a strap that has a range of adjustment. I like my guitar held rather high, so the minimum strap is more important than how low it'll go.
I was recently playing at a fair setting and the bass player spoke about the strap I had brought.
"Dude, it doesn't go with your shirt."
I was ready to dismiss the thought when it struck me.
I do dress for gigs. I look good when I play dress up - don't we all?
So if I care about my own look, shouldn't I try to match the strap, much as I would match my shirt and tie?
Yes, it is low on the priority list, but it does mean something.
Wednesday, August 1, 2012
Tension Is What Causes Change
Big Trouble Little China - there is a scene in which the troubles of the world are boiled down to this:
"But there is one thing even David Lo Pan must acknowledge. All movement in the universe is caused by tension between positive and negative furies."
Without tension there are no dynamics, no movement...entropy.
Musically, in life...this can be applied anywhere.
I am currently very content with my music, with my guitar, with my sound. And then it takes effort to sit and play take after take to achieve perfection. To even attempt perfection.
A rut is the outcome when one is content.
Tensions are to be savored. No, not conflict. But tensions. Two desires working in different but not opposing directions. They can be made to work in harmony...another musical term.
But it takes effort and it doesn't always directly affect music. You have to have a long term outlook.
A sense of patience.
This works...in a piece of music as well. No, really?
Dynamics are life to music. And seemingly everything else.
This is why I dislike compressor pedals.
Saturday, July 7, 2012
Two Drunken Monkeys?
One is the voice to listen to and garner sage advice.
The other is nothing but the sum total of all your fears. That is the one to ignore, completely.
I am not advocating that you discard healthy fears - I would never suggest sticking a fork in an electrical outlet; that is a very healthy fear.
I am talking about the easy schmuck. The one that fears to show what resides inside. We wear masks and fear having the mask taken away.
The mask limits you. And in return it doesn't protect you from anything but life and enjoying yourself.
Fuck it, fuck that...fuck you.
When I was in fifth grade I was tapped for a solo spot in a choir show. My voice cracked. I was mortified.
One bad note and I wanted to shrink and hide.
Why? What the fuck for?
I am human, and freely admit it; so why pretend to be infallible?
About ten years ago I learned to tell my fears, the irrational and silly ones, to go fuck themselves.
I started wearing shit I would never have been caught dead in before - it just wasn't cool. That perception of what is cool has changed dramatically.
What is cool is authenticity.
Dylan's voice sucks. So does Springsteen's. So many of my absolute favorite musicians have various flaws and faults. Who am I to pretend to be better than that group? Whatta schmuck.
Parenthetically, I have a decent voice. Not great, but serviceable.
A year ago I got to play a number with a guy I consider a friend. He graciously accommodated me with a simple tune and a solo in the middle. He was talking to someone and absently doing the chords, so I began to noodle around. He asked if I was soloing already...we laughed and began the song.
In the audience were people who had been present in my fifth grade recital as well as many good friends...and my mother. She had tried to console me forty years earlier.
A) We nailed the song.
B) When the first chorus came up, I belted it out, and nailed it. There was no fear, no thought of the past, I was in the moment playing, doing what I love. And it showed.
C) The solo was secondary, what mattered was we sounded good, really good.
Nothing about it was perfect, but I was able to show myself to thirty people and not fear that.
The other is nothing but the sum total of all your fears. That is the one to ignore, completely.
I am not advocating that you discard healthy fears - I would never suggest sticking a fork in an electrical outlet; that is a very healthy fear.
I am talking about the easy schmuck. The one that fears to show what resides inside. We wear masks and fear having the mask taken away.
The mask limits you. And in return it doesn't protect you from anything but life and enjoying yourself.
Fuck it, fuck that...fuck you.
When I was in fifth grade I was tapped for a solo spot in a choir show. My voice cracked. I was mortified.
One bad note and I wanted to shrink and hide.
Why? What the fuck for?
I am human, and freely admit it; so why pretend to be infallible?
About ten years ago I learned to tell my fears, the irrational and silly ones, to go fuck themselves.
I started wearing shit I would never have been caught dead in before - it just wasn't cool. That perception of what is cool has changed dramatically.
What is cool is authenticity.
Dylan's voice sucks. So does Springsteen's. So many of my absolute favorite musicians have various flaws and faults. Who am I to pretend to be better than that group? Whatta schmuck.
Parenthetically, I have a decent voice. Not great, but serviceable.
A year ago I got to play a number with a guy I consider a friend. He graciously accommodated me with a simple tune and a solo in the middle. He was talking to someone and absently doing the chords, so I began to noodle around. He asked if I was soloing already...we laughed and began the song.
In the audience were people who had been present in my fifth grade recital as well as many good friends...and my mother. She had tried to console me forty years earlier.
A) We nailed the song.
B) When the first chorus came up, I belted it out, and nailed it. There was no fear, no thought of the past, I was in the moment playing, doing what I love. And it showed.
C) The solo was secondary, what mattered was we sounded good, really good.
Nothing about it was perfect, but I was able to show myself to thirty people and not fear that.
Wednesday, July 4, 2012
Fit In and Make Yourself Feel Better
Yeah, not exactly what James Brown meant. Not what he said, either...but.
Can you name any of the musicians in the James Brown Revue?
Not a one. They were made to sound like a singular unit to showcase the dancing of the Whirling GodFather of Soul.
It's the annual July Fourth at George Harrison's. Three bands worth of music. A pig and a goat for food. There is more going on than a three ringed circus. People to-ing and fro-ing. On the concrete patio which is covered by a huge tent there are kids (20 somethings) on bikes, toddlers running and playing. There is a pool off to the side by the parking.
A road house atmosphere, through and through.
We begin to play. The standards come out first. Someone plays Lynyrd Skynyrd...and we're off.
One of the bands, in fact - the headliners, are a no show.
After the tongues stop wagging, Neil Young comes out...When You Dance and Down By The River.
And on it goes.
Throughout this Mark, a saxophone player of the Kenny G variety and Shotgun, the sixty something who still thinks he is at recess are playing incredibly loudly. Both arrived late and had to set up further from the action. So to make up for this they cranked their volume. Shotgun, I suspect is deaf. Literally.
He is honking that guitar SO loudly that people start to look to see what the ruckus is about.
Is that a car alarm going off? Nope...Shotgun found the sound effects on his pedal board.
(Insert facepalm here)
I turn my volume down. The drummer matches me, which is the greatest hurdle in most bands and suddenly Mark and Shotgun are too loud for what we're doing.
After the second set I was able to remove my ear plugs and just play.
Here is the lesson for today. If everyone works to make the band sound good we all come off as musical geniuses. But one deaf guy playing too loudly is enough to sour the entire performance for everyone.
This is not a new rant, but merely my annual revisit.
We endure because we enjoy the company. Even if they are nuts, ill mannered and deaf.
And...I have to say, I sounded great.
Can you name any of the musicians in the James Brown Revue?
Not a one. They were made to sound like a singular unit to showcase the dancing of the Whirling GodFather of Soul.
It's the annual July Fourth at George Harrison's. Three bands worth of music. A pig and a goat for food. There is more going on than a three ringed circus. People to-ing and fro-ing. On the concrete patio which is covered by a huge tent there are kids (20 somethings) on bikes, toddlers running and playing. There is a pool off to the side by the parking.
A road house atmosphere, through and through.
We begin to play. The standards come out first. Someone plays Lynyrd Skynyrd...and we're off.
One of the bands, in fact - the headliners, are a no show.
After the tongues stop wagging, Neil Young comes out...When You Dance and Down By The River.
And on it goes.
Throughout this Mark, a saxophone player of the Kenny G variety and Shotgun, the sixty something who still thinks he is at recess are playing incredibly loudly. Both arrived late and had to set up further from the action. So to make up for this they cranked their volume. Shotgun, I suspect is deaf. Literally.
He is honking that guitar SO loudly that people start to look to see what the ruckus is about.
Is that a car alarm going off? Nope...Shotgun found the sound effects on his pedal board.
(Insert facepalm here)
I turn my volume down. The drummer matches me, which is the greatest hurdle in most bands and suddenly Mark and Shotgun are too loud for what we're doing.
After the second set I was able to remove my ear plugs and just play.
Here is the lesson for today. If everyone works to make the band sound good we all come off as musical geniuses. But one deaf guy playing too loudly is enough to sour the entire performance for everyone.
This is not a new rant, but merely my annual revisit.
We endure because we enjoy the company. Even if they are nuts, ill mannered and deaf.
And...I have to say, I sounded great.
Sunday, July 1, 2012
Happy Canada Day - Buy Band In A Box 2012
I like Band In A Box. I have since late 2009. It is a wonderfully functional, feature packed piece of software.
The initial buy in is not cheap.
$129 for the Pro version - which is actually the starter kit. And from there it goes up. The Audiophile edition which includes everything PGM has to offer, comes installed on a hard drive. No set of DVDs for you! It also runs $669.
However, once in, you are able to get steep discounts for the newer versions and upgrades in the future.
Their installation is not seamless. They have split the files into eleven files of nearly a gigabyte a piece. In and of itself that is not a huge deal. I have downloaded and installed programs of that size without a hitch.
But for whatever reason PGM wants you to go through the installation process multiple times, clicking, "Yes, I Agree..."
This is one area PGM should really have worked to "upgrade." The cost is there servers would have to be more robust, hence the reason for this method of file handling.
This makes the install process a long and laboUred one for those who are used to plug and play.
So I have been pretty good about upgrading when needed. PGM does include updates and bug fixes free of charge. But they are constantly rewriting the program. These are not patches as much as updates.
To update from 2010 to 2012 is $79.
And when you open the program you can see the myriad of additions. Now I see why they include a video tutorial among the files.
What Band In A Box does for you is allow you to write a tune and have a full band play it back for you. A full band accompanying you. Cut, edit, change tempo, transpose keys, pretty much whatever you want it to do, it can do.
Along with MIDI support, (natch) it also supports a host of VSTs and also sports RealTracks in which real samples of human musicians are used, it delivers a far more organic backing track.
If you have ever used backing tracks, then you'll understand that this will allow you to make your own, original backingtracks.
PG Music Inc.
29 Cadillac Ave Victoria BC Canada V8Z 1T3
Band In A Box 2012
An emphatic, Buy This.
The initial buy in is not cheap.
$129 for the Pro version - which is actually the starter kit. And from there it goes up. The Audiophile edition which includes everything PGM has to offer, comes installed on a hard drive. No set of DVDs for you! It also runs $669.
However, once in, you are able to get steep discounts for the newer versions and upgrades in the future.
Their installation is not seamless. They have split the files into eleven files of nearly a gigabyte a piece. In and of itself that is not a huge deal. I have downloaded and installed programs of that size without a hitch.
But for whatever reason PGM wants you to go through the installation process multiple times, clicking, "Yes, I Agree..."
This is one area PGM should really have worked to "upgrade." The cost is there servers would have to be more robust, hence the reason for this method of file handling.
This makes the install process a long and laboUred one for those who are used to plug and play.
So I have been pretty good about upgrading when needed. PGM does include updates and bug fixes free of charge. But they are constantly rewriting the program. These are not patches as much as updates.
To update from 2010 to 2012 is $79.
And when you open the program you can see the myriad of additions. Now I see why they include a video tutorial among the files.
What Band In A Box does for you is allow you to write a tune and have a full band play it back for you. A full band accompanying you. Cut, edit, change tempo, transpose keys, pretty much whatever you want it to do, it can do.
Along with MIDI support, (natch) it also supports a host of VSTs and also sports RealTracks in which real samples of human musicians are used, it delivers a far more organic backing track.
If you have ever used backing tracks, then you'll understand that this will allow you to make your own, original backingtracks.
PG Music Inc.
29 Cadillac Ave Victoria BC Canada V8Z 1T3
Band In A Box 2012
An emphatic, Buy This.
Tuesday, June 26, 2012
My Drunken Monkey Is My Pal
Instead of seeing your inner critic as an adversary...see it for what it is. A critical voice.
What is it trying to tell you?
Why do you see it as evil?
A friend who is immersed in a class, came running home from school one day to explain to me how my drunken monkey is trying to tell me something and that it is worth my time to listen to what my inner critic has to say.
It is there for a reason.
It has a point.
So I need to embrace the message I have been ignoring. What is it trying to tell me?
I haven't a clue...yet. But at least now, I am listening.
What is it trying to tell you?
Why do you see it as evil?
A friend who is immersed in a class, came running home from school one day to explain to me how my drunken monkey is trying to tell me something and that it is worth my time to listen to what my inner critic has to say.
It is there for a reason.
It has a point.
So I need to embrace the message I have been ignoring. What is it trying to tell me?
I haven't a clue...yet. But at least now, I am listening.
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