Charlie Sheen
Armed and Hammered
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SRV, Hendrix, and even Clapton were always so much more advanced players than Page. .
Since Santa Claus (you know, the vato with the hair on his jaws) is going to bring me a Gretsch, my "only" 2009 resolution is to try and pick up on this style...
Now THAT'S some kick-ass pickin'. And no heavy effects to cover up slop...
Well no sheet dude, I bought this video so I didn't have to do that! Just show me some damn licks and put it in tablature on the screen, fool!Also gotta go with Page ... he brought in folk/country, indian, classical and really did establish a new genre in the process.
buzzystang said:Grissom says "Before you proceed any further, you need to learn all the notes of the fretboard and understand music theory"Well no sheet dude, I bought this video so I didn't have to do that! Just show me some damn licks and put it in tablature on the screen, fool!

...Clapton, umm, please. "Mr 3 Finger"...
Post some pics of that Gretsch when you can....
..."Teach me master, but I have no patience to learn..."
...There are "savants", but basically they lack all the barriers to "learning" mind-to-muscle control - they still have to hear it, categorize it and "learn" it at some point before they can use it... Most of them are just amazing parrots - there's a cost to having a messed up brain...
I put in a bid for "one meelion dollars" to ensure adequate liquidity in the marketplaceIt might get away from me. Fucking punks are driving up the cost and it's pretty near the limit I was willing to spend.

Opinion is all that is. An amateur can play page.Thats funny. Hendrix was my "guitar hero" when I first started listening to rock and didnt know any better. Now I realize he was good at "inventing" sounds and making noise, but not really a proficient guitarist. Mostly because the drugs got in the way. SRV is just a white clone of Hendrix. Clapton, umm, please. "Mr 3 Finger".
The musicianship, composition, and production engineering Page encompasses is, to me, unequalled by any other "big name" guitarist.
Gee, what a pal. It's up to $1,600 now. -passI put in a bid for "one meelion dollars" to ensure adequate liquidity in the marketplace![]()
Don't think you'll get too much argument on that - some exceptions, but at issue was how many could have written what page wrote at the time that he wrote it?Opinion is all that is. An amateur can play page.
Kidding of course, I'd never do that. That, and, I don't need a GretschGee, what a pal. It's up to $1,600 now. -pass
right now...Opinion is all that is. An amateur can play page.
Don't think you'll get too much argument on that - some exceptions, but at issue was how many could have written what page wrote at the time that he wrote it?
...
That is half the problems with opinions. There is more to clapton than the popular stuff. Same with Hendrix. I have even talked to a few so called Hendrix fans and found that they only knew the popular albums. For Hendrix, my favorite albums were Blue Wild Angel and Radio One. For Clapton, I always liked the Rainbow Concert and Live Cream. BTW, Clapton did a compilation album with Page and the Yardbirds back in the 70's.Ehh, and anybody can play blues. Clapton is flat out friggin boring. Unless theres some hidden stuff of his thats unlike any of his commonly known shit, then theres nothing to be impressed with. Audio Valium. Put him on, fall asleep.
Ehh, if the "unknown" stuff is that great, logic dictates that it WOULD be well known. I find it hard to believe that Clapton took a depature from his well worn 3 finger style to craft some "hidden gems".
As far as Hendrix, its only been recent posthumous releases to "discover" a hidden side. Prior to that, all there was were the studio releases and the studio hack remixes released by his manager Alan Douglas shortly after his death. I have all his JHE studio stuff, the two "Essential" collections which have some of his Band of Gypsies work, plus three of those Alan Douglas releases, Peace In Missisippi, Midnight Lightning, and a jazz exercise called Nine To The Universe. I very rarely like live recordings.
As far as opinion, music CAN be quantified subjectively, by those in the business, a musicians peers and anybody with an educated, critical ear. While Jimi broke ground and pushed the musical envelope, his talent his skill is artificially inflated by his legend and the mythology surrounding him, which befalls MANY bands and artists. They APPEAR greater, better, than they really are and people buy into the hype.
Lastly, I LOVE blues, but as I said, it IS a simple music, anyone can play it. However, NOT everyone can FEEL it and therein lies the difference. But, at the end of the day, it doesnt make THAT much difference in the final product.
I agree with most of what you said, but would like to point out a flaw in this thinking...Ehh, if the "unknown" stuff is that great, logic dictates that it WOULD be well known.
I agree 100%. Modern rap would not exist if originality and artistic skill decided the fate of the music. I know a few local bands that play wonderful music fusing jazz, blues, rock, and even some R&B. They all have a strong musical background and most have music related college education. They will probably never make it. People don't want originality. People want the same old sound repeated over and over again. That is what sells records.Most of what we hear is formulaic crap - this is proof IMO, that we don't exist in a system where music lives or dies on its artistic merit.
Every now and then someone manages to find a "transition" - though in many ways it's something that had already been done that manages to make it's way into the stream of vomit known as "popular"...People don't want originality. People want the same old sound repeated over and over again. That is what sells records.

Your wrong, you couldn't be more wrong, I cannot image how someone can think like thatIt's fun to watch someone else argue for a change LOL![]()
Prove it!Your wrong, you couldn't be more wrong, I cannot image how someone can think like thatProve it!