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AllenLowe

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Posts posted by AllenLowe

  1. "Jazz guitar (and bluegrass guitar) is boring and homogenous, yet pedals are synthetic and non-organic - "

    B3, you're really being unfair here - if we are going to discuss this, let's discuss it. I never said any such thing or made any such connection - I was speaking about very different points, and connecting them is really a kind of debater's trick -

  2. B3 - I am not making those kind of judgements, you are - I am simply saying that, from an objective standpoint, I hate the sound of most jazz guitar - I am trying to explain it in terms that I feel are accurately expressive of the problem - these are not ideological judgements I am making, but aesthetic. Tube distortion sounds great to my ears because it sounds good - not because I idealize its connection to nature. However, if I try to analyze why it sounds so good, than the answer is probobaly, yes, because it has rich and organically guitar-like characteristics. I find bluegrass playing homogenous and a little dull, its true - but for other reasons (to much codification of the style) -

  3. Joe - I don't disagree with much of what you said, I only felt you were too quick to dismiss my point - I just feel that there is a lot that can be done with tube technology and a good tube amp, a lot that can be done with the instrument and the hands, and I miss the direct SOUND of the tube-amplified guitar. Metheny is a great player, I agree - I just really do not like the sound of it all except in passing. I must say I prefer analog synthesis (is the B3 not an example of this?) and I really do believe a large part of the probelm with digital effects is the various stages of conversion and re-conversion - the truth is, the way many jazz guitarists use effects, they might as well be playing any instrument - I think this is problematic -

  4. well, it's getting late - I'll do my best - it's not ignorance of the physical capabiities but ignorance of the physical LIMITATIONS of an instrument that leads to innovation - that's a much differnt thing, I think -

    as to jazz guitarists whose sounds and playing I like - well lets go back:

    1) Eddie Lang - beautiful sound, great technique - love him -

    2) Snoozer Quinn - an obscure one, from New Orleans, played with Whiteman and with others - not a great "line" player but swung and had a great acoustic sound -

    3) Barney Kessell - straight ahead but very rich and full sound -

    4) Jimmy Raney - probably the greatest improvisor of them all, almost did not sound amplified -

    5) Joe Puma - beautiful, rich sound, lyrical plaer -

    6) Al Casey (of Fats Waller) - great player, I saw him a lot in NYC in the 1970s - big sound, fluid player -

    7) Charlie Christian - how can you not llike C.C.?

    8) Nick Lucas - one of the great unsung - playing very swinging acoustic solos as early as 1923, before he became a crooner -

  5. it's as though Sonny Rollins were to say, well, the saxophone is unimportant, it's only the vessel for my expression. Well, in reality, everything Rollins plays is related to the instrument's physical capabilities as well as its expressive range - the idea of embouchore, location of the keys, the interaction of mouthpiece and reed, of volume and timbre. I just felt that Metheny was expressing something of a cliche and ignoring the importance of the direct physical capabilities of the guitar - as most jazz guitarists do - I found it a bit annoying for Rachel and Joe to simply dismiss my argument as "making no sense" because they disagreed. In this they were, I think, expressing a typical jazz-person's myopia. You're an organist - you know its not just another keyboard but a very specific kind of keyboard with very specific physical capabilities - if it wasn't, well, than any pianist could sit down at it and become an instant organist -

  6. that shoots nothing down, does not even address the point I am making, that jazz guitar sound is boring and homogenous (as is bluegrass, btw) - and metal is about as stylized and synthetic as you can get - the relationship of the sound of metal guitar to guitar is like the relationship of professional wrestling is to actual wrestling -

  7. of course it makes no sense to you, Rachel, and Joe...you guys are jazz fans.

    Rarely in jazz guitar playing do I hear the sound of the guitar in the same way as I hear it with certain rock guitarists - going back: Link Wray, Carl Perkins, Hendrix (of course), Buddy Holly, (early) Jeff Beck, (early) Jimmy Page, Mike Bloomfield, Robbie Robertson, many many more. Jazz guitarists are either afraid of true, direct amplification (meaning natural tube distortion) or use so many stages of analog to digital to analog to digital to analog conversion that their tone achieves a kind of digital sheen or, in the case of even guitarists that I like very much like Metheny and Bill Frisell, becomes a wash of digitally distancing effects. Occasionally some jazz guy who thinks he's hip will use an overdrive PEDAL, but that's why it all sounds (in jazz AND rock today) like so much synthetic excitement -

  8. you know the only thing that tends to bother me in that interview? Metheny does what a lot of musicians do, which is say that it's not important what the instrument is, but that the instrument is merely a vessel through which to express the music. I think this is very wrong headed - each instrument has it's own qualities that ought to be exploited - now, Metheny is a great player, but his attitude does explain, to me, why I hate the SOUND of most jazz guitar -

  9. I love Jack Sheldon (anybody remember Run Buddy Run, his old TV series? He's also in that bad movie with James Caan and Better Midler about a touring big band singer). I'm not surprised Martin Williams didn't get him - Larry summed it up perfectly; as good a critic as Williams was, he was probably put off by what he deemed to be Sheldon's casual approach to his art - though that approach masked his quite wonderful abilities as an improviser. There's some great work I have from him on a CD of a tour with Benny Goodman. Now that's a tour that muist have been interesting. Herb Geller also told me a funny story - Herb was visitng the US and went to see Sheldon in a club. Sheldon starts talking between tunes, says: "Visitng tonight is the great alto saxophonist Herb Geller, who has been living in Germany for some time - Heil Hitler, Herb!"

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