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Tuesday, 14 June 2011

A Tale of Two Bachs... and Books

Posted on 19:27 by Unknown
I have just finished reading two wonderful and very different Books about Johann Sebastian Bach.



The first, Evening in the Palace of Reason [Hilariously, the Harper-Collins blurb says the meeting took place in 1757, long after Bach had died, instead of 1747] by James R. Gaines, and the second is the monumental Johann Sebastian Bach: The Learned Musician by Christoph Wolff, probably the world's foremost musicologist specializing in the life of Bach.

I said they are very different, but I might as well have said that they could hardly be more different. Evening in the Palace of Reason centers on the lives of Frederick the Great and J.S. Bach as they lead up to their meeting in 1747, while The Learned Musician is all about Bach. I mean, all that is known and that can be surmised about Bach. The former is an engrossing, fast paced read, while the latter is exceedingly detailed - sometimes even excruciatingly so - but deeply satisfying in a different way, especially if you are a serious student of the music of Bach, as I am, or a very curious and already well informed amateur.

Interestingly, the two authors have radically different takes on the 1747 Potsdam meeting as well as the resulting work, the famous Musical Offering. In Gaines' dramatic and humorous look at the situation, Frederick and Bach's son Carl Philipp Emanuel conspired together to embarrass the old man by coming up with The Royal Theme, which allows for virtually no stretti. According to him, Bach's ass was chapped by the obvious ruse, and The Musical Offering was Bach's revenge. Wolff, on the other hand, views Bach as a peace emissary (!) just months after Frederick's Prussian army had occupied his little burg, and The Musical Offering as a pious gift to the king.

Who is right? It's obviously impossible to be completely sure, but even the picture Wolff paints of Bach is of a larger than life character who did not suffer fools gladly, and who took perceived affronts to his music very, very seriously, so I'm inclined to side with Gaines. Besides, it makes for a much more interesting story.

So, I would recommend Gaines' book to anybody interested in Bach who likes fast and fun reading - his description of Frederick's "gay in all senses of the word" court is particularly humorous - but a word of caution is in order for Wolff: This is the deep end of the musicological pool here, and even I found parts of the book an epic slog (As someone who has analyzed in excruciating detail a lot of Bach's music, and who can actually, you know, compose in those styles, I found his descriptions of Bach's compositional approaches particularly eye-roll inducing).

Bottom line, though, I'll undoubtedly read Wolff's book again, while I think once through Gaines' tome is enough.

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Saturday, 14 May 2011

Six Year "Blogversary": New Demo Recordings

Posted on 19:27 by Unknown
Hard to fathom it's been six years this month since I started MMM, but it's true.

Had my first gig in nearly a year last Saturday, and it went great. It was a private party a bud of mine recommended me for because he couldn't do it. Amazingly, that was six months to the day since I picked the guitar back up and started rebuilding my set again after my mother's illness (during which I didn't pick up a guitar at all for about four months).

This also coincided with a transition in my practice regimen that has had me practicing for up to 6 hours some days, so it is time to start working on a new demo CD while I enter the next phase.

My MO for this is to just record three takes of each piece and save the best one of each, no matter what. In another few weeks, I'll do this again, and in a month or so a third time. This will give me three best-of-threes to chose a best of nine out of.

Without further ado, here are the first round versions.

Tears in the Rain - Joe Satriani

It's not as easy as it sounds.

Desert Song - Eric Johnson

This is about 85% of where I want it to be.

Spanish Fly - Eddie Van Halen

The first half sucks but the second half is about as good as I've ever played it.

A Day at the Beach - Joe Satriani

I'm pretty sure I'm the only nylon string player in the world who performs this. This is about 90% as good as I've ever done it, and I was actually amazed to capture this take. Recording this would be impossible without the RMC Polydrive because it filters out the percussion booms I create on the guitar (You have to beat the hell out of nylon strings to get them to ring, and I have large callouses on my right hand i and m fingers because of this piece). Flamenco guys hate not getting percussion through the pickups, but for recording - or performing - tap technique on a nylon string, a Polydrive is a requirement, not an option.

Eu So Quero Um Xodo - Dominguinhos

This is my favorite piece in my entire repertoire... that I didn't compose myself. lol. Not a bad take, but only about 75-80% of where I had it a year or so ago.

Stairway to Heaven - Jimmy Page

Yeah, yeah; but my demo CD just wouldn't be complete without it. The rock guitar solo section is rough, but not a bad single take, and I never put anything but single takes on CD's. Just weird that way.

*****


You know what? I've pretty much completely ditched ProTools LE for GarageBand. Since all I record is stereo solo guitar and solo guitar synth (Not on these takes, obviously), and since all my effects come from the MPX-G2 and FS1R, I don't need the complexity and hardware limitations of ProTools anymore. The real reason this happened is the Lexicon I-ONIX FW801s recording units I got: They sound a bazillion times better than any ProTools hardware I've ever had, and they are a 1U device. If you want the most extravagantly cool interface for GarageBand, the FW810s is it. I just used a single stereo instrument track and hit "delete" after renaming and saving each take. It's an incredibly fast and easy way to work if you record yourself.

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Saturday, 30 April 2011

Backup Gear: Two of Everything... at Least

Posted on 09:27 by Unknown

HAVING ONLY ONE OF SOMETHING LIKE THIS POLYDRIVE INTERFACE IS A RECIPE FOR DISASTER.

If you end up playing with either bleeding-edge technology or vintage gear - I have some of each - you figure out pretty fast that to be a confident and dependable performer, you need backup gear. For most devices that are not overly prone to failure, that means two, but for some critical things, it may be three, and for loudspeakers, it could just be one extra unit.

For example, when I leave for a road trip, I must have at least two guitars, two rack systems, and three PA speakers (I usually take four). In town, I usually just take an extra guitar if it's a background music gig, but if it's something major - for which I'm being paid a significant amount of money - I'll take an extra rack and speaker too.

This policy of having backup gear along has saved my bacon - and made me look like a hero - at several gigs. When that eight-year-old data backup battery dies and all of your programs vanish, there's nothing like being able to laugh it off and grab the backup rack out of your car or truck. Or, when that darned D-string breaks, it's sure a lot quicker and easier to just grab a backup guitar rather than changing the string. Of course, I learned this, like I learn everything in life, the hard way: I once travelled over 100 miles one-way for a gig and arrived with no 1/4" to Speakon adapters. Since I put speaker cables in each rack when I pack them up, a backup would have saved me that gig, the money... and just a ton of embarrassment: It's hard to forget to pack something twice.

That was my, "Never again" moment.

So, make a list, check it twice, and all your gigs will be very, very nice. Naughty waitresses are cool, but naughty amps are not.

The catch for me is - there's always a catch - I have two guitars that look exactly the same but that are in fact entirely different.



The Rider Nylon on the left has a high classical action, and the one on the right has a low flamenco action. I have decided that the classical action Rider is not a suitable backup guitar, because it's way to hard to play tap technique on it... so I need a third, of course.

But there's more to it than that. I love practicing tap tech on the classical Rider because it makes the pieces so much easier to play on the flamenco Rider, and I play gigs without playing Spanish Fly and A Day at the Beach all the time. So, I'm glad I got the classical setup, and I wouldn't want to be without it, but two is not enough in any case. Why?

Because, the real problem is with the RMC Acoustic Gold saddles, or perhaps just my less than stellar luck with them. Back when I was playing Godin guitars with these saddles, I had one go entirely dead on me - the G string on that guitar - which is where I got the idea to always have two guitars along. Well, these pickup elements are by far the best in the world, but to be so sensitive and clear, they evidently also have to be quite fragile. Lummox that I am, I've managed to break two of them while changing strings! Fortunately, both on the classical backup ax, and I managed to fix the second one myself.

So, you see where this is going: I imagine the scenario where I'm changing strings in anticipation of a road trip and I break one of the RMC saddles. I don't have time to get it repaired before I leave, so I have to hit the road with just one guitar. This is not acceptable, so I'm going to order a third Rider Nylon/RMC - my second in the flamenco setup - before the end of the year. I'm also going to order some extra saddles so I can repair them here myself, rather than having to ship them off to get the work done. Yes, having extras of things like that often means you'll never, ever need another one again. lol.

The good news is that I'm getting all of these ducks in a row because I'm again free to get on the road and do some serious performing now that my mom is being looked after. I've worked up to some six and seven hour practice days over the past 5 months, which will be the subject of some upcoming posts, and some problematic pieces I've been working on for years have suddenly come into focus. It's a great feeling.



She bears an almost uncanny resemblance to my high school sweetheart.
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Saturday, 26 March 2011

Epic Drunk Driving Fail in the 'Hood

Posted on 11:27 by Unknown
Some young buck in a pickup truck - no word on whether he was wearing a pink carnation, but he was definitively out of luck - launched himself and his vehicle into a house in my neighborhood back at the beginning of the month. The truck burst into flames and caught the house on fire.



I walk by this house every day on my 6-8 mile walks. Fortunately, nobody was home and even the drunk driver was not seriously hurt.

To give you an idea of how spectacular this was, here is the intersection from which the truck went airborne.



The cross street is Thousand Oaks, and the road going off into the distance is Bulverde Road, which turns into Scarsdale as it enters my neighborhood. What you can't see from this angle is that there is a rise, very similar in size and angle to a waterski jump, onto Scarsdale. The reason there is no damage to the landscaping in the foreground is because the truck was in the air over it. The police estimated the distance the truck was airborne at over 100 feet.

I walked across to the sidewalk in the picture above to show where the truck landed.



He made it almost to the sidewalk, and the curb deflected his trajectory to the right, and into the house. Within a couple of days, the house was demolished down to the slab.



This is the second time, to my knowledge, that this house has been hit by a car. I don't think I'd want to live there. lol.



The caption said she's French. Having spent a lot of time in France, I could have told you that just by looking. She's almost stereotypically Gallic. Quite pretty, though.
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Sunday, 27 February 2011

Two-a-Days

Posted on 19:27 by Unknown
No, not football training camp, technical and performance practice in two separate sessions every day. Grueling, but I'm about 75% ready to gig again... and, I've worked out twice a day every day this year so far too: Bowflex and a 90 minute walk.

Feeling much much better than I did last November.

Something for all the True Blood fans out there.



Pretty much the ideal redhead. Yeah, I watch the show. lol.
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Saturday, 29 January 2011

Hiatus

Posted on 04:27 by Unknown
Taking a little time off from the blog to catch up on some set development chores. My mom got very sick late last year and I wasn't able to play for a few months, so I'm rebuilding my set again. Yes, I rebuilt it at the beginning of last year too, so this is quite frustrating, but now that mom is taken care of, I ought to be back performing again by March or April. In fact, I have a standing two gig per week offer at an eatery already, so I'm anxious to get the set back together.

Life sometimes intrudes on one's plans.
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Saturday, 25 December 2010

MMM Merry Christmas

Posted on 05:27 by Unknown
Merry Christmas, readers. Hope you're looking forward to great things coming together in the next year, as I am.

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