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Thread: Finger pickers, look here.
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29th September 2006, 07:19 PM #16Ukelele does nothing for me I'm afraid.straight guitar is as exciting as watching grass grow I reconwish he'd move to the guitaryou have to have a sence of humour if you choose the ukulele.. surely!
Some of the most fantastic music I've heard wasn't played on guitar or ukulele, nor for that matter on instruments that I'd even recognise.
I've seen drums and sticks and tin cans and single string make-shift violins and heaven forbid even the hammond organ played in a way that made me feel happy, or even something else. Have you ever seen James Morrison on the fly sprayer, or Ted Egan playing his Beer Carton?
The instrument doesn't matter at all. How does it make you feel? You don't care for it? Fine. That doesn't mean it wasn't played with joy and passion (and in Jake's case a tad of talent one might add!).
Just cut the "it would be better on..."
Iain you of all people!:eek: , I thought you were above "that awful wailing sliding geetar" stuff (as I am sure did Ry Cooder), I've heard some shockers on classical guitar too, but that doesn't devalue the instrument.
I hope I have the right artist here. I think it is Tommy Emmanuel who won't sign a cheap crappy guitar owned by a young autograph hunter without first playing it. His point? Any instrument can be made to sound fantastic if you know what to do with it.
So cut out the "that instrument is crap" stuff, and recognise that all instruments are crap in the wrong hands (mine!), and anything can be made to sound incredible if just a bit of talent is added.
I own some of the most godawful instruments ever invented (pray that you never hear a banjo mandolin in full flight!) but I am fascinated, even mesmerised at how they sound in the right setting with some talented players!
So there!
P (Friday - between lunches!)
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29th September 2006, 07:39 PM #17
I don't disagree with what you've written, BM, but instruments are a horses for courses thing. The Ukulele sound a little strained and restricted in some of those pieces. As I said, I was listening to Clapton today, and he just so rarely produces an extraneous sound; it's so pure.
The ukulele is good for Hawaiian music, ditties, and people like Tiny Tim.
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29th September 2006, 09:28 PM #18
Hear Hear Peter, musical snobbery is hilarious.
http://www.woodworkforums.ubeaut.com...bal#post267699
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29th September 2006, 09:39 PM #19
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29th September 2006, 09:52 PM #20
"Hear Hear Peter, musical snobbery is hilarious."
Isnt it just!....................................................................
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29th September 2006, 10:46 PM #21
I posted this here about 5 weeks ago in another thread and its my fav version of the cannon rock
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rYtQ1M6qE_4
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4th October 2006, 05:08 AM #22
What about these two... who needs vocals!
The best rendition of a classic I've ever heard!
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vNc5o...elated&search=
They're called Rodrigo y and Gabriela, they use guitars as percussive instruments.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=G8dPs...elated&search=
http://www.rodgab.com/ check out their version of a Well written instrumental piece(Iain you should like it!)originaly preformed and written by Metallica... "Orion" Hell the ABC even used the original for fill in music video with some surfing!....................................................................
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4th October 2006, 08:34 AM #23
May come as a surprise but I like Rick Wakeman.........
He doesn't play a keyboard, he makes it sing.
As J S Bach said, playing music is easy, it is just a matter of touching precisely the right key for precisely the right time in precisely the right order, or something like that, and who said Germans had no sense of humour.Stupidity kills. Absolute stupidity kills absolutely.
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4th October 2006, 11:46 AM #24
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