On 2013-01-20 14:08:57 +0000, Jonathan said:
> On Sunday, January 20, 2013 7:31:50 AM UTC-5, andy-uk . wrote:
>> If hands are important and you want to sound like Django .... what
>> about your left hand?
I'm not sure who the question is addressed to, but what about that the
left hand? Django is fascinating in any number of ways, but at my age,
and with my interests, these are academic questions more than they are
plotting a course of study. I think his left hand and his picking style
are both amazing and highly personal. I think both are worthy of study
and inquiry, but not, as is inexplicably highlighted as a danger in
guitar playing, to the exclusion of everything else.
> Maybe you could start small by putting a rubber band around your pinky
> and ring finger, and see how it goes :)
I've known a couple of guitarists that were pretty significant Django
clones. They are interesting but, no offense to Django or his
imitators, they seem more limited by this replication than they do
liberated. In fairness, they might be able to do pretty convincing
imitations of Wes and Tal Farlow too, I don't know. But I'm not sure
that being the Rich Little of guitar is a "gift" so much as a curse.
Norman Mailer wrote "The Fight" which was a large feature piece first
published in Playboy and then expanded into a small book. It was about
Ali reclaiming his heavyweight title from George Foreman in Zaire.
He spent no small amount of time arguing that hand speed and speed of
response in counter-punching, also noteworthy in Emile Griffith among
others, was faster among people who were illiterate. I thought he gave
a good, though ultimately unprovable thesis in this regard.
Django was illiterate until Grappelli taught him to read and write
relatively late in life, which I understood he then did quite poorly.
Nevertheless his guitar skills were well developed and his style and
approach set while he was illiterate.
Picks and strings and amps and hats are always very important, but it
seems that relentlessly pursuing your very own approach seems the best
way to uncover "genius" or at list personal distinction on the guitar.
Oh--and also dying young.
This morning as I woke up, likely initially pondering my own mortality,
I began considering the greats that had died young. The history of bass
has been particularly boned with the early loss of some of their
greatest innovators in Jimmy Blanton, Oscar Pettiford and Scott LaFaro.
Parker, Bird, Clifford Brown, Charlie Christian, Eddie Lang and of
course Django. And plenty more. It's really amazing how many iconic and
critically important players in music history died young.
So: Being illiterate and dying young might be more important that pick
and string gauge. I've blown it in these two fundamental ways already.
There's no hope for my lasting genius in the world of music. I'll see
if I can't make my mark instead in being a regional master of scopa.
Jeez--I haven't evan had my coffee yet.