On Sunday 23 September 2012 05:04, bad sector conveyed the following to
alt.os.linux.suse...
> You should really write a book; did you play pro in a band or maybe on
> your own?
I have never been a professional - in the sense of making a living out
of my music - but I have been in several bands, and of very eclectic
nature.
I formed my first band when I was still in highschool. We started off
as a duo - myself on lead guitar and the other guy on acoustic rhythm
guitar and synthesizer - but then later on we were joined by another guy
from our school on bass, and then later on a drummer, who was a lot
younger than us.
The band temporarily took a break so we could focus more on our
college/university education, and when we reunited after several years,
we had another bass player. Later on, a singer was added to the band as
well - originally the other guitarist (and keyboard player) did most of
the lead vocals, and I myself used to do the lead vocal on two of the
songs that I had written. I mainly wrote only the music while the other
founding band member wrote the lyrics, but on occasion we would each
write complete songs - music and lyrics.
We started off as a kind of progressive rock band, but the other guy's
musical preferences quickly seemed to be headed more into a kind of
experimental punk rock with far less intricate musical arrangements.
Eventually it also turned out that the band as a whole was not willing
to move forward and become semi-pro, and that the other guy's ego was
beginning to dominate the band. He too didn't have the ambition to go
semi-pro or improve upon the technical aspects of making music.
My songs were getting more complex and guitar-oriented, but I found that
they were increasingly scrapping my songs from the playlist when we were
rehearsing for a gig, and eventually, after a quite successful gig, the
other guy - by whom I mean "the one with whom I founded the band when I
was 17" - asked me to leave the band. I was shocked, but I saw no
reason not to comply. He had already talked the other band members into
siding up with his views, and I knew that it was going to be pointless
to stay in a band with people who do not want you there.
From that moment on, I started practicing more at home, and I began
realizing that the band had been holding me back, because they didn't
want to grow, neither as a band nor as individual musicians. I was now
free to explore musical avenues which were not possible within the band,
and to become a technically much better guitar player. This was when I
became strongly influenced by the likes of Joe Satriani and Steve Vai,
and although I lack practice now and I've also moved away from the hard
rock'ish, heavy metal'ish playing style now, I could already play
several Satriani and Vai songs back in the 1990s.
I have tried to start new bands and I have been in other bands as well -
both as a permanent member and as a stand-in lead guitarist - but I
guess none of them were either suitable or serious enough. In the late
1990s I was a member of a cover band for a while, doing classic rock
covers.
The last band I was in was not really a /defined/ band, but rather a
public jam session band, where you had a small core of musicians who
were almost always going to be present at every session, and a number of
irregularly attending musicians. Everyone was welcome to come and jam
along. There were definitely fireworks going off on my first session
with these guys - some of whom I knew from having talked to them at a
café. Unlike most of the "guests", I stuck with them the whole night,
and we were all having a great time, moving in all kinds of musical
directions, from funk to rock to jazz to blues and everything in
between.
The thing however is that most jam sessions that I know over here of are
just typical blues jams, where it's mainly the guitarists who take
turns, and who are generally competing with eachother, showing off their
riffs and licks. Kind of a gathering of alpha males. Now, I'm not an
alpha male myself, but I /am/ a male, and put an alpha male next to me,
and I will behave just as competitively. That's a leftover from having
to compete and fend for myself in highschool.
The jam context I was referring to higher up and which I participated in
for the better part of 2003 was different. We had all sorts of
musicians there, and everyone was considered equal and equivalent.
Nobody was trying to be a leader or an alpha male. Someone would simply
start a groove, and someone else would pick up on that, and then the
others would all pitch in, and we all took turns at lead and rhythm.
On occasion, just for fun, we'd do some cover songs as well. There were
two jazz classics that we did free interpretations of at almost every
gig - "Sunny" and "Summertime" - but we've also done more mainstream
rock/pop stuff, e.g. Fleetwood Mac's "Rhiannon", Kiss's "Sure Know
Something", The Police's "Every Breath You Take" and "Message In A
Bottle", et al.
Sure, you had some showboats dropping in every once in a while, and even
one guy who brought an Eric Clapton songbook with him and then played
nothing but Clapton songs, singing all the time and playing lead guitar
when he wasn't singing. The other musicians didn't appreciate that,
because that was not what we were there for. So in the end, the
showboats/egotrippers would do a number of songs with us but were then
kindly informed that we weren't there as their personal rhythm section,
and they would then just go sit in a corner and have a beer, or pack up
their stuff and go home.
Sadly enough, due to an outrageous display of disrespect towards us by
the owner of the venue where these jam sessions took place, the whole
thing ended abruptly in November 2003, and although we would on occasion
still run into eachother at restaurants or cafés, we all sort of went
our own way from there on. It's a pity, because we did make some great
music together.
> On 09/18/2012 10:33 AM, Aragorn wrote:
>
>> If I may add a little personal experience to this one, I've always
>> had guitars with vibratos on them up until I started playing Gibsons
>> - well, my Firebird VII also has a vibrato tailpiece - and I can
>> assure you that vibrato systems always run away with your sustain and
>> tone. The reason for that is plain and simple physics: they contain
>> springs, and springs absorb vibration.
>
> I have little need for them, it's only for that 1/100 times and then
> the Floyd style is enough for me, but I noticed that most LP's I saw
> had no whammy at all and the players didn't seem to be dead.
Exactly. And you can get nice pitch bending effects with the use of
effects devices as well. Not quite the same of course, but the option
is there.
>>> - a 24 fret neck
>>
>> Again a personal remark here, albeit that many guitarists share this
>> opinion with me. With a 22-fret neck, the neck pickup sits exactly
>> under the harmonic node of the hypothetical 24th fret. This gives
>> the neck pickup a particular harmonic sweetness.
>
> I've heard people cite exactly that reason as a negative though i.e.
> they like not having the pickup in that (according to them) mushy
> region.
Then your experience is exactly the opposite of mine. Most guitarists I
know actually prefer the neck pickup to be sitting under that harmonic
node.
> When it comes to deep guitar expertise I'm so poor I can't even change
> my mind so I don't really have an opinion on locating the pickup under
> half length resonnance.
Actually, it's 3/4 of the scale, not half. The 12th fret is the one
that's halfway of the scale length. ;-)
>>> - an all maple neck with dot inlay (perhaps big dots)
>>
>> Okay, no argument there if that is your preference. Maple sounds
>> brighter than mahogany and a maple fingerboard adds snap, but
>> personally I would then choose either a maple neck with a rosewood
>> fingerboard, or a mahogany neck with a maple or ebony fingerboard.
>
> I don't see how the fingerboard interrupted by all the fret cuts could
> possibly do anything except bad accoustics.
No, it doesn't work like that. The fret and the bridge are the primary
transmitters of string vibrations into the wood of respectively the neck
and the body. The fret material and fingerboard wood species are the
secondary transmitters at the neck side, and the top wood species is the
secondary transmitter at the body side. These are things which affect
mainly the attack phase of the sound, and the actual neck wood and body
wood underneath the top (if they are distinct) are what most of the wood
tone comes from.
> I'm thinking of railroad inspectors hitting the wheels with hammers to
> detect cracks if you ever saw one of them in action. Now if one of
> them wheels had section sawcuts filed with whatever I think they would
> not sound the same as a healthy wheel!
The frets do not interrupt the fingerboard material. They are glued
into that fingerboard material and there is still enough of the material
left between the fret and the actual neck wood.
> What I would do on my prototype instead is try to glue frets onto the
> now completely integral neck wood so as to preclude it being even
> partly segmented.
It wouldn't be segmented at all. It's just an aspect that ads tonal
coloring to the envelope of the sound.
>>> - a bolt-on neck
>>
>> Not exactly the best option for either sound or sustain, and you must
>> also keep in mind that the bolts will allow the neck some play if you
>> use the vibrato system a lot.
>
> I have a radical idea that goes beyond bolt-on, it may not work, but
> I'll try it.
Are you by any chance referring to a neck and body center made of one
piece, which can be inserted and attached to different bodies? If so,
that approach already exists. ;-)
>>> The "sound" I'm after but which I was not really aware of early in
>>> the game is probably LP because of the humbuckers' better sustain.
>>
>> Humbuckers do have more sustain than Fender-style single-coil
>> pickups, but the difference is rather small. Most of the sustain of
>> a Les Paul comes from the body and the neck, and its set neck
>> construction.
>
> That's news to me, good to know. I thought the humbuckers were the
> main attraction.
No no, definitely not. A humbucker was initially designed to "buck the
hum", by essentially using two single-coil pickups wired in series and
out-of-phase, but with opposite magnetic polarity, so that only the hum
gets canceled by the phase inversion, while the opposite magnetic
polarity brings the actual guitar sound back in-phase.
What makes a humbucker have slightly better sustain than a single-coil
is that the magnetic window that the string crosses through is wider, so
the pickup registers more harmonic content and more vibration. That's
why there is a perceived increase in sustain in the electric signal.
However, the Gibson Les Paul was introduced in 1952 and was initially
equipped with Gibson's P-90 pickups. These are single-coil pickups, but
they are a bit wider than the typical Fender-style single-coils, and so
they do sound warmer/fatter and more powerful - they also have a lot
more windings. Work on a humbucking pickup design to eliminate the
50/60 Hz hum started around 1955 - both at Gibson at at Gretsch, but it
was Gibson who filed for the patent, which is why these pickups were
called PAF ("patent applied for") - and only first appeared on the Les
Paul in 1957, both on the Goldtop - which at that stage still simply
bore the name "Les Paul model" and on the Les Paul Custom.
The Les Paul Custom was then initially sold with three PAF pickups - a
two-pickup model became available again later that same year - and the
Goldtop had two pickups. In 1958, Gibson slightly redesigned the neck
profile - it became somewhat slimmer - on the Goldtop and replaced the
golden finish with translucent sunbursts, and that's when they also
rebranded it from simply "Les Paul model" to "Les Paul Standard", albeit
that the word "Standard" did not appear on the guitar itself and the
headstock silkscreen still read "Les Paul model".