Alright at the advice of everyone I am going to just be myself then.

  I am keeping my tuner on my headstock and no one is going to stop me!

Mike Hedding


On Nov 18, 2009, at 7:53 AM, mistertaterbug <[email protected]>  
wrote:

> If anyone cares to, go to "Remember the Cross" and "That Home Above"
> by the Monroe/Flatt/Scruggs/Wise/Rainwater band. One is clearly B, the
> other B flat. But, they are both clearly played out of A. There are a
> number of other noteworthy cuts, "The First Whippoorwill" for one,
> that are played out of one key but are clearly not pitched in that
> key. So, did fucking Bill Monroe (to quote fucking Gaudreau) tune up
> or capo up? It's not tape drag. As Terry Bullin once said,"Well, maybe
> he did it in the studio but surely he wouldn't have done it out in
> public." It's just silly. If the situation requires a different voice
> and the capo provides it, use it. When did it become against the rules
> to use the tools?
>
> I started using a capo now and then due to saving time and aggravation
> in the studio. Also, open tunings. I'd really love to use more open
> tunings. Listen to the cut on Dr. Ralph's recording of "Lift Him Up".
> That's tuned open, but there were a few songs where we tuned open only
> to have TBone say that he'd like to go up a half step. Now, retuning 8
> strings on a mandolin every which way and expecting it to settle down
> in a few minutes is just unreasonable. Slapping on a capo is not,
> especially when time is money.
>
> As for working up solos and improvising...
> I think that maybe we can go back to "the Father" one more time and
> consider this approach. Over the years, if I listen to songs that
> Monroe did over a number of decades, such as "Uncle Pen", "On and On",
> "Bluegrass Breakdown", etc, what I hear is a script, a framework over
> which variations are applied. I'm not talking about the construction
> of the song so much as I am the construction of his solos in the song.
> It seems that he worked out a solo that served as the basic pattern to
> follow, but changed small aspects of it occasionally as his whim
> dictated. But the basic "script" was predominantly the same. This may
> be helpful, maybe not. Just thought I'd throw it out there.
>
> I had a short conversation with Russ Barenburg the other day and the
> subject of improvisation came up. He said that he occasionally has
> people ask him about improvising, as do I. It's really an individual
> learning experience and there doesn't seem to be any one way to
> approach it or teach it. He said that to him it is ridiculous to
> assume that it is possible to whip out an improvised solo that rivals
> something that requires one sitting down and working it out and
> learning it over the course of say, several months. But that seems to
> be what some people assume they will be able to do with a few
> "rules".  I think that it is easy to overlook the fact that the sound
> our heros have/had did not just appear overnight but took sometimes a
> lifetime of blood, sweat, and tears to acquire. There is too much
> impatience in us all.
>
> I think that Eric has a valid point, that being each song deserves a
> look to see what the best approach is. I agree with Eric too (Who is
> this Eric guy? He seems to know a lot of stuff...) regarding using
> tunings and capos, if a person wants a specific sound, go where it is
> regardless of how you need to get there. As John Hartford used to say
> (and I know I've quoted him saying this before...), "This is art and
> there ain't no damned rules."
>
> Be bold, be yourself, be honest. The audience can spot a phony from
> the back row.
>
> Puhtater
>
> On Nov 17, 6:46 pm, [email protected] wrote:
>> Ron Spears tells a very good Jimmy Gaudreau capo story. At a gig  
>> somewhere, Jimmy put a capo on his mandolin and Ron
>> gave him the "hairy eyeball" as only Ron can do and Jimmy got right  
>> in Ron's face and says "I ain't fucking Bill Monroe."
>> Might even be true.
>>
>> Clyde Clevenger
>> Just My Opinion, But It's Right
>> Salem, Oregon
>> Old Circle
>>
>> ----- Original Message -----
>> From: "Don Grieser" <[email protected]>
>> To: [email protected]
>> Sent: Tuesday, November 17, 2009 4:36:23 PM GMT -08:00 US/Canada  
>> Pacific
>> Subject: Re: Thinking more outside of a Jam
>>
>> I saw Jimmy Gaudreau use a capo on his mandolin at a bluegrass
>> festival. It sounded great. It's a tool. Use it for a certain sound  
>> or
>> effect but not because you're too lazy to learn to play in Bb or B.
>> Monroe style players play out of closed positions anyway even when
>> they don't have to, right?
>
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