Awesome, Erik... thanks for the breakdown. I like that approach! I think if it comes from the heart even if it is by accident it has got to be good! Yes, sometimes garbage will leak out of experimenting with new ideas but, as they say one persons garbage is anothers, blah blah blah.
Adam On Nov 23, 8:35 pm, erik berry <[email protected]> wrote: > So I experienced a few moments over the last weekend relating to the > subject of "writing" a solo and also with some of the nifty quotes > Tater's been posting on Facebook. > > We started playing a brand new song that we've already recorded for > release. I haven't really worked up a solo, although I "wung" it just > fine in the studio and am happy. The basic script of the recorded solo > is flashy scale climb into quoting vocal melody of second line into > big tremelo double stop. > > While trying to play this script Thursday night my fingers traffic > jammed and I wound up losing it, so I kinda did some "angry" slide up > and downs, double-stopped but not really, a really inarticulate > "whoop, whoop," sort of like a wolf whistle. This got some whoos from > the folks in the front row and made me think of what someone wrote on > Mike's Facebook page, taht if you play a wrong note a few more times > it doesn't sound wrong, so I played some sloppy flash and the "whoop > whoop" again and this time the whole place went "yeah." Interesting. > (And I thought of that wrong note thing on the fly--this is what > Grisman means by fast composing, methinks). > > So the next night I tried to do it again. Felt good. Cleaned up the > slop a little. > > By Saturday night I'd gotten it figured out, including playing the > climb a little less flashy and more tremelo-y, but into the > intentionally sloppy "whoop whoops". Big cheer, big smiles from the > bandmates. And that's how I write my solos, I guess. > > Anyhoo, there you go. I thought of this thread and have been wanting > to share this since I got home. Thanks, > > erik > > On Nov 20, 2:09 pm, [email protected] wrote: > > > > > The Voice Capo looks just like a nut cracker. > > > Clyde Clevenger > > Just My Opinion, But It's Right > > Salem, Oregon > > Old Circle > > > ----- Original Message ----- > > From: "Pat Murphree" <[email protected]> > > > T > > > Now when are they going to develop a voice capo so I can sing high harmony? > > > Phreepicker > > > -- Hide quoted text - > > > - Show quoted text - -- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "Taterbugmando" group. To post to this group, send email to [email protected]. To unsubscribe from this group, send email to [email protected]. For more options, visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/taterbugmando?hl=en.
