C
clivus
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...It might have been Martin Taylor as I think back on it...
Robot retuning 'on the fly' might be a cool thing, but the absolute coolest retuning trick I have seen was at the Chet Atkins Appreciation Society several years ago when this British jazz guitarist (whose name I have long forgotton) perfectly changed tunings twice by hand mid-performance without missing a beat on a fairly uptempo chord/melody solo. Blew everyone away.
dumb. .
Hey EZ please elaborate.
I thought it was amazing.
Well since I presume you weren't in attendance, your judgements about my appreciation of the artist seem unfounded. What in your opinion is dumb about it?really dumb.
please elaborate.
the absolute coolest retuning trick I have seen was at the Chet Atkins Appreciation Society several years ago when this British jazz guitarist (whose name I have long forgotton) perfectly changed tunings twice by hand mid-performance without missing a beat on a fairly uptempo chord/melody solo. Blew everyone away.
...It might have been Martin Taylor as I think back on it...
What in your opinion is dumb about it?
it took that dork many, many years to get good enough to do something so useless. had he worked on doing something not so stupid, the rest of the world would know who he is. the trick itself obviously had an impact on you, but not so much that you're certain who in fact did it.
also, what did the other non-percussive instruments do at that moment?
... the rest of the world would know who he is...
it took that dork many, many years to get good enough to do something so useless. had he worked on doing something not so stupid, the rest of the world would know who he is. the trick itself obviously had an impact on you, but not so much that you're certain who in fact did it.
also, what did the other non-percussive instruments do at that moment?
Wasn't it Lester Flatt who used to do that on 5-string banjo?Robot retuning 'on the fly' might be a cool thing, but the absolute coolest retuning trick I have seen was at the Chet Atkins Appreciation Society several years ago when this British jazz guitarist (whose name I have long forgotton) perfectly changed tunings twice by hand mid-performance without missing a beat on a fairly uptempo chord/melody solo. Blew everyone away.
I am guessing that Flatt may have been using the special re-tuning machines that allow a pre-set amount of re-tuning. the Randy Lynn Rag is a well known exaple of that technique on banjo. The guy I was referring to did not use re-tuning machines and he was not tuned in an open tuning as I recall, so it was a bit trickier I think.Wasn't it Lester Flatt who used to do that on 5-string banjo?
I am guessing....
that Flatt may....
as I recall.....
I think.....
I don't think you know who or how good Martin Taylor is.
That aside he's an awesome bloke and a phenomenal guitar player that has more musical invention in his smile than all this board has collectively.
Seriously if you met him he would enchant you. Whether it is your musical bag or not doesn't really matter and he was always that good.![]()
Wasn't it Lester Flatt who used to do that on 5-string banjo?
I am guessing that Flatt may have been using the special re-tuning machines that allow a pre-set amount of re-tuning. the Randy Lynn Rag is a well known exaple of that technique on banjo. The guy I was referring to did not use re-tuning machines and he was not tuned in an open tuning as I recall, so it was a bit trickier I think.
Thanks for backing me up Muttley!
It was Earl Scruggs, and they're called Scruggs pegs. Flatt was a guitar player.
It does help that the guy is actually a friend of mine.
He is totly awesome though.