
mshilarious
Banned
I NEVER SAID CLICKS PREVENTED GROOVES!!!!! You brought up grooves, you talk about grooves, but I did not until you forced me!
Let's review:
I have no problem with that. But why is a click a precondition for a groove? That makes no sense.
OK, I still had not used the word groove. At this point, I was talking about dynamics, which is playing loud or soft. Nothing to do with grooves. In this quote, you say a groove is an ebb and a flow, but now you say it isn't a slowing and speeding? That's the same thing! EITHER WAY I DON'T CARE! I DID NOT BRING UP GROOVES!!
But since you had twice brought up grooves, and accused me of not understanding them, I replied:
Right there I stipulate your position about grooves. My comment about dynamics is UNRELATED to grooves. Again, that's loud or soft, not leading or trailing the beat.
To which you respond:
That's not what I meant, although those are the same thing (see your ebb and flow comment). With the click, you cannot slow down for four or eight measures, and then return to tempo without doing the programming upfront. I think that's a waste for a well rehearsed band.
Look, I don't know why I pissed you off by not liking clicks. However, I am not a slacker, nor an idiot. I have been playing for 18 years, and I know what a groove is. You're just going to have to accept that some capable musicians don't like clicks. I can accept the opposite.
First off, I never play for money, only do volunteer FOH, and only record what I want. I've worked on a couple of other people's recordings, but never for pay. I intend to preserve my amateur status.
I am not going to conform my music to a click, unless I am performing a baroque piece where the style of the period demands it.
Right now I have a metronome on my desk. It makes me neither happy nor sad.
Let's review:
You have to play off of it, groove to it, make it part of the song and then remove it before anyone puts more parts down.
I have no problem with that. But why is a click a precondition for a groove? That makes no sense.
You obviously don't understand how a groove is created. The click is something that you ebb and flow against to create the feel. The object is not to be 100% on top of the click all the time.
OK, I still had not used the word groove. At this point, I was talking about dynamics, which is playing loud or soft. Nothing to do with grooves. In this quote, you say a groove is an ebb and a flow, but now you say it isn't a slowing and speeding? That's the same thing! EITHER WAY I DON'T CARE! I DID NOT BRING UP GROOVES!!
But since you had twice brought up grooves, and accused me of not understanding them, I replied:
Good musicians listen to each other and create the groove. Yes, a good drummer can groove to a click, and anticipate the dynamic changes of the song without hearing his bandmates.
Right there I stipulate your position about grooves. My comment about dynamics is UNRELATED to grooves. Again, that's loud or soft, not leading or trailing the beat.
Finally even when you groove to a click, you're still forced back on the 1, at least every couple of measures.
To which you respond:
Farview said:A groove is not from speeding up and slowing down inside of a measure. It comes from changing the relative placement of the notes to the constant.
That's not what I meant, although those are the same thing (see your ebb and flow comment). With the click, you cannot slow down for four or eight measures, and then return to tempo without doing the programming upfront. I think that's a waste for a well rehearsed band.
Look, I don't know why I pissed you off by not liking clicks. However, I am not a slacker, nor an idiot. I have been playing for 18 years, and I know what a groove is. You're just going to have to accept that some capable musicians don't like clicks. I can accept the opposite.
I've been where you are, I used to believe that it sucked the life out of music. Then I was enlightened. The world opened up, and with practice, the click made the tracks stronger, my reputation better, my wallet fuller, and my life better.
First off, I never play for money, only do volunteer FOH, and only record what I want. I've worked on a couple of other people's recordings, but never for pay. I intend to preserve my amateur status.
I am not going to conform my music to a click, unless I am performing a baroque piece where the style of the period demands it.
Right now I have a metronome on my desk. It makes me neither happy nor sad.