TheVat Posted November 20 Posted November 20 Stirring performance, lovely performer, and I loved the top comment which concerns coughing during a performance. (clicking on comments should show it first) I can play Asturias on piano, but on acoustic guitar it sounds so. much. better.
exchemist Posted December 11 Posted December 11 Continuing the guitar theme, time for a bit more Bach: Prelude from 1st Cello Suite played on the guitar by the lovely and talented Julia Lange: What I like about this performance is that, unlike some guitar performers of this piece on YouTube (there are quite a few) she doesn't try to make it all about herself by messing about with the tempo and inserting dynamic contrasts all the time, as if it were a Romantic piece. It's Baroque. She allows Bach's pulse (always very strong) to carry it forward and lets his cascades of notes do the expressive work, with just a little inflexion here and there to stress key moments. Very classy interpretation, I thought. And she looks as if she in a sort of calm and peaceful ecstasy throughout, which is rather delightful. 1
TheVat Posted December 12 Posted December 12 Brava. I like musicians who get to that sort of communion with the piece and invite you in (vs showoffy "look at me play, Ma!" stuff). If you like "ecstasy throughout," also may be seen in many BB King solos.
Ken Fabian Posted December 12 Posted December 12 (edited) I've been revisiting some of the music I liked when (much) younger. Not much of it still has appeal. Even going back over Beatles albums there were a lot that just don't do it for me, but still leaving some that really, really do. The hard rock likes of Led Zep, Deep Purple, I liked then, not much now. One band - at least some of their catalogue - has managed to impress me more than I expected going back around; I was a fan of Yes in 70's and 80's and much taken back then with Steve Howe's guitar and Rick Wakemen's keyboards especially. Still am but this time around I am floored by Chris Squire's bass playing. Not necessarily has wide appeal but since people seem to be including linked examples. (People who make videos of live performances suck at showing what anyone apart from lead singer and lead guitar are doing but this one segue's into Squire's signature solo piece - him showing off, and a bit indulgently; the basslines across so many songs are awesome, better than that imo, as often the lead instrument as not but so few videos show what he is doing (and how any video people who were AT a Yes concert failed to pay notice to him has me scratching my head)) - "Long Distance Runaround/The Fish" - Edited December 12 by Ken Fabian
StringJunky Posted 18 hours ago Posted 18 hours ago (edited) A new view angle from the twin towers tragedy, a chap just uploaded after 23 years. It's quite clear the collapse starts at the sites of impact and not a detonation at the bottom by a secret government cabal. Edited 18 hours ago by StringJunky
Genady Posted 17 hours ago Posted 17 hours ago 1 hour ago, StringJunky said: the collapse starts at the sites of impact It sure did. I watched it from about 500 m.
StringJunky Posted 15 hours ago Posted 15 hours ago (edited) 1 hour ago, Genady said: It sure did. I watched it from about 500 m. Wow! I was doing a landscaping job at a house and the lady owner came running out and said a plane had crashed into the WTC, then we saw the second one. We knew then it was an attack. So sad and shocking to see and hear those people crashing down onto the foyer roof from inside cameras before they collapsed. You were standing 500m from the start of the mess we see today in the Middle East. Edited 15 hours ago by StringJunky
Genady Posted 14 hours ago Posted 14 hours ago 29 minutes ago, StringJunky said: Wow! I was doing a landscaping job at a house and the lady owner came running out and said a plane had crashed into the WTC, then we saw the second one. We knew then it was an attack. So sad and shocking to see and hear those people crashing down onto the foyer roof from inside cameras before they collapsed. You were standing 500m from the start of the mess we see today in the Middle East. When the first plane crashed, I was straight under the WTC. 500m was how far I walked away before the structures collapsed.
StringJunky Posted 14 hours ago Posted 14 hours ago 34 minutes ago, Genady said: When the first plane crashed, I was straight under the WTC. 500m was how far I walked away before the structures collapsed. You had a close shave.
TheVat Posted 9 hours ago Posted 9 hours ago On 12/11/2024 at 11:53 PM, Ken Fabian said: I was a fan of Yes in 70's and 80's and much taken back then with Steve Howe's guitar and Rick Wakemen's keyboards especially. Still am but this time around I am floored by Chris Squire's bass playing. I underappreciated Yes back then, only really discovering them decades later. And Squire is amazing on bass, as in Roundabout. And, as you mention, much of Zeppelin or Deep Purple hasn't really stuck with me, though I occasionally find myself enjoying their instrumental pieces more now, like "Lazy" or "Kashmir." 9 hours ago, StringJunky said: A new view angle from the twin towers tragedy, a chap just uploaded after 23 years. It's quite clear the collapse starts at the sites of impact and not a detonation at the bottom by a secret government cabal. I was on the grassy knoll in Dallas, in 1963. Just some weeds and burger wrappers. Funny how those weird theories get so much traction. There was footage I saw on the news that evening, 9-11-2001, where it was pretty clear where the pancaking started. 1
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