Musicians On The Forum?
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Category: Progressive Music Lounges
Forum Name: Prog Music Lounge
Forum Description: General progressive music discussions
URL: http://www.progarchives.com/forum/forum_posts.asp?TID=308
Printed Date: November 30 2024 at 05:02 Software Version: Web Wiz Forums 11.01 - http://www.webwizforums.com
Topic: Musicians On The Forum?
Posted By: The Owl
Subject: Musicians On The Forum?
Date Posted: March 10 2004 at 13:18
Just curous, how many of you on this forum are musicians yourselves? Any in bands? Releasing or released CD's? What's your instrument?
Inquiring Owls want to know.
------------- People are puzzled why I don't dig the Stones, well, I listened to the Stones, I tried, and I tried, and I tried, and--I Can't Get No Satisfaction!
www.myspace.com/theowlsmusic
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Replies:
Posted By: Joren
Date Posted: March 10 2004 at 13:27
There's already a topic on that. But it's not your fault that didn't see that, it's on page 5:
http://www.progarchives.com/forum/forum_posts.asp?TID=17&PN=5 - http://www.progarchives.com/forum/forum_posts.asp?TID=17& ;PN=5
I play the saxophone myself (soprano, alto and tenor), but I'm not in a band at this moment. I used to play in a band that played pop and rock covers like Elvis and No Doubt , but we also played some classic rock. Well, it was quite funny actually. And we got free beer when we had to play somewhere .
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Posted By: Guests
Date Posted: March 10 2004 at 15:21
Greetings!My name is Dale Hauskins.I was the Los Angeles Californian Guitarist of the Swiss(Luzern/Weggis)progressive rock band FLAME DREAM(6 albums on Phonogram's Vertigo label produced by John Acock(Steve Hackett/Nick Magnus/Genesis/Steel Eye Span/ELO/Deep Pulple/etc!))Mostly recorded at Patrick Moraz's studio in Geneve,Switzerland 1979-1986 http://www.rire-sous-cape.ch/counting-out-time/flame-dream/f%20lame-dream-index.htm - http://www.rire-sous-cape.ch/counting-out-time/flame-dream/f lame-dream-index.htm http://launch.groups.yahoo.com/group/flamedream/ - http://launch.groups.yahoo.com/group/flamedream/ Currently available for Recording(Tracking)Tours & Gigs... Dale Hauskins:Cel.#(714)444-6951 Email: mailto:[email protected] - [email protected] mailto:[email protected] - [email protected] Reggae Jazz/Rock Hip-Hop Guitarist.CD/Tour credits:Bamiki Bandula(Massive McGregor);Pato Banton(Tour 2001);Bargain Music("The Magic is Over"CD BEATVILLE 2003);Big Cat("California"CD 2004);Einstein Brown(Sapadilla/Pannist;CD/Tours);Dean Butterworth;Phil Chen;Calypso Rose;Martin Campbell(CD/Tour 2001-2002);Santa Davis;Rock Deadrick;Dominators;Mikey Dread;Majek Fashek("Little Patience"CD 2004/Tour 2000-2003);Anna Fisher("Ying Yang"CD 2004);Flame Dream(Swiss progressive rock group,6 CDs Phonogram(Vertigo)Produced by John Acock(Steve Hackett));Fully Fullwood("For All Time"CD 2004/Tours);Russ Henry;Drew Hester;Joe Higgs;Jah Soldiers Band(Tour 2001-2002);Jawge Hughes("Come on Back"CD 2002/Tour 2001);Jesus Wore Dickies("Friends of Jesus"CD SKUNK 2003);Humble Soul("Jah Love" CD/2001); Peter Hunnigale;Winston Hussey;Mike Hyde;KONTIKI("Stand Tall"CD 2003);Kyng Arthur("Mister Master" CD-2000,"Prisoner of The Flesh" CD 2002);Scientist(Hopeton Brown);Tippa Irie(Tours 1999- 2003);Remi Kabaka;Nick Magnus(Steve Hackett/Enid);Carl McGregor(Bamiki Bandula)Musical Sniper(aka Rappa Robert Tour 2001);Johnny Osbourne(Tour 2001-2002);Steve Reid;The Specs;Upstream;Dave Wakeling;April Weller;John Wolf-Brennan;Cece Worell; etc. http://www.gigmasters.com/artists/DaleHauskins - http://www.gigmasters.com/artists/DaleHauskins http://profiles.yahoo.com/dalehauskins - http://profiles.yahoo.com/dalehauskins http://www.capesounds.com/BandDetail.asp?BandID=266 - http://www.capesounds.com/BandDetail.asp?BandID=266 http://counting-out-time.virtua.ch/flame-dream/flame-dream-index.htm - http://counting-out-time.virtua.ch/flame-dream/flame-dream-i ndex.htm http://www.dubmusic.com/html/members.html - http://www.dubmusic.com/html/members.html http://www.ocweekly.com/ink/03/14/feedback-seigal.php - http://www.ocweekly.com/ink/03/14/feedback-seigal.php
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Posted By: Joren
Date Posted: March 10 2004 at 16:26
What the f*** are you trying to do?! Promote yourself by posting the same crap on every topic?!
I don't understand it
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Posted By: Jim Garten
Date Posted: March 11 2004 at 03:46
The Owl wrote:
Just curous, how many of you on this forum are musicians yourselves? Any in bands? Releasing or released CD's? What's your instrument?
Inquiring Owls want to know. |
Hi Owl -
I'm currently learning (at the tender age of 40) Hammond, having obtained a 1971 L122 & Leslie 145 a while ago - I've said this before, but give it a while, then look out for a new tribute band "Uriah Creep"
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Jon Lord 1941 - 2012
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Posted By: Joren
Date Posted: March 11 2004 at 06:26
Cool! Have you played the piano before?
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Posted By: Jim Garten
Date Posted: March 11 2004 at 07:13
Joren, until my 40th birthday last year I had never played a musical instrument at all!!
I got the Hammond in late 2002 as I'd always loved the sound & had wanted one for years; it gathered dust for a few months & my wife got fed up of me just drooling over it, so bought me some lessons as part of my 40th b/day - I loved the lessons from day 1 & these still continue 9 months later.....
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Jon Lord 1941 - 2012
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Posted By: Jim Garten
Date Posted: March 11 2004 at 08:14
Max@
any chance the guest listings by Dale Hauskins could be removed en-masse from this site, they seem to be popping up on threads left right & centre.
I'm a very tolerant chap, but don't think these forums are the right place for self-promotion.
Thanks m'man
Jim
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Jon Lord 1941 - 2012
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Posted By: dude
Date Posted: March 11 2004 at 08:34
i second that motion!!(mind you, his credentials are impressive...SHADDUP PETER AND JIM)
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Posted By: Tauhd Zaïa
Date Posted: March 11 2004 at 08:44
If playing keyboards (mainly Roland synthetizers) means to be a musician YES
I've no time anymore and have just good souvenirs from my young time
I played too in to small bands just to enjoy music, not to be serious : "Crossing Over" and "Alea" : no releasings, no collectors, no bootlegs : nothing to the posterity !!
padadim padadam tchack poum poum (sample of our productions)
------------- The State Of Grace Is Achieved
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Posted By: Vibrationbaby
Date Posted: March 11 2004 at 08:54
This Dale Hauskins guy sounds desperate. I think I posted this on a couple of previous threads. I used to play in a few local jazz bands but the best time I had playing was filling in for a few gigs with a Black Sabbath cover band. I think we played Livin`After Midnight as well. As I said the jazz musicians I played with had little or no interest in bands like Yes or Genesis.
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Posted By: dude
Date Posted: March 11 2004 at 09:28
TAUHD(WITH THE TWO DOTS) AND VIBRATIONBABY:YOU PLAYED IN BANDS,ON STAGE,IN FRONT OF AN AUDIENCE,AS ALI G WOULD SAY....RESPECT!!!!
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Posted By: Joren
Date Posted: March 11 2004 at 09:37
Jim Garten wrote:
Joren, until my 40th birthday last year I had never played a musical instrument at all!!
I got the Hammond in late 2002 as I'd always loved the sound & had wanted one for years; it gathered dust for a few months & my wife got fed up of me just drooling over it, so bought me some lessons as part of my 40th b/day - I loved the lessons from day 1 & these still continue 9 months later..... |
It is always said that learning something the easiest when you're young. But, if you've never tried, you don't know... (maybe you're very musical!) Good luck!
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Posted By: Tauhd Zaïa
Date Posted: March 11 2004 at 09:46
dude wrote:
TAUHD(WITH THE TWO DOTS) AND VIBRATIONBABY:YOU PLAYED IN BANDS,ON STAGE,IN FRONT OF AN AUDIENCE,AS ALI G WOULD SAY....RESPECT!!!! |
A new dot come dude :
If you have listened us at this time maybe your respect should be a little lower
------------- The State Of Grace Is Achieved
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Posted By: Jim Garten
Date Posted: March 11 2004 at 10:36
Joren wrote:
Jim Garten wrote:
Joren, until my 40th birthday last year I had never played a musical instrument at all!! I got the Hammond in late 2002 as I'd always loved the sound & had wanted one for years; it gathered dust for a few months & my wife got fed up of me just drooling over it, so bought me some lessons as part of my 40th b/day - I loved the lessons from day 1 & these still continue 9 months later..... |
It is always said that learning something the easiest when you're young. But, if you've never tried, you don't know... (maybe you're very musical!) Good luck! |
Trust me, it is not easy, but very very enjoyable - I just wish I had done this years ago
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Jon Lord 1941 - 2012
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Posted By: Dan Bobrowski
Date Posted: March 11 2004 at 10:43
Yeah, I started playing guitar pretty late in life. Seems as soon as I begin really making headway, something comes up and my strat sits and collects dust fo a few weeks. Then it's back to square one, rebuilding callus and trying to remember scales and such. Oh, to be young again. Me brother, RobJ, is a musician. If I had a nickel for every time he tried to get me off the sports and into playing music, I'd be $20.00 richer. Of course I spent time in the choir in school and church. I had hair then.
My wife plays, fingerstyle, and sings wonderfully. We play now and then. Every conversation ends in a song reference.
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Posted By: Jim Garten
Date Posted: March 11 2004 at 10:58
danbo wrote:
Yeah, I started playing guitar pretty late in life. Seems as soon as I begin really making headway, something comes up and my strat sits and collects dust fo a few weeks. Then it's back to square one, rebuilding callus and trying to remember scales and such. Oh, to be young again. |
I try to practice for at least an hour a day (doesn't always work out that way, though) - it still feels as if my tutor is trying to break my fingers every week.
THEY DON'T BEND THAT WAY, YOU SADIST!!
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Jon Lord 1941 - 2012
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Posted By: Joren
Date Posted: March 11 2004 at 11:23
I remember, when I was still a little boy (I'm talking about the age of 8 now), I didn't really want to play an instrument , but my parents actually forced me to, and now I am so grateful . The reason for forcing me was that my father had learned to play the clarinet when he was already 15 years old or so and he regretted that so much, that he wanted me to begin earlier.
There are not many things that are more beautiful than making music with friends, in front of an audience!
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Posted By: Dan Bobrowski
Date Posted: March 11 2004 at 11:27
Jim Garten wrote:
danbo wrote:
Yeah, I started playing guitar pretty late in life. Seems as soon as I begin really making headway, something comes up and my strat sits and collects dust fo a few weeks. Then it's back to square one, rebuilding callus and trying to remember scales and such. Oh, to be young again.
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I try to practice for at least an hour a day (doesn't always work out that way, though) - it still feels as if my tutor is trying to break my fingers every week.
THEY DON'T BEND THAT WAY, YOU SADIST!! |
Well, I finally moved to the Big City after a few years in the Sierra Nevada's. I'm thinking about taking a few leasons just to break out of the box. I was trying to practice daily, but packing, unpacking, fixing stuff? It's a full time job.
Pity Me.
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Posted By: Alexander
Date Posted: March 11 2004 at 19:56
I am a drummer of 3 years.
------------- On A Dilemmia Between What I Need & What I Just Want
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Posted By: Dan Bobrowski
Date Posted: March 12 2004 at 00:01
Hey Alex,
What do you call someone who hangs out with musicians?
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A Drummer!!!
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Posted By: Alexander
Date Posted: March 12 2004 at 00:23
danbo wrote:
Hey Alex,
What do you call someone who hangs out with musicians?
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A Drummer!!!
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LOL!!!! I have heard that joke many times, it could be quite irrelevant though!
------------- On A Dilemmia Between What I Need & What I Just Want
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Posted By: Joren
Date Posted: March 12 2004 at 09:05
The drummer of Iron Maiden, Nick McBrain, used to have his own joke corner (only jokes about drummers) on the old Maiden-website
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Posted By: Aztech
Date Posted: March 12 2004 at 17:56
Never heard that joke before, but being a keyboardist myself, having played in bands, it's sometimes quite true.
Don't get me wrong, I love good drummers, its the backbone of many musics/songs. My favorite is Phil Collins.
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Posted By: RobJ
Date Posted: March 15 2004 at 14:04
Yo Danbo! I'm thinking I know someone's nephew who would take you on in a showdown.. your guitar playing against his drumming... winner takes all !
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Posted By: Dan Bobrowski
Date Posted: March 15 2004 at 14:22
Uuuuuuuuuuhh,, I'll pass. It was a funny joke though. I think you told it to me.
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Posted By: RobJ
Date Posted: March 15 2004 at 16:27
hehe.. Maybe so... I used to know lots of drummer jokes, but I don't play with any of them these days.
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Posted By: Glass-Prison
Date Posted: March 15 2004 at 18:54
Well, being a drummer myself, I have fell victim to many drummer jokes.
how is a drum solo like a thunderstorm?
You know it's coming, and you can't do anything to stop it!
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Posted By: Joren
Date Posted: March 16 2004 at 05:04
I thing drum-solo's are very exciting! (if they're done by a good drummer, of course)
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Posted By: Jim Garten
Date Posted: March 16 2004 at 06:23
Ah drum solos....
I think these were actually compulsory by law on all 1970's live albums; they usually occurred on side 3 or 4 of the vinyl albums & enabled members of the audience to attend to the call of nature before the band wound up for the grand finale.
Problem is, I actually enjoy drum solos, so never got chance to go to the loo
I did see a great quote once though - it went along the lines of "...the club was more crowded than a canteen serving hatch full of journalists trying to escape a Ken Hensley keyboard solo...."
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Jon Lord 1941 - 2012
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Posted By: Dan Bobrowski
Date Posted: March 16 2004 at 10:40
WOW, a "GREATEST DRUM SOLO" thread.............
Tank.
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Posted By: Aztech
Date Posted: March 16 2004 at 11:50
The older Genesis style drum solos or the Rush drum solos
Man those were great to see and hear.These guys were creative !
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Posted By: Jim Garten
Date Posted: March 17 2004 at 07:28
Greatest one I've heard so far is very recent - Neil Peart's solo on 'Rush In Rio' is astounding; great combination of acoustic & electronic playing (also, the multi angles on the DVD let you analyse every flam & parradiddle) - the man is one of a select few drummers who could be justifiably called a musician (rather than a percussionist).
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Jon Lord 1941 - 2012
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Posted By: Aztech
Date Posted: March 17 2004 at 10:17
I' d love to play keyboards in a band again,especially a prog / rock band,but its hard to find :
musicians over late 20s
who have their own instruments
that live in a half hour radius from where you live
who don't want to be rock stars and just play to have fun
who play the same type of music you like (ie from prog to rock)
people who have time to play
that their wives/girlfreinds will actually let them out to play
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Posted By: Vibrationbaby
Date Posted: March 17 2004 at 10:44
Niel Peart is one of the most over-rated drummers and Rush is one of the most overated bands. I`m not saying that they`re crap ( I`ve seen them more times than I can count ) but their later stuff after say, Signals, became rather tedious. Personally I think that they should have packed it in years ago. One thing, too, about Niel Peart`s drum solos, is that he has been doing the same bloody solo for about 25 years with only slight variations. OK, I`m going to shut up right now, bring on the hate replies!
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Posted By: Stormcrow
Date Posted: March 17 2004 at 11:02
Vibrationbaby wrote:
Niel Peart is one of the most over-rated drummers and Rush is one of the most overated bands. I`m not saying that they`re crap ( I`ve seen them more times than I can count ) but their later stuff after say, Signals, became rather tedious. Personally I think that they should have packed it in years ago. One thing, too, about Niel Peart`s drum solos, is that he has been doing the same bloody solo for about 25 years with only slight variations. OK, I`m going to shut up right now, bring on the hate replies! |
Hmmmm.....
Well I'm sorry that you don't like Rush or Peart. For myself, I think that their last 2 or 3 studio albums have been just rawk music; not a complete waste of plastic, but nothing special considering. It's possible that they are just getting tired.
However I also love their body of work up to that point and I believe that they are one of the handfull of really important North American prog influences over the last thirty years. They succeeded in keeping the fire burning through the eighties like only a few other bands had the desire or talent to do, bucking the punk, disco and hair/glam trends.
That being said, I don't hate you if you feel differently.
I'd find some other reason to do that. (j/k)
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Posted By: Aztech
Date Posted: March 17 2004 at 13:24
Vibrationbaby :I agree with what you said.
Don't get me wrong I love RUSH and they did alot for the Canadian Prog scene and I have most albums from : 2112 to Presto but I stop at Presto !
Neil peart is one of the great "technical"drummers but I much prefer the artful style of Phil Collins.
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Posted By: Vibrationbaby
Date Posted: March 17 2004 at 15:05
Aztech wrote:
Vibrationbaby :I agree with what you said.
Don't get me wrong I love RUSH and they did alot for the Canadian Prog scene and I have most albums from : 2112 to Presto but I stop at Presto !
Neil peart is one of the great "technical"drummers but I much prefer the artful style of Phil Collins. | I like the early stuff too (Cygnus X-1, La Villa etc.) there are a lot of unsung heroes out there besides the guys like Niel Peart who get all kinds of exposure because they play with a top act. I live in Montréal Canada and we have a local drum legend called Guy Nadon he`s 72 years old and still plays The Montréal International Jazz Festival every year. I`ve been watching this guy play drums since the late seventies and he still blows me away. I`ve also met him a few times and he told me once, "drumming is not about counting, that`s what the bankers are for. Drumming is feeling from the heart." If anyone ever has the chance to see the jazz festival in Montréal and is interested in drumming you HAVE to see Guy Nadon.
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Posted By: Aztech
Date Posted: March 18 2004 at 15:57
I also live in Montreal and have had a chance to see Nadon.
He is good and a local phenomenom he learnt to play drums on tin cans because he couldn't afford a real drum and it actually made him a better drummer because of it.
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Posted By: Dan Bobrowski
Date Posted: March 18 2004 at 16:00
Aztech wrote:
I also live in Montreal and have had a chance to see Nadon.
He is good and a local phenomenom he learnt to play drums on tin cans because he couldn't afford a real drum and it actually made him a better drummer because of it.
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I've got an interview with Bill Bruford, where he talks about learn on boxes until he could afford a drum pad, then a snare, a tom.............
He said today's kids get a full kit before they even learn; 1 tap 2 tap 3 tap 4.
Spoiled brats.
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Posted By: Vibrationbaby
Date Posted: March 19 2004 at 10:18
Spoiled brats and they don`t even want learn to play music the proper way.They just want to learn note for note the latest Metallica guitar or whatever solo without really knowing what the hell they`re doing. A reason why a lot of these guys who played in prog bands in the early seventies were accomplished musicians was because they had some sort of formal musical education. For example Kieth Emerson, Van Leer and Akkerman of Focus, Kerry Minear of Gentle Giant, Rick van der Linden of Ekseption (and later Trace), Rick Wakeman ( Rick is an odd fellow, but I like him! ) I could go on, and on.
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Posted By: arqwave
Date Posted: March 30 2004 at 20:18
i am a drummer, i used to play very serious with my aol band called Prego... but suddenly i had to chose from being a drummer or being an architect... an you know what happend next, but i gather with some friends nowadays to play or to talk about music. i actually being played to date for 12 years, great years (i'm 28). music and architecture has a lot in common, more than you think, ate the end its art.
actually i accept the fact that our youth (hahahaha) new kids don´t care about prog music, jazz and fusion, we sholud encourage them to listen to this great music
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Posted By: Gaston
Date Posted: March 30 2004 at 21:31
I play guitar, bass, keyboard and am an avid songwriter and lyricist. I was in an alt-rock band called Bremmens Barrel in the 90s, but have gone on to a little better of things...
Currently on hiatus from a band called "Climbing Trees" It's jam bandsish but we have alot of prog influence from Floyd and Rush (cause we is Canucks)
Right now I'm working on new material for an upcoming project. It's a cross between Tool, Rush and a little John Scofieldish (if you can believe that) however my bass playing is more Geddy than anything.
I'm using the program SONAR to record and have a Soundblaster audigy platinum sound card that works wonders (drool)
I'll have some of it done by the summer, if y'all want to wait around for it, I can upload some here or over a private vpn.
We're called "Hey Use Guise"
Gaston
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It's the same guy. Great minds think alike.
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Posted By: Certif1ed
Date Posted: April 08 2004 at 18:33
I have played bass in bands for the last 20 years or so. I am classically trained on the piano - did grade 8 then got bored. Also did grade 8 theory and singing - but the singing was what did it for me, as my voice sounds like a goose farting in the fog unless I copy what someone else sounds like. I later got disillusioned with the music biz, took a degree in music and computing and now work as a software tester.
I taught myself guitar to "make it real", but I can only strum a few chords and play a blues scale or 2. Oh - I can play the intro to "Stairway..."
My current music project is with a work colleague. We are producing a kind of electro-rock hybrid with the emphasis on solid, simple structure and cool lyrics. That's been the hard part - writing lyrics that say something AND are cool! I think we've managed it for 3 tracks - hopefully we'll release them soon, but that's quite enough self-promoting!
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