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Joplin vs Slick

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Poll Question: Which do you prefer?
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SteveG View Drop Down
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote SteveG Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 20 2019 at 06:22
Originally posted by Sean Trane Sean Trane wrote:

Originally posted by SteveG SteveG wrote:

Originally posted by Psychedelic Paul Psychedelic Paul wrote:

I could suggest Grace Slick for inclusion in the Prog-Related section of Prog Archives, but she's almost bound to be rejected for inclusion, given my past record of rejected suggestions. Wink
You and Svetonio are similar in that respect.
 
 
 
====================
 
PP/Svettie,
 
I'm responsible for the Airplane being on PA, and it was quite a fight to get them in as proto-prog, and I'm still tryng to get Quicksilver Mess Service in....
 
I did consider make a package of Kantner & Slick as one single entry, and despite the Sci-Fi nature of Blows Against The Empire (which received a Juno for best Sci-fi oeuvre in 1970, first - and only - time for a record) and the other other two's Sci-fi light concept, but the time frame is not right for Proto-prog.... 
So if it does happen, it will have to be in Prog-related
 
 
 
Confused Should we await the coming of a Psychedelic Peter to bolster Paul?
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote moshkito Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 20 2019 at 07:56
Originally posted by tamijo_II tamijo_II wrote:

@moshkito
Not too familiar with the political elements surrounding this, was brought up in a European context, mainly eating European music, only slowly digging into the US scene a decade later. American music was mainly Woodstok - Easy Rider and all the mainstream bullsh*t in my circle early 70's. Zappa and Jazz/Fusion next.

The political elements of the movement was most likely quite different at continental Europe back then as it is also (more or less) today. In general you might say that even the democrats could be considered right wing where i come from, especially in the 70's.                  


What happened in America, was world wide ... and you can see it in a lot of bands through out Europe ... however, the appreciation is kinda spread out all over ... GONG was in it, in France and England, and even got Daevid Allen's passport in trouble and all that ... and Germany was very well aware of the whole thing in America, and it is talked about in many bands ... FZ is not an "accident" in that he is an anti-establishment type of work/person, and that appealed in a lot of places. Hard to say that things were not "heard" in France, since Heldon (for example) had some serious politically minded covers on their albums ... not to mention the titles of the pieces in the albums!

A lot of the others had quite a bit of stuff hidden away, however, that's like saying that SAVAGE ROSE and OSANNA did not have a voice and no one heard them ... the only ones that didn't were the English/British and the PA folks who still think that PG invented the costume thing and the theatrical presentation that had been a part of theater history in Europe for at least 500 years ... but then, English/British history is not a part of Europe, right? LOL

But it was very well known that in many places a lot of the "new music" was being censored and shut down, and East Germany was one of the best known of these although all of the Communist bloc were known to have the same issue ... to the point that you can even hear a SATIRE of it by Guru Guru on their album "Tango Fango" ... but something that is really hard for folks to understand ... Guru Guru ends up saying that "our new God" is not this or that ... it's "rock'n'roll" ... !!!!!! And we ignore that comment and how valuable it was at the time it came out and the wall didn't come down until much later, when all Roger could do was just about make fun of it ... in my book! I would have given more local bands, and many of them the (so called) "krautrock" members, that had been a part of the fight and this "new freedom". Everyone forgot and ignored them!

Both Joplin and Slick were very important to the music scene, and in general to the whole thing ... both were "anti-establishment" to a point within the confines of their art ... and how they expressed themselves ... Slick, in her book, does not look at a lot of these things with an artistic eye, but she is not a dummy and above all, she is well read and intelligent ... or worse ... just another doll on the stage! 

The only sad thing for me, is that we never got a chance to see/hear Joplin again, and really ... she deserved a lot more ... a lot more ... although I am not sure that she was interested in the politics of it all ... for her the music and its feeling was enough of a revolution and no other words were necessary ... but the intensity, is something that most did not have, or were afraid to even try ... only a handful of people could go that far ... and survive! Europe, by comparison, has a history of the arts that go back hundreds of years ... in America, the "art" has been relegated to the bottom, because commercialism, and meme is more important to everyone. 

(I can't speak for Europe on this last point on more recent days!) ... and thus, both Joplin and Slick come off much more important ... whereas Europe with its breaking apart in so many small countries ... had a tendency to hide and make all the "arts" disappear! America got rid of them, instead!
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Psychedelic Paul Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 20 2019 at 08:44
Originally posted by SteveG SteveG wrote:

Originally posted by Sean Trane Sean Trane wrote:

Originally posted by SteveG SteveG wrote:

Originally posted by Psychedelic Paul Psychedelic Paul wrote:

I could suggest Grace Slick for inclusion in the Prog-Related section of Prog Archives, but she's almost bound to be rejected for inclusion, given my past record of rejected suggestions. Wink
You and Svetonio are similar in that respect.
 
 
 
====================
 
PP/Svettie,
 
I'm responsible for the Airplane being on PA, and it was quite a fight to get them in as proto-prog, and I'm still tryng to get Quicksilver Mess Service in....
 
I did consider make a package of Kantner & Slick as one single entry, and despite the Sci-Fi nature of Blows Against The Empire (which received a Juno for best Sci-fi oeuvre in 1970, first - and only - time for a record) and the other other two's Sci-fi light concept, but the time frame is not right for Proto-prog.... 
So if it does happen, it will have to be in Prog-related
 
 
 
Confused Should we await the coming of a Psychedelic Peter to bolster Paul?
 
If we have a psychedelic Mary here too, we could make a threesome. Smile
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote rogerthat Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 20 2019 at 08:56
Originally posted by Atavachron Atavachron wrote:

Joplin was one of a kind--  a homely and spectacularly talented Blues artist who was easily seen as a screechy showgirl.

Ragged soul, striking character, the greatest white blues singer of all time.




Yeah, easy vote for Joplin here.  

Now if she was pitted against Beth Hart, I would have to think because Beth can do Whole Lotta Love better than Robert Plant.
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Psychedelic Paul Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 20 2019 at 09:11
On the subject of ragged soul, I like Maggie Bell and Stone the Crows.
STONE THE CROWS - Freedom Road
 
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote someone_else Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 20 2019 at 09:26
Originally posted by SteveG SteveG wrote:

Originally posted by Psychedelic Paul Psychedelic Paul wrote:

I could suggest Grace Slick for inclusion in the Prog-Related section of Prog Archives, but she's almost bound to be rejected for inclusion, given my past record of rejected suggestions. Wink
You and Svetonio are similar in that respect.


Almost. Svet's volleys of suggestions were not entirely fruitless. Some of them were included.
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote SteveG Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 20 2019 at 09:33
Originally posted by Psychedelic Paul Psychedelic Paul wrote:

Originally posted by SteveG SteveG wrote:

Originally posted by Sean Trane Sean Trane wrote:

Originally posted by SteveG SteveG wrote:

Originally posted by Psychedelic Paul Psychedelic Paul wrote:

I could suggest Grace Slick for inclusion in the Prog-Related section of Prog Archives, but she's almost bound to be rejected for inclusion, given my past record of rejected suggestions. Wink
You and Svetonio are similar in that respect.
 
 
 
====================
 
PP/Svettie,
 
I'm responsible for the Airplane being on PA, and it was quite a fight to get them in as proto-prog, and I'm still tryng to get Quicksilver Mess Service in....
 
I did consider make a package of Kantner & Slick as one single entry, and despite the Sci-Fi nature of Blows Against The Empire (which received a Juno for best Sci-fi oeuvre in 1970, first - and only - time for a record) and the other other two's Sci-fi light concept, but the time frame is not right for Proto-prog.... 
So if it does happen, it will have to be in Prog-related
 
 
 
Confused Should we await the coming of a Psychedelic Peter to bolster Paul?
 
If we have a psychedelic Mary here too, we could make a threesome. Smile
We do. Her name is ompha.
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote SteveG Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 20 2019 at 09:34
Originally posted by someone_else someone_else wrote:

Originally posted by SteveG SteveG wrote:

Originally posted by Psychedelic Paul Psychedelic Paul wrote:

I could suggest Grace Slick for inclusion in the Prog-Related section of Prog Archives, but she's almost bound to be rejected for inclusion, given my past record of rejected suggestions. Wink
You and Svetonio are similar in that respect.


Almost. Svet's volleys of suggestions were not entirely fruitless. Some of them were included.
I agree. Svety was a bit finer at the sharp end.
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote micky Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 20 2019 at 16:38
Originally posted by moshkito moshkito wrote:

Originally posted by micky micky wrote:

...
and ain't getitng it and need some Janis along with a bottle of SC.. a time honored blues tradition. Put on some old school blues. not SRV but real stuff man..  get f**ked up and howl at the moon and break a bottle over some frat boys head and .. you know.. amazingly..  things seem better afterward. The magic of the blues that prog just can't do..

Bullpuckyalamerde!

I was doing the colorful stuff and listening on my headset Nektar, Hawkwind, Amon Duul 2, TFTO, TAAB, APP, and just about all the early HARVEST label stuff when Roy Harper and Kevin Ayers and Capability Brown lit up your imagination like a lot of "blues" stuff never did!

VIVE LA LUMINACION!

I see your Bullpucky and raise you a steaming pile of bullsh*t...

big difference between stoner psych prog.. and the hard blues man.  The first is really just an excuse to smoke sh*t and drop in and tune out.. the other is about the business end of life man. 

 It is all about authenticity man. For the whole proggie mindset about music being intellectual is complete bussh*t..  music can stimulate teh brain.. but what it has done since the damn of time is stimulate the soul.. the emotions man. That is what the blues and its brother.. jazz are all about. 

It works both ways.. overly intellectual music something the Europeans excelled at...has never really gained a foothold here in the States for our musical tradition.. in contrast to theirs is not based on music being an creative outlet for the .. higher classes.. the educated....but an outlet for the sh*t upon and left behinds of life man.  Much as overly intellectual music never really caught here or was ever partciularl well done.. as it aint' in our DNA.. the blues.. jazz.. it is part of our musical DNA.. and though Euros may connect the stylistic dots . it is without any kind of empathy if you will.  It is all about emotion.. feel. and that is not just NOT easy to replicate.. it is damn near impossible.
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote micky Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 20 2019 at 16:52
Originally posted by SteveG SteveG wrote:

Janice was the greatest white female vocalist of all time, which means she was the greatest female vocalist of all time. Luv dem blues!

ohhh... and I love you Steve.. but I wouldn't go quite that far...

suffice to say Janis was hand DOWN the greatest female rock vocalist ever..  they all owed a debt to her.. 

I remember reading an interview with Linda R. who was immensely influenced by her.  Not just to be a singer.. but a star.. 

easier said than done in rock..  something notorisouly testorone driven and male dominated.. 

every female rock singer can trace their success back to her..

but her over Aretha.. Babs...or Billie???  oohhh. let's just call her one of the greatest female vocalists of all times. She's earned it.. and even if idiots around here don't recognize it.. those that count.. do recognize it.

my favorite from her..  perhaps the single greatest female rock vocal performance ever and my favorite from her....   untouchable



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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote The Dark Elf Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 20 2019 at 17:24
Love both for different reasons, but I would have to say Janis Joplin, particularly when all the female vocalists I know (and those that I don't but who have mentioned influences) would state that Janis is perhaps one of the most influential vocalists of all time. 
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote moshkito Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 20 2019 at 20:52
Originally posted by micky micky wrote:

...
It works both ways.. overly intellectual music something the Europeans excelled at...has never really gained a foothold here in the States for our musical tradition.. in contrast to theirs is not based on music being an creative outlet for the .. higher classes.. the educated....but an outlet for the sh*t upon and left behinds of life man. Much as overly intellectual music never really caught here or was ever particularly well done.. as it ain't in our DNA.. the blues.. jazz.. it is part of our musical DNA.. and though Euros may connect the stylistic dots . it is without any kind of empathy if you will.  It is all about emotion.. feel. and that is not just NOT easy to replicate.. it is damn near impossible.

If all it was in the music was intellectual bullsheets, then we would not even consider anything like it ... and it's weird you saying this and comparing both ... because there was so much improvisation, stoned or otherwise, and saying that one is intellectual and the other isn't is bizarre ... and probably completely out of touch ... for many folks in Germany it was about how the sound felt and you matched up to it, and some folks made music out of the noise, and some did Jimi impressions (early Guru Guru), and others just ripped up the stage (Ulli) and then others, went after new sounds that helped illustrate their imagery ... which has absolutely NOTHING to do with intellectual anything, and is the biggest rap on music there is ... even here ... improvisation is not considered "valid" music, because it is missing the "mind", so to speak!

You don't see a connection between a Klaus Kinki and a Damo ... so you don't know the value of "busking", on the street as opposed to in front of the camera. And you think that singing the blues (Janis is a far out example) is what it is all about, not realizing that the same words, or different words are also "blues" to one's inner mind and body in different ways ... 

I'm glad I quit a lot of dope many years ago ... at the very least I do not have what I think are damaged views of what music, and the arts is supposed to be ... like Edgar Allan Poe's "blues" are not his short stories!

Weird!
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Catcher10 Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 20 2019 at 21:43
Grace is more grace-ful....plus she's hotter than the sun!
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Atavachron Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 20 2019 at 22:14
^ Because that's what's important in a singer.

;)



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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote SteveG Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 21 2019 at 04:16
Originally posted by micky micky wrote:

Originally posted by SteveG SteveG wrote:

Janice was the greatest white female vocalist of all time, which means she was the greatest female vocalist of all time. Luv dem blues!

ohhh... and I love you Steve.. but I wouldn't go quite that far...

suffice to say Janis was hand DOWN the greatest female rock vocalist ever..  they all owed a debt to her.. 

I remember reading an interview with Linda R. who was immensely influenced by her.  Not just to be a singer.. but a star.. 

easier said than done in rock..  something notorisouly testorone driven and male dominated.. 

every female rock singer can trace their success back to her..

but her over Aretha.. Babs...or Billie???  oohhh. let's just call her one of the greatest female vocalists of all times. She's earned it.. and even if idiots around here don't recognize it.. those that count.. do recognize it.

my favorite from her..  perhaps the single greatest female rock vocal performance ever and my favorite from her....   untouchable

Yes, a great a song. I caught a bit of the hyperbole fever that runs through the site and I should tempered my opinion. I do think that she was the best female hard rock and blues vox to ever come along. I recall an interview where Stevie Nicks said that she regretted that she never had a chance to do a duet with Janis. I love Stevie but come on. She would have been hopelessly outclassed by Janis! LOL
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote SteveG Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 21 2019 at 04:19
Originally posted by Atavachron Atavachron wrote:

^ Because that's what's important in a singer.

;)
LOL
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote rogerthat Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 21 2019 at 08:01
Originally posted by moshkito moshkito wrote:

Originally posted by micky micky wrote:

...
It works both ways.. overly intellectual music something the Europeans excelled at...has never really gained a foothold here in the States for our musical tradition.. in contrast to theirs is not based on music being an creative outlet for the .. higher classes.. the educated....but an outlet for the sh*t upon and left behinds of life man. Much as overly intellectual music never really caught here or was ever particularly well done.. as it ain't in our DNA.. the blues.. jazz.. it is part of our musical DNA.. and though Euros may connect the stylistic dots . it is without any kind of empathy if you will.  It is all about emotion.. feel. and that is not just NOT easy to replicate.. it is damn near impossible.

If all it was in the music was intellectual bullsheets, then we would not even consider anything like it ... and it's weird you saying this and comparing both ... because there was so much improvisation, stoned or otherwise, and saying that one is intellectual and the other isn't is bizarre ... and probably completely out of touch ... for many folks in Germany it was about how the sound felt and you matched up to it, and some folks made music out of the noise, and some did Jimi impressions (early Guru Guru), and others just ripped up the stage (Ulli) and then others, went after new sounds that helped illustrate their imagery ... which has absolutely NOTHING to do with intellectual anything, and is the biggest rap on music there is ... even here ... improvisation is not considered "valid" music, because it is missing the "mind", so to speak!

You don't see a connection between a Klaus Kinki and a Damo ... so you don't know the value of "busking", on the street as opposed to in front of the camera. And you think that singing the blues (Janis is a far out example) is what it is all about, not realizing that the same words, or different words are also "blues" to one's inner mind and body in different ways ... 

I'm glad I quit a lot of dope many years ago ... at the very least I do not have what I think are damaged views of what music, and the arts is supposed to be ... like Edgar Allan Poe's "blues" are not his short stories!

Weird!

I see micky's point albeit I wouldn't call it intellectual vs emotion.  What drives American genres is licks, not just a 'sound'.  You write a kickass lick and then toy with it, you're good to go. Sometimes you don't need to envision an out of the world structure or go to faraway places; you can just stay rooted and grounded and still kick ass.  Notice that American music is so in the pocket a lot of times.  You need both kinds of music, obviously, to complete the picture.  But just on the topic of licks, I know micky said SRV isn't REAL blues but sample this, amazing machine gun riff.  



How many players from Europe can you think of who could play the blues as well as him?  Leave out Clapton (and FWIW I DON'T think he is as good as SRV) and then you have Gary Moore who is also from the Anglo American universe.  Continental Europe?  Maybe the closest was Uli Roth who was still a hard rock guitarist end of the day and needed all that almighty gain.  

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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote moshkito Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 21 2019 at 08:27
Originally posted by rogerthat rogerthat wrote:

...
How many players from Europe can you think of who could play the blues as well as him?  Leave out Clapton (and FWIW I DON'T think he is as good as SRV) and then you have Gary Moore who is also from the Anglo American universe.  Continental Europe?  Maybe the closest was Uli Roth who was still a hard rock guitarist end of the day and needed all that almighty gain.  

Many ... and I might start with Guru Guru ... Ax is the next best Jimi there is after Terje Rypdal in many of his great moments.

Guitar works, are not a good point for you, because Europe has music history going back 500/600 years and more and this influence makes for things that are very different, whereas American music had its art wiped out completely, and all that was left in the 20th century was black music, that even the movie studios tried to prevent from coming up by sending their "stars" singing the hits to the stores and make it look like they were "the music".

Thus, a lot of American music, might have a closer relationship to "the blues" than it would a lot of other things, and there is nothing wrong with that ... and it wasn't until after the 1950's that more, and different American music started coming forward, and jazz was at its front, something that also started with black music!

These comparisons, like an European can not do SRV or FZ, or an American can not do an Ax or Uli, or John W (AD2), and many others ... is a dead end ... in most cases the music is so different as to hurt the discussion!

THEY ARE BOTH GREAT ... and for the record I DID SEE SRV on a tour with Robert Cray, and he was phenomenal ... there is no 2nd thought about it! So, don't think I do not appreciate American folks ... there are many of them.


Edited by moshkito - November 21 2019 at 08:28
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote rogerthat Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 21 2019 at 08:55
Originally posted by moshkito moshkito wrote:

Originally posted by rogerthat rogerthat wrote:

...
How many players from Europe can you think of who could play the blues as well as him?  Leave out Clapton (and FWIW I DON'T think he is as good as SRV) and then you have Gary Moore who is also from the Anglo American universe.  Continental Europe?  Maybe the closest was Uli Roth who was still a hard rock guitarist end of the day and needed all that almighty gain.  

Many ... and I might start with Guru Guru ... Ax is the next best Jimi there is after Terje Rypdal in many of his great moments.

Guitar works, are not a good point for you, because Europe has music history going back 500/600 years and more and this influence makes for things that are very different, whereas American music had its art wiped out completely, and all that was left in the 20th century was black music, that even the movie studios tried to prevent from coming up by sending their "stars" singing the hits to the stores and make it look like they were "the music".

Thus, a lot of American music, might have a closer relationship to "the blues" than it would a lot of other things, and there is nothing wrong with that ... and it wasn't until after the 1950's that more, and different American music started coming forward, and jazz was at its front, something that also started with black music!

These comparisons, like an European can not do SRV or FZ, or an American can not do an Ax or Uli, or John W (AD2), and many others ... is a dead end ... in most cases the music is so different as to hurt the discussion!

THEY ARE BOTH GREAT ... and for the record I DID SEE SRV on a tour with Robert Cray, and he was phenomenal ... there is no 2nd thought about it! So, don't think I do not appreciate American folks ... there are many of them.

I have heard Ax and I don't hear what you hear.  Don't get me wrong, he is an amazing guitarist, but he doesn't really play the blues.  He's playing around the blues.  Which is nice.  And which is also very European.  

Listen, I am neither American nor European so it's not about making 'strong' or 'weak' points, lol.  Yes, I am aware that European music is much older (as is the music of my own country).  That does not change the fact that blues was and is a very American music and large swathes of the rest of the planet could not escape its influence.   And that kind of blues-based music with lots of licks rather than sophisticated arrangements has its own appeal, is what micky's point was. And I happen to agree.  I love prog dearly, doesn't mean I wouldn't pay to see a great blues guitarist (not that there are many left). 
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Fischman Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 21 2019 at 09:31
Originally posted by rogerthat rogerthat wrote:

Originally posted by moshkito moshkito wrote:

Originally posted by rogerthat rogerthat wrote:

...
How many players from Europe can you think of who could play the blues as well as him?  Leave out Clapton (and FWIW I DON'T think he is as good as SRV) and then you have Gary Moore who is also from the Anglo American universe.  Continental Europe?  Maybe the closest was Uli Roth who was still a hard rock guitarist end of the day and needed all that almighty gain.  

Many ... and I might start with Guru Guru ... Ax is the next best Jimi there is after Terje Rypdal in many of his great moments.

Guitar works, are not a good point for you, because Europe has music history going back 500/600 years and more and this influence makes for things that are very different, whereas American music had its art wiped out completely, and all that was left in the 20th century was black music, that even the movie studios tried to prevent from coming up by sending their "stars" singing the hits to the stores and make it look like they were "the music".

Thus, a lot of American music, might have a closer relationship to "the blues" than it would a lot of other things, and there is nothing wrong with that ... and it wasn't until after the 1950's that more, and different American music started coming forward, and jazz was at its front, something that also started with black music!

These comparisons, like an European can not do SRV or FZ, or an American can not do an Ax or Uli, or John W (AD2), and many others ... is a dead end ... in most cases the music is so different as to hurt the discussion!

THEY ARE BOTH GREAT ... and for the record I DID SEE SRV on a tour with Robert Cray, and he was phenomenal ... there is no 2nd thought about it! So, don't think I do not appreciate American folks ... there are many of them.

I have heard Ax and I don't hear what you hear.  Don't get me wrong, he is an amazing guitarist, but he doesn't really play the blues.  He's playing around the blues.  Which is nice.  And which is also very European.  

Listen, I am neither American nor European so it's not about making 'strong' or 'weak' points, lol.  Yes, I am aware that European music is much older (as is the music of my own country).  That does not change the fact that blues was and is a very American music and large swathes of the rest of the planet could not escape its influence.   And that kind of blues-based music with lots of licks rather than sophisticated arrangements has its own appeal, is what micky's point was. And I happen to agree.  I love prog dearly, doesn't mean I wouldn't pay to see a great blues guitarist (not that there are many left). 

Sometimes I think the time I saw Buddy Guy in '91 was the very best concert I've ever been to.  

Shortly thereafter, accidentally caught Luther "Guitar Junior" Johnson because I just happened to walk into the right bar while on vacation and he just happened to be playing there that night. My wife and I sat at a small roundtop right up front, not 3 meters from the man while he laid out some killer licks.  

I'm sorry I never got to see Son Seals or Michael Burks, who both expired far too soon.  

Most recently (2018), I got to see Ana Popovic at a local club.  While she skews pretty hard to the rock side of things, somewhere between SRV and Hendrix, she still knows how to bend a string!  Fantastic performance.  Interestingly, it seems to be the women who are keeping great blues guitar alive these days.  Ana Popovic, Dana Fuchs, Samantha Fish, Susan Tedeschi, Joanne Shaw Taylor, Debbie Davies, Deborah Coleman, Carolyn Wonderland....
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