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Tag: blues

Paco De Lucia

I’ve stated that I’ll try not to rant, however, this one has been burbling in my belly like a bad batch of raw oysters on a mid week binge at Long Doggers. I don’t like jazz. I hate ‘smooth jazz’. I sometimes enjoy ‘Nola ‘ Jazz. I don’t like and rarely listen to Paco De Lucia , though I do respect him as a great musician who has…..whatever. Flamenco/Jazz fusion is what I consider elevator world music pooped in a bag, lit on fire and left at the doorstep of all who want to feel cuddly because they listen to ‘ethnic’ music and are ‘down’ with what was once the songs of outcasts and is now ‘stuff white people like’. That is an unfair assessment and I really don’t believe that all who listen to jazz are enjoying the tonal equivalent of a flaming bag of crap (except for smooth sexy jazz ). I know jazz and all its bastard fusion variants take a lot of technical ability as well as inborn talent. I get it.  A lot of people love jazz. That’s great. I don’t. I have always loved music in it’s rawest form, especially, Flamenco and Blues. Corey Harris has an entire album dedicated to exploring and juxtaposing delta blues with its Mali origins. I dare not link the two musical genres together as they are mostly disimilar.

Have you ever seen something original that was good, maybe great, then saw a remake and decided to pull the good ‘ol suicide note out of your copy of Purpose Driven Life  and tie the chord to the chandelier after realizing there is no hope mankind. Who gives a damn about global warming when there are Michael Bay movies. This isn’t the battle of generations. I listen to a lot of contemporary new music. Radiohead, Muse, Nuerosis, Interpol, Last of the Shadow Puppets, Libertines, Babyshambles, Mastodon, Melvins, they are all great bands in my opinion. This is a battle about bastardization and taste.

Ultimately I see Paco De Lucia as the father of Flamenco-Jazz Fusion. Every time I hear it I feel like howling  like a slowly dying dog.

Learning to Read Music and Play the Guitar

I have always wanted to play guitar. I never took the time to try very hard. Once as a teenager I bought a blues DVD but all the instruction was in tablature form. When I was in my late teens I listened to one of my fathers LPs, The Best of Carlos Montoya,  and became more and more impressed and appreciative of Spanish guitar, Classical guitar and flamenco in general. From that moment I poured into classical guitar and flamenco. I borrowed CDs from the library. I ordered imports from Europe. My first real gritty flamenco CD was Enrique Morente and Sabicas in their record Nuevo York. I ordered CDs from the Naxos label. One of my favorites being a Nakita Koshkin composition The Princes Coach performed by Artyom Dervoed. At the end of the song Dervoed taps the four fingers of his right hand from the lower bout of his guitar all the way up the neck to the tuners making the sound of a horse galloping away. Oops I digress, back to learning guitar. I ordered a beginners flamenco guitar book, An Introduction to the Flamenco Guitar, by Anita Sheer and Harry Berlow. Unfortunately in this book all the songs are in musical notation. Years have passed and I have decided to mess around with some music theory as tablature seemed so incomplete to me.

I found a great website to help me learn some theory and get me started plucking some songs. The website is www.learnclassicalguitar.com. The instructor supplies PDF files and video showing how the songs are played. He also provides countless instruction via his website as well as a very well written music notation and theory primer sent through email. I started out with Hush Little Baby  and now on lesson #9 which is a simplified Bach.

I have yet to open my beginners flamenco book again but I am very happy with what I have learned thus far.

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