“I love flamingo...
LOL then I bet you’d love flamenco music.
Cheers
Why Don't More People Into Music Reproduction At Home Play Around With Musical Instruments
In my teens I used to play the violin in the school orchestra. I scraped through grade 8 (see what I did there!). It must have shaped my listening preferences as I very much prefer sitting in the middle of the music, and my Bryston sp3 splits the music up round the room very well. I also look for authentic sounds like piano decay and for example listening to Bix Biedebecker picking out a cornet instead of a trumpet. Why, does it make a difference? The players obviously consider the subtle difference important too. The genuineness of the sound is important to me and synthetic music just grates. Pressing a keyboard and different sounds coming out at a press of a button does not appeal. The mix of guitars in Rod Stewart's Mandolin Wind always gets me querying how many guitars are playing in the instrumental sections. On that note (see, I did it again) a big question to you audiophiles ........ How many guitars (or of that genre) are playing on Mandolin Wind? I say 3 but a guitar playing friend said 4. It has been bugging me for 40 years or so! Please put me out of my misery! Again I suppose, most music listeners don't care but to some of us such things are dear to our hearts. |
Great topic. I agree wholeheartedly and happy to see so many comments supportive of your premise. “Now I know those few notes & easily recognize them in any song.” Then you have more talent (ears) than you give yourself credit for. Get yourself a good teacher! **** I mastered the trumpet in 1967-1971 and was in the jazz band in high school **** No offense, but I kinda doubt it (the “mastering” part). **** “I love flamingo...“ **** I love flamingo too 😊: https://youtu.be/lt0GojgWrA8 Btw, a new professional quality saxophone can be had for about $4,000 (and up, of course; much less for used). |
I started playing piano when I was four and played in a small town rock band in my late high school and early college years. I continued playing at home until about age fifty, when I gave it up. The excitement wasn’t there unless I was pushing my boundaries, and I did not have the time or energy to do what I needed to do to improve. I still have the piano, which has been in the family for 124 years. Listening to good music on a good system keeps the passion alive, and needless to say all those years of playing enhances the appreciation. Maybe I’ll go back to it. |
No talent from whomever hands out the musical talent gene--and either you have it or you do not, period. I played several instruments starting in about 2nd grade, but was never that good at any of them. Fast forward to college, and guitar and drums became my choices and I played in several bands, but was the only "non-musician" in any of them. Forward again to the early 1970's when I opened my shop. What a revelation is was to stumble through a song myself and and then listen to a reproduced version. Taught me that box speakers of the day, while fine, were not capable of accurately reproducing the sounds that I played on the actual instruments, even at a basically beginner level. Closest to real were speakers from Magnepan, and they have improved quite a bit since the early 1970's. That's what messing with instruments did for me, and I still have a few around that I mess with now that I am retired. It is relaxing and enjoyable, but of course no one else has to listen! Cheers! |