RIP: BB
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RIP: BB
89 isn't bad though, I'll be happy to make to 70!
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Re: RIP: BB
Yeah that's one of these cases were you read the obituaries and think: Huh?! I had no idea the guy was still alive.
Re: RIP: BB
That’s because blues musicians look like they are at least 65 years old at birth.TomViolenz wrote:Yeah that's one of these cases were you read the obituaries and think: Huh?! I had no idea the guy was still alive.
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Re: RIP: BB
He played 221 shows a year for 50 years.
At 69 he was diagnosed with diabetes, he lived for 20 more years with a disease that kills people in their 40's.
He also played hundreds of shows during that time. From 10 to 14 after his mother died he lived for four years without parents, as a sharecropper.
He had 15 children with 15 different women, and actually paid the child support on that.
The world of musicians is now filled with effete pricks arguing about which macbook weighs less and which Rompler sounds best out of the box.
How can people possibly think there's any soul left in their music when they use devices that hand them the scale? that a 6 year old can master?
At 69 he was diagnosed with diabetes, he lived for 20 more years with a disease that kills people in their 40's.
He also played hundreds of shows during that time. From 10 to 14 after his mother died he lived for four years without parents, as a sharecropper.
He had 15 children with 15 different women, and actually paid the child support on that.
The world of musicians is now filled with effete pricks arguing about which macbook weighs less and which Rompler sounds best out of the box.
How can people possibly think there's any soul left in their music when they use devices that hand them the scale? that a 6 year old can master?
Re: RIP: BB
RIP
http://soundcloud.com/aislingbeing
Live, Reason, Moog sub phatty, Moog sub 37, Ozone 6, guitars, Pedals, proper ergonomic sitting posture, french pressed coffee with a pinch of cardamon.
Live, Reason, Moog sub phatty, Moog sub 37, Ozone 6, guitars, Pedals, proper ergonomic sitting posture, french pressed coffee with a pinch of cardamon.
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Re: RIP: BB
ouchMachinesworking wrote: The world of musicians is now filled with effete pricks arguing about which macbook weighs less
@bb, miss you already
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Re: RIP: BB
Everything isn't about you though, really my comment wasn't directed your way. Though I'm one to be shocked that weight is ever a concern having lugged around a Marshall stack and being a fan of the notoriously heavy Gibson Les Paul, I simply don't get why people are so worried about two or three pounds of weight? If you aren't doing the work, then you aren't doing the work, that's what I'm getting at. Music is a hobby for most of us, but it's a lot closer to having a cabinet making hobby than a video game hobby, and I think there is this section of the Live user base that thinks of making music like a video gamer, IE everything should be easy, and I shouldn't have to do any real work.starving student wrote:ouchMachinesworking wrote: The world of musicians is now filled with effete pricks arguing about which macbook weighs less
@bb, miss you already
BB epitomizes an era when musicians worked hard, we need more musicians like him, that's my point.
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Re: RIP: BB
Actually I take that back. More gigs for me.Machinesworking wrote:BB epitomizes an era when musicians worked hard, we need more musicians. like him, that's my point.
Unsound Designer
Re: RIP: BB
I wonder if sasha, digweed, or another dj/producer had passed if this thread would be at page 5 by now.
http://soundcloud.com/aislingbeing
Live, Reason, Moog sub phatty, Moog sub 37, Ozone 6, guitars, Pedals, proper ergonomic sitting posture, french pressed coffee with a pinch of cardamon.
Live, Reason, Moog sub phatty, Moog sub 37, Ozone 6, guitars, Pedals, proper ergonomic sitting posture, french pressed coffee with a pinch of cardamon.
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Re: RIP: BB
aisling wrote:I wonder if sasha, digweed, or another dj/producer had passed if this thread would be at page 5 by now.
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Re: RIP: BB
Mad respect for B.B. and for all he's accomplished, but that dissing of electronique musicians as somehow lesser musicians is non-sensical. It sounds to me like my grandpa, who worked in a steel mill, arguing that the guys in accounting don't really work, because they sit on their ass all day and don't even break a sweat.
The times change, musical instruments change, the way we express ourselfs and our thoughts and emotion changes, music changes. B.B. would not have known how to make computer music well, just as he didn't know how to write symphonies or perform on a symphonic orchestra level.
He was a great of his time and style. Others will be great in our time it its styles. Saying one has less worth than the other is, as I said, non-sensical, and it sounds especially stupid voiced on the forums of a music software company.
The times change, musical instruments change, the way we express ourselfs and our thoughts and emotion changes, music changes. B.B. would not have known how to make computer music well, just as he didn't know how to write symphonies or perform on a symphonic orchestra level.
He was a great of his time and style. Others will be great in our time it its styles. Saying one has less worth than the other is, as I said, non-sensical, and it sounds especially stupid voiced on the forums of a music software company.
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Re: RIP: BB
Well, them being much younger, chances are their death would have been of a more unnatural variety and thus much more entertaining to chat aboutaisling wrote:I wonder if sasha, digweed, or another dj/producer had passed if this thread would be at page 5 by now.
Besides, threads get locked here as a matter of course nowadays, if they elicit more than one post per day
Re: RIP: BB
I think this is very true. I would add that though BB didn't change (add didn't really need to) many embrace change as part of a larger struggle to encourage creativity.TomViolenz wrote: The times change, musical instruments change, the way we express ourselves and our thoughts and emotion changes, music changes. B.B. would not have known how to make computer music well, just as he didn't know how to write symphonies or perform on a symphonic orchestra level.
Having listened to BB as far back as the late 60s would just like to say: RIP BB you were a class act.
Michael Morgan | pearl hour project
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Intel i7-2600 @3.4GHz; 16G Ram; Win 10-64; Live 9.5
RME-Fireface UFX; Machine II; APC40; MPK25;
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Re: RIP: BB
Wait, how many scales was BB known for mastering?
I'm sure more seasoned jazz and classical players could say the same thing about most rock musicians, not that I'm saying that about BB...
Anyway I don't have a problem participating in sharing/selling stuff related to the Scale effect I guess probably in the same way a drug dealer is not responsible for the customer to buy and use those drugs.
What a sad but true analogy...
Though BBs history is more interesting than the music, wasn't he more of a watered down caricature of a blues musician? I mean can you really feel the blues when he's all shiny up on stage with Lucy MCVII compared to the dusty old broke guy on an acoustic singing abiut hiw he doesn't have jack shit? And how far could he take his solos or was it really all about that one bend?
I'm sure more seasoned jazz and classical players could say the same thing about most rock musicians, not that I'm saying that about BB...
Anyway I don't have a problem participating in sharing/selling stuff related to the Scale effect I guess probably in the same way a drug dealer is not responsible for the customer to buy and use those drugs.
What a sad but true analogy...
Though BBs history is more interesting than the music, wasn't he more of a watered down caricature of a blues musician? I mean can you really feel the blues when he's all shiny up on stage with Lucy MCVII compared to the dusty old broke guy on an acoustic singing abiut hiw he doesn't have jack shit? And how far could he take his solos or was it really all about that one bend?
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Re: RIP: BB
You completely missed the point. To clear it up for you hopefully:TomViolenz wrote:Mad respect for B.B. and for all he's accomplished, but that dissing of electronique musicians as somehow lesser musicians is non-sensical. It sounds to me like my grandpa, who worked in a steel mill, arguing that the guys in accounting don't really work, because they sit on their ass all day and don't even break a sweat.
The times change, musical instruments change, the way we express ourselfs and our thoughts and emotion changes, music changes. B.B. would not have known how to make computer music well, just as he didn't know how to write symphonies or perform on a symphonic orchestra level.
He was a great of his time and style. Others will be great in our time it its styles. Saying one has less worth than the other is, as I said, non-sensical, and it sounds especially stupid voiced on the forums of a music software company.
BB King as a musician was very hard working, that can't be denied. Kraftwerk for an example, or OMD or any of the early electronic music pioneers spent months and sometimes years practicing and getting a sound that was theirs, their own voice. That, takes work. Plenty of electronic musicians today sound "good", but exactly the same, no voice, no work put into anything more than sounding professional.
That people want the lightest laptop or use scale tools to make sure they play only in key are just examples of this, there are plenty of great accountants, but there are far more mediocre accountants these days. I'm not into Rush, or Tiesto, but I can tell you who I respect more.