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Notes_Norton

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Everything posted by Notes_Norton

  1. There is more than one right way to go through life. I'm glad you are also having a wonderful life. BTW, I not only seem to like what I do, I love what I do, it's the most fun I can have with my clothes on And to keep on topic, music education helped me get here. Notes ♫
  2. Everybody's Boppin - Lambert Henricks & Ross Like scores of other songs, this is build on the chord progression of "I Got Rhythm" by George & Irish Gershwin. IMO, the scat singing is about as good as its.
  3. Bebop Lives (Boplicity with added lyrics) - Mark Murphy
  4. Bomb? Political Science (Let's Drop The Big One Now) - Randy Newman
  5. "Normal" in the US and most other industrialized countries is working for someone else. Clocking in and clocking out, working regular hours and following the same schedule week after week - after year after year - until they take off the golden handcuffs and retire. By then, the retirees are often too old to travel independently all over the world. In Florida, we targeted the adult community in 1985. So many retirees told us, "Don't wait until you retire to travel, do it while you are young." Mrs. Notes and I are among the small percentage of people who are not normal. We work for nobody but ourselves. No unseen corporate head tells us when to work, when to take a vacation, or anything else. We are not wage-slaves. Responsibilities? I bought a house, cars, even a sailboat, and never missed a payment. We pay our taxes, both local and federal, keep our property up, and live in a way to minimize our impact on climate change as much as we can. We have a good relationship with all the neighbors on our dead-end street, and we all watch out for each other. Mrs. Notes and I practice in the middle of the afternoon when the neighbors are mostly working, and they all know if we choose a bad time for them, they can give us a call, and we'll do it later. After all, we don't punch a clock. Nobody has ever called, but they know they can. My main responsibilities are to both the people who hire us and to the audience. I take these responsibilities seriously. I have never either missed or arrived late for a gig in my life. The people who hire us, the venue, the bartenders, the waiters/waitresses, and everybody else depends on our showing up to make their income for the night. In the early days, I played with a fever of 104. I've since hardened my immune system, and rarely get sick at all. Can you imagine calling bridezilla on the day of the wedding, and saying, "We can't show up today because the sax player is calling in sick." Or how about a club owner with a few hundred people wanting to drink and dance all night? Nope, the show must go on when you are in this business. My mother understood, when my father died, she checked my schedule before deciding what day the funeral would be. She understood my commitment to the gig, and the fact that if I didn't show up, that entertainment purchaser would probably never hire is again, and word of mouth among the others would seriously harm my career. The audience is our other responsibility. They deserve for us to play the best we can, whether there are 10 or 10,000 people present. We need to read the audience, play what they want when they require it, pace them through the gig, and entertain them for what is appropriate for that particular gig. We use our experience and our brains and do everything in our power to give them the best experience for the duration of our gig. In addition, we have a responsibility not to harm the audience, so we do pre-gig sound check with a calibrated SPL meter and make sure the seats closest to the band are not over 85dba (slow response). If they ask us to crank it up, it's their responsibility, not ours. Mrs. Notes and I chose not to have children or pets. To pursue our lifestyle would be unfair to them. Irregular hours, and sometimes working out of town; For example, a 3 week cruise ship gig with options lasted 3 years for us until we decided to give notice and get back on land. We couldn't bring up kids like that, and it would be cruel to a cat or a dog. We've been to 49 US States, most of Canada and down to Latin America, plenty of Caribbean Islands, Europe, Asia, and Africa and have done our best to not be the demanding 'ugly American' but instead an example of friendly good will. Not only that, but we've been invited back to stay in people's homes all over the world. Why? Because we got out of the tourist zones, navigated their transportation systems, and met the people on their own terms as a friendly traveler (not as a demanding tourist). That's a responsibility to our country. So tell me, what responsibilities am I not fulfilling? Am I missing something? I'm of the age where most people retire. I have no plans to retire. If Tony Bennett and Willie Nelson can do it in their advanced years, so can I. Why? Because I really love what I do. I can't think of anything I'd rather do than get up on stage, get into that place where there is no space, no time, no me, and let the music flow through me until the gig ends, and it almost always ends too soon. Well, I can think of one thing, but I can't say that here I wake up in the morning, go to sleep at night, and in between, I do what I want to do and what I love to do. To me, that's the definition of success. I won the life-lottery. And to keep on topic, both my music education and the talent I inherited are the reason why I can do what I do. Insights and incites by Notes ♫
  6. For me, having any hair on top at all is officially a great hair day. Notes ♫
  7. If your sax player has been playing tenor sax or bari for many years, have him lay his hands flat on a table and then see if the fingers on his right hand curve slightly to the right. Notes ♫
  8. Thanks to a few years making a living playing a Fender P-Bass, my left-hand span is just shy of 10 inches. And I haven't played bass full-time since the psychedelic era, when it was hard to get work as a sax player. I could probably stretch farther when I did this 5 hours per night. I started with good-sized hand, the right spans 8.75 inches. Not counting the thumb, from the index to the 'pinky' left hand is 7", right hand is 5.5". I suspect this is from reaching from a minor third to a fifth on the same string of the P-Bass near the nut. I play lead guitar on stage for a number of songs, and that span helps. Funny thing, after all these years, the fingers on my right-hand curve slightly to the right, a function of having to reach for the right-hand keys on the sax. I guess as much as I shape music when I play, my musical tools shaped me. Insights and incites by Notes ♫
  9. When I was young, in a road band, eventually opening for major stars in concert, I was making a lot of money. Motown courted us as their first choice for an all-white band to be released on their family of labels. Unfortunately, the talks broke down over money, (Motown wanted to exploit us), and the band broke up. After that I took a day gig using the electronics I also took in school but found being normal isn't for me so before long, I want back to playing music. Back to regular gigs, back to normal money, back to less glamour, but still playing music, still having fun, still having those gals make eyes at me. I eventually met a female musician who I fell in love with. She is a fantastic singer and plays guitar and synth. She is my lover, bandmate, and my very best friend. 44 years later, we are still having a great time together. I won the love-lottery - it was pure luck. At this point in my life, I don't see me ever making enough money for fancy cars or a house with a pool. I buy brand new minivans to haul my gear and drive them until they are unreliable, usually about 200k miles. The mortgage is paid off, no pool, but a half acre one lot away from a two-mile wide lagoon, east of that a 1/4 mile barrier island, and then the Atlantic Ocean in Florida. It was a good buy, it's worth over 10 times what I paid for it. I know the rule in Florida, the closer to the ocean the higher the percentage of appreciation. Until COVID we travel once a year as close as the US or as far as China and Australia. We've been on every continent but Antarctica. Travel is one of our passions. But I enjoy my life. Instead of saying "I have to go to work today", I say "I GET to go to work today!" I don't have excessive material things, but my life is rich with experience. Mrs. Notes and I prefer the experience over possessions, as long as we're not needy. I enjoy my life, I live it on my own terms, I answer to no one, I prosper by my good decisions, and I hopefully learn by my bad ones. I earn a living doing what I love to do, and look forward to each and ever gig. There are many right ways to go through life, 'one size does not fit all', and this is my way. I think I also won the life-lottery. For someone else, this would be entirely the wrong way. My formal music education, plus what I learned from other musicians, plus what I learned for myself has made me a good enough musician, performer, arranger, MIDI sequencer to make a living doing music and nothing but music. << rewind << When I was in junior high school, I was in the school band, and after school I got into a rock band. We were terrible, everybody was back then. We got hired for a school dance. There I was on stage with my best friends at the time. We were playing the hits of the day to the best of our ability and having the time of our lives. I looked up and that cute girl who never even acknowledged my existence in English class was 'making eyes' at me, and at the end of the night they paid me money. That is when I said, "This is what I want to do for the rest of my life! I'm still doing it and have no plans to retire, it's too much fun to quit. I've played with major stars in huge halls, on cruise ships, in singles bars, in concert, in show clubs, in casinos, for yacht/country club dances, in dive bars, in private clubs for the wealthy, and just about any other place musicians gig. Furthermore, I've played a lot of songs, was treated as a peer by the stars of the day, bedded a lot of women, met a lot of great people, and I've gigged in every state east of the Mississippi and a number of them west. Mrs. Notes and I even played by invitation in the People's Republic of China (we extended that and took a one-month vacation meandering from the Great Wall to exiting from Hong Kong). I know others could do that without formal music education, but the skills I learned plus the talent given to me by my father allowed me to have a life of music, a life of joy, and an escape from being a wage-slave for some mega-corporation. If I had a chance to go back and do it again, I'd do it the same way. Life is the perfect way to spend the time of day. Insights and incites by Notes ♫
  10. This song is a tribute to those who passed before us. We used to do this song on gigs until it went out of favor. Night Shift - Commodores
  11. Music education comes in many forms, from formal schooling, to your buddy musicians showing you things, to completely self-taught (by ear). I am in favor of learning as much as I can in all the different ways you can. They more you know, the more you will be able to do with your instrument(s). That alone doesn't make you a good musician, but a good technician. It teaches you how to use and apply the tools. IMO a good musician is about talent, and a self-taught 3 chord blues person can be a great musician. However, a person with the same amount of talent (musicianship) who has learned how to use and apply those tools can usually make much better music. On the other hand, if the person hasn't got the talent, all the command of the tools in the world won't make great music, just empty notes. You can't have too much education. Insights and incites by Notes ♫
  12. Only if you are a wage slave. I work for myself. As an entertainer, I get applause every 5 minutes or so, and the end of the gig I get people thanking me for a delightful afternoon/evening, and when I am playing the music, I'm in that zone where there is no time, no space, no me; just the music feeling like it's flowing through me instead of from me. Mrs. Notes and I love playing music for an appreciative audience, and although we are not going to get rich, or even wealthy playing music for a living, we paid off the mortgage, we have zero debt, we're having a great time, and we answer to nobody but ourselves. No doormat here, instead mini-star status. We played in larger bands before, but started our duo in 1985, since then, until COVID reared its ugly self, we were never out of work. Now that COVID is fading, we're back at it, we have 14 one-nighter gigs this month. Life is good.
  13. Pretending = make believe. It's Only Make Believe - Conway Twitty
  14. Hard to answer this one. College is very expensive. If he wants to be a teacher, it's a requirement. If he wants to play music for a vocation, the knowledge is important, but not the diploma. Being a pro musician is not easy. I've done it, but I know many more who tried and failed and now do it part-time with a day-job. To be a pro musician, one has to be an entertainer and a musical chameleon. As far as sitting in your home studio and becoming a success on the 'net, I know nothing about that. Although I've been called to do sessions in recording studios, I make my living playing live in front of an audience. If he wants to have a wife and children, tell him the teacher route is probably the best one. I've known a lot of musicians who, working at night, with variable income, ended up divorced with child support payments. Insights and incites by Notes ♫
  15. I feel the same way when a cover song leaves out a great harmony line. That just leaves a gaping hole in the song.
  16. Ran across this looking for a different version to add to a Band-in-a-Box fake disk. This girl can play the trombone with enthusiasm!!! Puttin' On The Ritz - Gunhild Carling
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