Jump to content

Notes_Norton

Members
  • Posts

    6,645
  • Joined

  • Last visited

  • Days Won

    6

Everything posted by Notes_Norton

  1. ^^ I'll answer that ^^ It Ain't Me Babe – Bob Dylan But I'll tell you who to blame it on... Blame It On The Bossa Nova - Eydie Gorme
  2. OK, I looked it up. I guess my idea wasn't so original. But mine has a drum beat at the end. And does his have the exact same distribution of various rests? I don't think so. Just a slacker IMO. I was never into John Cage, when introduced to some of his 'legit' works it didn't turn me on, so I never looked for anything else by him. Gig got rained out tonight. I kept the deposit, and they will reschedule. I'll apply it to the new date. It's summer so it pays to be flexible. The rainy season usually starts mid-May and runs to the end of October, but it started early this year. We're doing more outdoor gigs this year than we did before COVID, so I suspect there will be more of it. Back on topic. On tomorrow's gig, I'm going to do my best to quote other songs during my imrov solos. Send lawyers, guns and money. Notes ♫
  3. I think I'll copyright a song that consists of 32 bars of rests for every instrument in a full orchestra, followed by one sixteenth note on a snare drum. The rests will consist of whole rests, down to 64th notes, plain and dotted, and also include various triplet rests. Then when anyone records a song with a bit of silence in it. I'll sue. I don't care how long, I'll cry infringement. Notes ♫
  4. How did you get away with it? The auto censor nuked it when I posted it. I should cry favoritism, get a lawyer and sue the bot. I need Protection (use a ******?). I'll send a French Letter via certified mail. I'll put on a Raincoat and march on the streets during inclement weather. The bot is trying to bust my Balloon. I can't Rubber stamp this action. The bot is tying to Sock it to me. How can I practice Safe Sax now?
  5. Feel Like Breaking Up Somebody's Home – Etta James The rhythm section is super-tight. The drummer set a groove, with the 2s and 4s way behind the beat. Etta could have talked this song and it would have sounded good. But she was on top of her game when she recorded it. Nice job.
  6. Think of all the licks that we use as the vocabulary of our music. They evolve through time, the boogie woogie piano part of the swing jazz era became a bass line in the early rock days, and so on. There are thousands more like this. We all learn from what came before, and we are all influenced by what we hear, so some of it is going to come out. In both jazz and folk music, there is a tradition of quoting a few bars of another song in a new song. It's homage, not plagiarism. If you steal the melody, or the lyrics, that's an obvious violation. But the rhythm? Or the chord progression? Come on. Samples are different. They are using someone else's performance. I'm not sure if the paying for them is right. After all, a visual artist can make a collage of different images to create a new work of art, and he/she doesn't have to pay royalties. Perhaps the musicians should be paid for the session work? I don't know. The original intent of copyright law was to protect the income of the original artist by being stolen and used by another. There is no way Sheeran's song is hurting the income of the heirs of Marvin Gaye's estate. Funny thing about copyright. If someone creates a cure for cancer, he patents it, and gets fewer than 20 years of protection. Yet a 25-year-old person can write a song, live to 100, and his/her copyright is good for 75 years after he/she dies. The cure for cancer gets 20 years of protection, and the theoretical song above gets 150 years. That just doesn't seem right to me. But this is all just my opinion. Insights and incites by Notes ♫
  7. I saw an ad for burial plots, and thought to myself, this is the last thing I need.
  8. Would I get away with Rubber for the *****? That censored word took me by surprise. I thought that was the respected name for that piece of safety wearable. OK, I'll hit "Submit" and we'll see if the word rubber is banned. Craig mentioned bowling alley's. We did the Cereal Bowl in Battle Creek, Michigan. It was the biggest bowling alley lounge I ever gigged in. Before DJs took over a big chunk of our business, there were so many live music venues, anyone who was halfway decent could get a gig. And there were plenty of girls who were attracted to musicians. We called them "band-aids" with no disrespect intended. Beautiful girls, and I thank them all for the fun we had together. Notes ♫
  9. Bang A Gong (Get It On in Europe) – T Rex
  10. I think Robin Thicke's Blurred Lines was a bad decision, and this, a good one. The purpose of copyright is to protect the income of the original artist. In no way did either of these songs hurt the income of Marvin Gaye's estate. I knew Marvin a little when I was with Motown, and I don't think he would have sued. So there is a moral, don't be influenced by anything Marvin's heirs can sue you for. Chord progressions "No" Background rhythms "No" Melody "Yes" Lyrics "Yes" It's really simple. Insights and incites by Notes ♫
  11. On the road, gigging at a different college town's singles bar, two weeks in the same place (sometimes four)--after the free-love revolution, and before AIDS put a ***** on it. That was as close to heaven as any generation of young folks ever got.
  12. Thanks for sharing. Looks like you had fun. Hawaii is the only US state I haven't visited yet. Alaska was 49. Any tips for someone who hasn't been there?
  13. R.I.P. Gordon The Wreck Of The Edmund Fitzgerald – Gordon Lightfoot
  14. No emotional distress, no offense, everything is fine, Kenny. I took it as humor. On the road we did a month in Albany, GA, where I dated a hooker for the month. She took a liking to me, and if she didn't have a client, she took me home with her. Most of her clients were high salaried businessmen. That was before AIDS, when anything anyone could have caught was curable. I didn't catch anything. In Ft. Lauderdale, FL, I dated an “exotic dancer”. She made a lot of money and worked hard for it. I learned a lot about working girls in my days on the road, and have a huge respect for them. A lot of people who don't mind their own business say these people are 'selling their bodies'. That may be so, but if working 40 hours per week for some faceless corporation isn't also selling your body, I don't know what is. As you can tell, I'm a live-and-let-live kind of guy. As long as you aren't harming someone else, it's OK with me. Notes ♫
  15. Ah, remembering my years gigging at the nudist camp. They came in all shapes, sizes, and ages.
  16. I have a few jokes about unemployed people but it doesn't matter, none of them work.
  17. Did you hear about the guy who got hit in the head with a can of soda? He was lucky it was a soft drink.
  18. The dancers treated us like younger brothers, and there was no socializing with us or the customers after hours. The place could lose their license. I realized the girls were hard-working, and some of them took it as an art form. Unlike the t___y bars of today, they took their time undressing. Like musicians, most of them were making a living doing what they liked to do. One of the girls was billed with the tag line "with a million dollar wardrobe" but she didn't keep it on all that long. All in all, for a boy of 18 years old, it was pretty much a dream job. Notes ♫
  19. I may be an adult entertainer, but I reserve the right to act immature
  20. It's All Over Now – Rolling Stones Back in the day, when we did this song, we would sometimes introduce it as: "She used to kiss me on the lips, but it's all over now."
×
×
  • Create New...