What kind of music do you like (2024)?

Herbaceous

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In a couple weeks I’m going to see an amazing lineup of Canadian rock musicians. The bill includes:

Treble Charger
Bif Naked
I Mother Earth
Headstones
The Tea Party

I recently saw I Mother Earth with the Tea Party back in October, but the last time I saw Treble Charger was in 2000 I think. I’ve never seen the other two. Super stoked!
 
the pedalsteel is hard for new musicians to get started on for several reasons
one being money, even a student model will cost at least $13-1400
then you have to have a volume pedal $100-250
a decent tuner $150-250
i use a special amp thats made just for the steel guitar $500.00+
then the bar and picks add another $100.00
and thats just to get started !!!
the blue guitar you see me playing in the picture cost me $ 3800.00 fifteen years ago .
and another thing to consider is that over 90% of the people that try to learn to play simply quit before they can even play one song . by the time they realize how much time and pratice is required , they get frustrated and give up
Pedal steel is my absolute favorite instrument. Back in the day guys like Rusty Young, Al Perkins, Buddy Cage, John David Call, Tom Brumley were incredible players and added so much to the music.
 
I know I answered somewhere in here but can’t find it. The Allman Brothers Band is my favorite band. Except for those awful albums on the Arista label. I’m into jam bands. Grateful Dead. Dead & Company, String Cheese Incident, Wide Spread Panic. Tedeschi Trucks Band, Greensky Bluegrass and lately Billy Strings.
 
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At present I enjoy silence and spoken podcasts. My daughter's earphones broke down, so I get served some fresh 'trap' music in the evenings, which has its bright and ibteresting moments, its not all bad.

On my own I want to listen to some of Dvořak's symphonies, as I don't think I have much insight into them.

Heard a part of his 2nd symphony, while the school year was still on, and it is beautiful.

In the car, being driven from a to b by my b9yfriend, we listen to a radio station with very interesting off mainstream song collections, from different eras and localities. Some 'house', some rock, some pop, some current hits, sone electronic, minimalist ...all sorts...curious to hear.
 
I’m going to see these guys in a couple of weeks:
View: https://youtu.be/B1zCN0YhW1s?si=Do8A9ppOcQCSn9X5


The last time I saw them was at Ozzfest 2001. My mother probably thought that my 17 year old self would eventually grow out of wanting to go to concerts with active mosh pits where men wearing scary masks would scream songs full of swear words.

I am pleased to report that my 40 year old self has done no such thing. Can’t wait!
 
I favor classical and jazz. My favorite classical composer is Mozart because his music is lively and positive for the most part. My favorite jazz man was Oscar Peterson, a Canadian pianist who trained in classical music at the Julliard School and developed a jazz piano technique that was phenomenal. I heard Peterson play in jazz clubs in 4 cities. I became a real fan. Sadly he died several years ago.

I like a lot of other things as well. I play piano a little and I play mostly blues because it is easy with as much jazz as I can muster which is mostly Latin jazz. As a youngster I played drums with a dixieland jazz band which developed in me a love of that style as well. My favorite Mozart composition is Eine Kleine Nachtmusik. I can't list my favorite Peterson recordings because there are so many.

Allow me to tell a little story about Peterson. The pianist in the Dixieland band was a friend and very talented jazz pianist. He once applied for some training by Peterson. Peterson invited him to his home, listened to him play and told him to go back to the hotel and practice so that he could perform "Satin Doll" for him the next day. When he returned the next day, Peterson said "Okay let's hear Satin Doll in the key of B" My friend said, "It's written in C. I can't play it in B." Peterson invited him to come back when he could. For those unfamiliar with music, C would be considered an "easy" key because there are no sharps or flats in the major scale. But hardly anything is written in B. That was a demanding prospective teacher to be sure.
 
Mozart, I love. I'm also a great fan of Beethoven, Brahms, Berlioz and Schubert ( I used to sing his "liede" - songs)
However, my passion for classical music is Renaissance and Baroque. I could listen to it all day and all night. I detest 20th century "classical"music.
Jazz? No particular favourites, but I just love the boogie woogie from the 20s, 30s and 40s!
 
Mozart, I love. I'm also a great fan of Beethoven, Brahms, Berlioz and Schubert ( I used to sing his "liede" - songs)
However, my passion for classical music is Renaissance and Baroque. I could listen to it all day and all night. I detest 20th century "classical"music.
Jazz? No particular favourites, but I just love the boogie woogie from the 20s, 30s and 40s!
Beethoven was the brilliant link between the Classical style of Mozart and the Romantic style of Brahms and others. He was an iconoclast. I play Fur Elise and the Moonlight Sonata (How did he get the idea to write something in C sharp minor?)

I too like the jazz of the 20's and thirties. It was in the 40's that we began to get progressive jazz from people like Oscar Peterson and it was just prior to the 1920's that Dixieland was in its heyday. Good stuff.
 
That was a demanding prospective teacher to be sure.
Lovely. Nice to hear.

I am always impressed how thoroughly people in the audience know about a musician and follow his path ...concerts, recordings...

Indeed, not an easy task at all. B, if you mean B major bears 5 sharps, but if you can think of all the music half a tone lower, from C to B, that's all there is to it and Bob's your uncle, you got it.

But, very few students can do that, and it would mostly be composition or conducting students, I reckon. From what I gather, though, jazz musicians are superior in regard to harmony. or ought to be. Hats off.
 
However, my passion for classical music is Renaissance and Baroque. I could listen to it all day and all night. I detest 20th century "classical"music.
Oh yes Renaissance is very charming...baroque, adorable. As far as keyboard instruments, we get into several interpretative directions, in regard to the contrast between "then" instruments and " now" instruments.

For me, also Beethoven, Brahms, most of the Romantics,Haydn is very nice too, and quite a lot of 20th and 21st century music.
There are some masterpieces, absolutely ,I love those new Universes...of course there are weeds...

I love Opera Arias, not necessarily the plots amd the lengthy development, but what human voices can produce is breathtaking.

Love Shakuhachi, traditional Japanese wind instrument, in the utmost traditional music with it.
 
Beethoven was the brilliant link
Totally, yes, he developed brilliantly.
C sharp minor? Probably for its colouring.

I love Dean Martin, Frank Sinatra, Italian Canzonas of the 40s and 50s.

I adore Elvis Presley.

Jazz, some yes, some no.

From the contemporary popular singers, Rag'n Bone and several really cool male US singers whose names escape me now...
 
I love Opera Arias, not necessarily the plots amd the lengthy development, but what human voices can produce is breathtaking.
We used to go to the English National Opera at least once a month, between 17 - 24 yrs old. I saw many major operas there: Mozart, Verdi, Wagner, Puccini, Rossini, Donizetti. All in English, because that was half the price of Covent Garden.
I sang in a few operas and operettas: Don Giovanni, the Bartered Bride, Il Combattimento di Tancredi e Clorinda, and Offenbach's La Belle Heléne. Not really my thing; I preferred sacred music and things like Schubert Lieder.
 
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