Hi All,
I really like Gonzalo's rhythm playing, and after watching the DC music school video on it (preview here, definitely worthy buying the whole thing
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=D--cQRSaIu4) I have a question: on beats two and four, is he fully muting the strings, i.e. not whipping them fretted and quickly releasing?
Is he the only player to play this way? He says he is a fan of Bireli's rhythm section (Hono, no?) but I haven't heard Hono muting to this level in his DC music school videos.
Vince
I don't know whether I'll ever be an excellent player if I keep practicing, but I'm absolutely sure I won't be if I stop.
Comments
Sound he gets on the 1 and 3. Usually he mutes the 2 and 4.
Chord ring
Regarding Hono, I couldn't agree more — the voicings I've seen him use on the DCMS videos have been enlightening. They are much higher than I would have used, but are really effective. I wonder if his voicings change when he plays without a bassist.
"It's a great feeling to be dealing with material which is better than yourself, that you know you can never live up to."
-- Orson Welles
Also, I love GB's music, and at our local Midwest fest (those years ago), really enjoyed his workshop. I love the bone-dry snap of the 2-4 beat I hear, here and there, among players - and have been trying to achieve it, without completely muting the strings. Before I went away from playing a couple of years ago, what I was doing was what I felt was flawed technique, more of a bass-rounded 1,3 (but full strum, all the strings), and a fully muted 2, 4. I thought it was flawed, believing 2, 4 were always played, if only for a nano-second before choking off. Do I have this right - this is a kind of new-generation "wave" in French manouche, a completely muted 2, 4, esp. in faster tempos?
pas encore, j'erre toujours.
Of course, for a ballad you might want to do something different.