Author Topic: Missing Sections  (Read 947 times)

jalevinemd

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Missing Sections
« on: September 25, 2016, 06:32:56 AM »
Please Disregard.  :)
« Last Edit: September 25, 2016, 06:34:39 AM by jalevinemd »

David Houck

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Re: Missing Sections
« Reply #1 on: September 25, 2016, 11:19:50 AM »
Disregarding the missing sections, here's what's appearing for me.  It's an amazingly beautiful day here in the North Carolina mountains.  There is a breeze blowing through the trees, the sun is shining, there are white clouds floating in the sky.

I've been practicing a lot the last few months (well, a lot for me); and while progress for me is always slow, there is a perceptible change in tone and technique, and in such things as chordal movement and voicing, and a little better overall understanding of the fingerboard landscape.  And perhaps more importantly, there is a perceptible change in the relationship between the player and the music played.  The divide between the two is slowly falling away.

We can carry a lot of baggage with us when we sit down to practice.  But practice offers the opportunity to let go.  When we can let go of all the ideas we have about who it is that picks up the instrument, when we can let go of all our expectations and goals about what practice can bring in the future, when we can let go of seeing the music and the instrument as separate from our very selves, then we have the opportunity, the invitation, to just be music.

Some of you have probably experienced this playing in groups, where you are so locked into the playing that "you" disappear, and there's just playing.

But practicing is more intimate.  When we cringe at a missed note, there is separation; there is someone passing judgement.  But when we can see that "someone" is passing judgement, when we see that separation as it arises, right there in the middle of practice, then we have the opportunity, the invitation, to be understanding and compassionate, to gently let go, to let the separation fall away.

This too is, for me, part of practice.  For when we pay attention, practicing music can teach us a lot about who we really are as human beings.

For those willing to inquire deeply within, sitting down with the instrument can be transformative.  Perhaps that's why it's called an Alembic.

  :)

Enjoy your day.

edwardofhuncote

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Re: Missing Sections
« Reply #2 on: September 25, 2016, 11:48:52 AM »
Excellent post Dave.  :)

It's a little overcast just a couple hours north of you in Virginia, but I felt the first cool breezes of Autumn blow through the valley this morning too.

After gigging pretty hard Friday and Saturday nights, I'm doing a little quiet reflection today. This morning I replaced the batteries in both my Alembics, and was reminded again of what a work of art they are inside too. Then I sat on the porch with a cup of my favorite coffee and my favorite Martin guitar.

It's good to slow down and be in a moment instead of planning the next ones.

ed_zeppelin

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Re: Missing Sections
« Reply #3 on: September 25, 2016, 12:23:10 PM »
If you're referring to "I Left My Heart In San Francisco," it may seem like there are missing sections, but the song is just one verse repeated over and over until Tony cues the band for the "big finale."


If you mean Woody Guthrie's "This Land Is Your Land," you're right, there are missing sections. Pete Seeger and Arlo always included them in concert. (Fun fact: "New York island" is singular, not plural. Thats because the original line was "Staten Island.")


If you meant "The Star Spangled Banner," it may seem like there are missing sections, but that's because there are four verses (sixteen if counted as quatrains) that only one person in fourteen million knows. If you're at a football or hockey game and the band launches into the second verse, the guy lustily belting out; "... what is that which the breeze, o'er the towering steep, as it fitfully blows, half conceals, half discloses?" is the one, and if those lyrics are utterly unfamiliar to you, you ain't. Join the club. (Fun fact: after the 1936 Olympics, when it was rumored that Adolph had the band play the complete song just to make the American athletes mumble and stare at their shoes during the three "mystery verses," it became customary just to play the first verse, though it still happens from time to time.)


In "Breakfast of Champions," Kurt Vonnegut called it "gibberish sprinkled with question marks," mostly because he was of a generation that favored "America The Beautiful" as the national anthem. He may have had a good point, since most people know all the lyrics, it doesn't begin and end with questions and at least the melody wasn't plagiarized from a naughty English drinking song about getting drunk and chasing women. (Perhaps they peppered them with questions as they tried to escape?)


Of course, I should invoke the married man's mantra here: "I COULD BE WRONG." You might have been referring to something else entirely by "missing sections," and I just couldn't see a perfectly good pre-derailed thread go to waste.


I really hope you weren't talking about a medical problem, though.

David Houck

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Re: Missing Sections
« Reply #4 on: September 25, 2016, 12:34:51 PM »
Greg; that front has now arrived and it's pouring rain here, with the welcome corresponding drop in temperature, and the beautiful sounds of rain falling in the forest and upon the metal roof.  Starting in on another cup of coffee.

Forest; on the other hand, Jonathan may have just simply been advising us to please disregard the missing sections.  :)

elwoodblue

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Re: Missing Sections
« Reply #5 on: September 25, 2016, 01:00:48 PM »
We can carry a lot of baggage with us when we sit down to practice.  But practice offers the opportunity to let go.


 I think of that as low impedance playing/practicing.


We have a metal roof too...do you ever get squirrels harvesting pine cones at 6:00 am?








David Houck

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Re: Missing Sections
« Reply #6 on: September 25, 2016, 01:31:47 PM »
Great use of the term low impedance!

My roof is steep, and since it became metal the squirrels have stayed off of it.   However, it was installed over the old shingle roof using slats; so what I do get is the popping sounds from expansion and contraction as the sun heats it, and then passing clouds let it cool.  Random percussion throughout the day.

elwoodblue

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Re: Missing Sections
« Reply #7 on: September 25, 2016, 02:07:11 PM »
Ours is pretty flat, a good target I guess. They drop them from the cone clusters 30 ft above.
About one every two seconds for a couple hours...in the morning :o
 The red squirrels have cute beeps...like teeny car alarms.


David Houck

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Re: Missing Sections
« Reply #8 on: September 25, 2016, 02:09:09 PM »

  :)

rv_bass

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Re: Missing Sections
« Reply #9 on: September 25, 2016, 02:49:33 PM »
Thank you, Dave, very nice!  It's like Emerson's transparent eyeball, only this time with music rather than nature.  Remember, the next note you play determines whether the previous one was "missed".  Be the music!  :)


flpete1uw

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Re: Missing Sections
« Reply #10 on: September 25, 2016, 03:33:54 PM »
Beautiful day here in N. Florida slight breeze watching the sailboats from a local Ale house.
Reminds me sometimes when practicing losing all sense of anything. Just following my emotions at the moment. Playing randomness to sometimes intensity. Someone will walk in in and ask, Wow what was that?
My usual replay is, just nonsense. :)
Great to be alive

David Houck

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Re: Missing Sections
« Reply #11 on: September 25, 2016, 03:40:20 PM »
Rob; yes, nature, and really all of our daily lives.  Driving in traffic, for instance, has long been a great teacher for me.

Pete; yes, it is amazing to be alive.

ed_zeppelin

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Re: Missing Sections
« Reply #12 on: September 25, 2016, 03:52:43 PM »
Greg; that front has now arrived and it's pouring rain here, with the welcome corresponding drop in temperature, and the beautiful sounds of rain falling in the forest and upon the metal roof.  Starting in on another cup of coffee.

Forest; on the other hand, Jonathan may have just simply been advising us to please disregard the missing sections.  :)
I thought that's what I was doing, while disregarding the rules of grammar as well. It's Sunday morning, so I'm just disregarding a whole lot of stuff today.

I blame the fact that I married a Scot at least a century ago, and ever since the common tongue that separates us has taken on a "fluidity" from our futile efforts to translate English into English, usually to no avail. I live in a world defined by degrees of vagueness, where the only exercise I get anymore is leaping to erroneous conclusions. When I see an opening like "missing sections" I'm compelled to blurt the first thing even remotely relevant, out of reflex.

It's from saying something to the Foghorn - in English - only to be greeted by the same quizzical expression a Golden Retriever has for French fries. Every time. Then she bellows something in reply - In English, I think - and it's my turn to cock my head, shrug and return the look. I've learned over time that the literal meanings aren't important, since the translation inevitably comes down to; "you're wrong" and "It's right in front o' ye, ye cloth-headed eejit!"

I think it's a wise guy to be ruled ... I mean, a wise rule to be guided by. It's obvious which sections I'm missing, or at least have become seriously loose. It's screws or marbles, take your pick. I'd ask her, but ... Well, y'know.


edwardofhuncote

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Re: Missing Sections
« Reply #13 on: September 25, 2016, 04:11:40 PM »
I think Jonathan accidentally clicked on the section headers and collapsed them. I've done it before too, and wondered what happened... bust or not, this thread has taken a fun turn today.  :D

cozmik_cowboy

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Re: Missing Sections
« Reply #14 on: September 26, 2016, 04:40:43 AM »
*Fun - well, not so fun, really - fact about the "missing" parts of TSSB: There was unit of British troops at Fort McHenry composed of run-away slaves who were promised freedom if they fought for the British; one of the verses celebrates their slaughter for having the gall to take up arms against whites.  Lovely song, eh?

*wonderful post, Dave.

* I really miss my Gramma's metal roof every time it rains.......

*Here in north central IL, it feels like the heat-and-humidity torture may have finally broken last night.  Dropped from the 80s to the 60s with nice strong beezes yesterday evening - right after I finished sweating over the brew kettle for 2 batches......


Peter
(edited for spelling)
« Last Edit: September 26, 2016, 09:39:06 AM by cozmik_cowboy »
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