R: [Harp-L] music



Sorry Mike, I have to be sure I got your point...It's late here, and I don't
want to talk rubbish. Are you telling us that people don't feel harmonica as
music thing? I mean: or you play blues or people (musicians or not) don't
care about you? I wanna be sure, so after your answer I could tell my small
opinion.

Cheers and all the best from Italy.

Riccardo Grosso
www.myspace.com/riccardogrossoharmonicaplayersinger


-----Messaggio originale-----
Da: harp-l-bounces@xxxxxxxxxx [mailto:harp-l-bounces@xxxxxxxxxx] Per conto
di Mike Fugazzi
Inviato: Tuesday, April 28, 2009 8:34 PM
A: harp-l@xxxxxxxxxx
Oggetto: Re: [Harp-L] music

I've found that the more unique I try to be on harp, the lesser the
response.  I am not a pro musician, and I have things I am good at, but I
don't think of myself as all that.  I do know that my style is different
than most harp players (including those not on the list) for better or for
worse.  I work really hard to avoid cliches at all cost.  

I suppose my style is a mash-up of Clint Hoover, Chris Michalek, Jason
Ricci, John Popper, and Derek Trucks- which doesn't sound all that original,
I suppose.  But, I play harmonica.  I've done the blues thing, I've done a
lot of "rock" playing guitar and slide leads, and I've tried DESPERATELY to
get a country gig.  Truth is, nobody cares about harmonica.  It is very hard
to find any musicians who will even give it a chance.

Basically, I get told that harmonica is for blues and can't be used for
anything else.  IT IS A MUSICAL INSTURMENT!!!  It can play the same scales
and notes as most other insturments...why can't harmonica work in a
non-blues context!?!?!?!  Why so closed minded???  I have litreally heard a
crowd go nuts for a recycled second generation SRV solo and then yawn while
the harmonica player takes a solo that would make most guitar players blush.

I've been in a stretch for about a year now where I've regretted choosing
harmonica over a more "traditional" insturment.  It is very hard to find
work.  The blues guys don't like me because I am young and stretch the
insturment as much as I can.  The rock guys don't dig me because only guitar
can play a rock lead, and country guys don't get it.  I know I am whinning
and you get stop reading whenever you'd like.  ;)

The harp is a foul temptress...the better you get, the less you're welcomed
by others. People don't listen to harmonica, they hear years of preconceived
notions and stereotypes but find it near impossible to actual hear what
you're saying.  I know some of you have ran into this before.  The part that
makes things MOST frustrating for me is hearing someone recycle blues riffs
over a funk or jazz tune, play totally out of the song's context, and then
make a name for themselves while guys like Paul deLay, Carlos Del Junco,
Jason Ricci, Howard Levy, and half this list go unnoticed.

There is safety in playing it safe.  There isn't a enough harmonica love to
play dangerously and not burn some bridges.  It is better than a generation
ago, but those who want harmonica want "harp" and not musicianship.  Tired
recycled blues solos from 60 years ago are what the harp listening audience
tends to get into.  They don't care about overblows, 12 position, etc.

I am going to try and continue to buck the trend, but I'll go through
occassional moments like this where I have a chip on my shoulder.  It
usually goes away in an hour or two.

 
Mike Fugazzi
Vocals/Harmonica
"NiteRail"
Press Kit (Brand New!)

Video

"This year I will be more thoughtful of my fellow man, exert more effort in
each of my endeavors professionally as well as personally. Take love
wherever I find it, and offer it to everyone who will take it. In this
coming year I will seek knowledge from those wiser than me and try to teach
those who wish to learn from me. I love being alive and I will be the best
man I possibly can."
-Duane Allman


"Music should be healing; music should uplift the soul; music should
inspire. There is no better way of getting closer to God, of rising higher
towards the spirit, of attaining spiritual perfection than music, if only it
is rightly understood."
-Hazrat Inayat Khan





________________________________
From: mfugazzi67 <mfugazzi67@xxxxxxxxx>
To: mfugazzi67@xxxxxxxxx
Sent: Tuesday, April 28, 2009 1:11:28 PM
Subject: Fwd:  [Harp-L] music

--- In harp-l-archives@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx, Robert Bonfiglio <bon@...> wrote:

It's time for music to go somewhere else.  It's not that the players
aren't good at what they do; it's that we've heard it all before.  We
know where they are going before they get there.  Everything is so
bloody safe!

  I am not saying I'm any different; classical music is in it's own
rut.  But with harmonica, I hear the same things over and over,
played very well, but is that enough?  You know the question - what
kind of music do you play?  Well, it's like the Stones, but has some
Snoop dog plus Kenny G in there!!!  We all sound like somebody.  Is
that okay?

Harmonically yours,

Robert Bonfiglio
http://www.robertobnfiglio.com


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