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Originally Posted by Bobby Timmons
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07-20-2024 02:30 PM
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I know haha.
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Take one, the Nearness of You is not quite near enough - but I figured out what's causing the background hiss (it was not my cat as I first thought).
Nearness of You - Mick 01 - Box.com
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Originally Posted by DeArmondX155
It's always beneficial to record yourself. (and share with others)
I see that this is your first post. How long have you been playing the guitar for? How much do you play/practice?
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Originally Posted by Mick-7
For reference, when I record on my digital piano, I plug in direct, turn the piano up all the way, turn the gain on the interface to about 30% and it works perfectly with no noise.
When I had my digital organ, I just had the leslie in the closet and I would turn it up and close the door on it.
When I record my acoustic piano, I stick the mic inside the cab and close the lid lol.Last edited by Bobby Timmons; 07-21-2024 at 02:39 AM.
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Originally Posted by alpop
You are right. I think I should record myself more often. Aside from obvious things I knew I had to work on, there are lots of little things I picked up on that I don't just listen to myself play.
Accumulated, I think I have played for almost a decade, but there is also a 15-year gap there. I was not playing much, then my guitar got stolen, and I did not go back to it for a long time.
I don't think I play enough, but according to my wife, I play the guitar all the time.
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Originally Posted by DeArmondX155
When you perform or record, you can't stop or drop bars or beats or excessively slow down to grab tricky chords. Whereas if you just play for yourself on the couch all of that stuff happens all the time and becomes a habit. Then you end up thinking that you are better than you actually are. This applies to my situation.
One big thing I just learned is that I need to pay more attention to balancing the volume of my right hand attack.
Being retired, I'm lucky that I can almost always put in a couple of hours a day practicing. (sometimes more if I have the energy)
Happy playing and practicing!
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Originally Posted by Mick-7
Would love to hear you take a crack at performing the arrangement that we are studying! (I will hound you on this.) LOL
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Originally Posted by Bobby Timmons
If anyone wants to see what I changed in the arrangement I could share it, I wrote most of it down. In fact I may as well write the whole thing out since I changed about a third of it.
By the way, Christian said in this video (link below) that the BbM9 chord we mentioned earlier (in bar 3 of this arrangement) is a favorite of Kurt Rosenwinkel.
Kurt Rosenwinkel harmony video
Originally Posted by alpop
P.S. - Actually, in reviewing Arnold's arrangement, I'd be willing to play almost all of it as written (but I often play the chords in different positions than he does). I would change the second ending to reflect the original score's harmony (and I don't like the sound of his F/A > Ab7). See below, his score is first, mine is below it.
My last chord could be the D7#9/D notated or Ab13/Ab: 4-x-4-5-6-x. Plus his Coda is too bland.Last edited by Mick-7; 07-21-2024 at 05:51 PM.
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Originally Posted by DeArmondX155
Originally Posted by DeArmondX155
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If you're going direct, you should turn the gain on the interface to about 30% and turn the amp up until it is almost peaking.
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Wow, what a lot of posts. Thanks everyone. I'll read them tomorrow. Just to say that I have a transcription to do for someone then hopefully I'll be back on track
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Originally Posted by Mick-7
?Stream The Nearness Of You by DeArmondX155 | Listen online for free on SoundCloud
Good point: If she starts telling me to play my guitar more, I will know something is up.
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Mick,
I tried playing your second ending and it didn't work for me.
I feel the song needs to resolve to the I chord of the first beat of the second bar of the second ending. I think it's pretty important to establish that spot as the end of the section. (The rest of that second bar is pick up notes to the B section.)
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Originally Posted by alpop
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Originally Posted by alpop
Originally Posted by alpop
I have attached my arrangement (the rhythms I notated may not be accurate)
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Originally Posted by Mick-7
After so many reps I was used to hearing a I-IV-I cadence, and THEN the pickup notes to the B section on the last two beats.
Playing your version again this morning, it is actually quite cool! I like it.
Carry on, sorry for the diversion. In the future I will try to open my mind just a crack and possibly learn something!
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Originally Posted by alpop
A-A-C-F.
So his progression would be: I6 (F6) > IVM7 (BbM7) > VIm7/IIImb6 (F/A) > V7of II (Ab7, the b5 sub for D7)/ IIm7
Mine is: I6 (F6) > II7b9 (G7b9) > IVm6 (Bbm6 = Eb9/Bb) > V7 of II (D7)/
Not radically different but to my ears it flows better. I have to say that this arrangement is the blandest one we've played so far.
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Originally Posted by DeArmondX155
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Originally Posted by alpop
Nearness of You - Mick 02 -Box.com
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Originally Posted by Mick-7
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Here's my version of TNOY. I enjoy working on these, sometimes I just don't have much time outside of work and other home responsibilities, and I can see how slow my progress has been. It really takes some intense focus for me to play these types of arrangements. When friends and family ask me to play a little of whatever I'm working on, in very casual, low-pressure contexts, I try to play some of these pieces. The errors pile up quickly unless I shift into super-serious mode. But I suppose any progress above zero is something.
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Originally Posted by alpop
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Originally Posted by PjzzaPie
You have the arrangement down. So given the time restraints and other responsibilities of life, you got a LOT accomplished.
A musician friend of mine is fond of saying: "An amateur practices until he plays it right, and a pro practices it until he can't play it wrong."
I'm intrigued by your guitar. What are you playing, and also how are you recording?
I am really enjoying learning these pieces as well, and hope you and others will keep at it. I've also been trying to maintain the others we have learned. (Already forgot Time after Time, yikes!)
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Originally Posted by alpop
My guitar is a carbon fiber archtop from Fibertone Guitars based in Slovenia. I wanted something that would not need to be humidified during the dry winters, which is probably when I have the most time to play. And I run it through a Joyo American Sound pedal, my favorite of the amp modeling pedals that I've tried. I record direct into Ableton Live via a Focusrite Scarlett Solo interface. I record direct because my air conditioning is pretty loud and it's always coming on and off. But I also like playing my nylon string guitar when I can.
Floating Biltoft pickup
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