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----- Original Message ----- From: "Chris Muir" <cbm@well.com> To: <Loopers-Delight@loopers-delight.com> Sent: Wednesday, June 21, 2006 8:19 PM Subject: RE: Sloppyness (was: Re: Hiromi) > At 1:33 PM -0400 6/21/06, Dean, Hal wrote: >>Call me a nitpicker on semantics, but I'd say the Hendrix Experience was >>LOOSE, not sloppy. There's a world of difference. A loose outfit may be >>communicating on a higher plane, while sloppiness is often a sign of the >>opposite - inattention to the moment. > > I think that sloppy and/or loose playing can also come from trying >things > that are on the edge of your ability to pull off. I really enjoy this. > > One of my favorite guitarists is Phil Miller (Matching Mole, Hatfield >and > the North, National Health, etc.). In many of his solos he is reaching >for > _that_ note or phrase, and barely makes it, which can come across as a > little sloppy. I would rather listen to someone like Phill Miller >grasping > for thing, than most other guitarists playing it safe. > > --- > > As an aside to this already off-topic thread, one of my complaints with > something like a >Berklee / GIT education is that they drill the >mistakes > right out of you. A side effect of this is >that people are left with >only > their imagination to rely on, as they rarely have need to recover >from > mistakes, which is often some of the most inventive playing, IMO. come on !! this is the same cliché argument again, would you say the same thing from any university ? creativity is also needed for scientists, businessmen, etc... the schools have nothing to do with that: creativity is a path to work on for anybody. and btw they recover from mistakes as much often as anyone, simply they recover more elegantly so you dont even hear it as a mistake. Claude GIT grad 1990 with honors :-)