Posted on 11/16/2014 7:51:18 AM PST by CharlesOConnell
I saw a woman bassist last year at the Medford Jazz Jubilee and sh was the best bassist I’ve ever heard. She did a solo that sounded like an entire orchestra, hauntingly beautiful.
I forgot her name, but she had a CD out if I can find it.
Ed
My mother had perfect pitch. She could not only name any note that she heard, she could reproduce it with her voice.
She used her talent to directv he church choir, first the junior choir, then the senior choir. An off key note hurt her ears, drove her crazy, but she never said much unless it was me singing or playing the violin.
She couldn’t stand Frank Sinatra’s voice. She said he was always off key and she couldn’t stand falsetto. I’ll never forget her making fun of the old rock and rol song, Sherry. She would sound like she was holding her nose and sing, Sherrry, Sherry baby, and walk over to the radio and turn it off. We just waited until she left the room and turned it back on.
Hey, I resemble that remark!
(Ed, the banjo player!)
I like Adele and Carey Underwood.
Ed
Perfect pitch is the ability to identify a note that is heard. My mother’s piano teacher was fascinated by mother’s ability. The teacher would send my mother into another room and ask her to name a note. My mother got it right every time. Her real name is agent was her voice, though. It ran in the family, her cousin sang with the Metropolitan opera. He was a baritone.
Richard Bona is the best bassist I’ve ever seen live, I saw him with Metheny about ten years ago, he could give Jaco a run for his money. Plus he plays about twenty other instruments and can sing.
Almost unbelieveable, yet it happened.
Personally, I play the stereo. A man’s got to know his limitations.
As a left handed writer the scrunched over doesn't come from any "type" of lefthandness. I learned to write that way because writing normally with your left hand means you smear the pencil lead and/or ink with the edge of your hand if you're writing left to right. So to avoid it we needed to twist our hands up and around.
When your paper is turned to the 2 o’clock position, your hand doesn’t smudge anything because, just like right handed, the hand doesn’t touch the ink. I’m left handed and have never had the smudge problem nor do I have to scrunched or twist my hand over. Hubby is left handed, too and he doesn’t scrunch over either. People may go for years before realizing we’re lefties.
I don’t know why but for some reason I never did the paper turning thing....I think I had a hard time learning how to make my letters and turning the paper would have been a complicating factor. Nice to know though.....though I rarely if ever write long hand anymore.
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