I couldn't find a clip of a surf song played on classical guitar, but I found the reverse.http://blog.wfmu.org/freeform/2006/09/japanese_surf_v.html
dp:
dude
365 days ago
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Shout Bananas!!
320 days ago
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See you kiddies at the Convention!
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showman
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https://losg...
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Happy Tanks-Kicking!!!
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CLAM SHACK guitar
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surf music is amazing
136 days ago
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get reverberated!
86 days ago
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“A Day at the Beach” podcast #237 is TWO HOURS of NEW surf music releases. https://link...
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![]() Joined: Dec 12, 2006 Posts: 2688 Ventura, CA ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
I couldn't find a clip of a surf song played on classical guitar, but I found the reverse.http://blog.wfmu.org/freeform/2006/09/japanese_surf_v.html |
![]() Joined: Feb 26, 2006 Posts: 12159 Seattle ![]() ![]() ![]() |
Forget about the band, what about the right person to arrange it. The 40th is long, changes keys, and is a complicated piece of music if you want to do it right. You could just steal the main melody, but that really defeats the purpose of covering classic music. It is just wrong to rip the song apart. |
![]() Joined: Feb 26, 2006 Posts: 4387 Under the Sun ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
... you might want to avoid the version of "Fur Elise" that's on the Terauchi Takeshi album linked above. —That was excessively violent and completely unnecessary. I loved it. |
![]() Joined: Dec 12, 2006 Posts: 2688 Ventura, CA ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
And which movement? The world isn't ready for a 30 minute surf song. Someone on here did a great version of Ludwig Van's 5th (first movement). I have Troika by Prokofiev from the Lieutenant Kiji Suite on Myspace. I didn't have to change anything. The Tomorrow Men do Claire de Lune, and then there is Pollo del Mar who must have one classical piece on every CD. |
![]() Joined: Feb 27, 2006 Posts: 25695 Anaheim(So.Cal.)U.S.A. ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
Baronics from Canada anyone? somebody we all know played on the 2nd cd. http://www.youtube.com/user/baronics#p/a/u/1/o0zmfE4Cd8M —Jeff(bigtikidude) |
![]() Joined: Feb 26, 2006 Posts: 12159 Seattle ![]() ![]() ![]() |
I have a copy of that album, I've only listened to it a couple times. Not a huge fan. Although you inadvertantly brought up a point I didn't think of. That is the very nearly the full Fur Elise. It is just a short piece for solo piano. Same goes with many etudes and caprices that would work for a modern rock band setup. |
![]() Joined: Feb 26, 2006 Posts: 12159 Seattle ![]() ![]() ![]() |
Sounds good! I really enjoy Prokofiev, I just got his First Violin Concerto. |
![]() Joined: Feb 26, 2006 Posts: 4387 Under the Sun ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
Yeah, there're only a couple of songs on it that are really worth more than one spin. Mostly just "Fur Elise," interestingly enough. "Inadvertently" ... pfft. —That was excessively violent and completely unnecessary. I loved it. |
![]() Joined: Feb 26, 2006 Posts: 5123 San Francisco ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
The Pyronauts recorded a beautiful version of this song... maybe they'll make it available (?). —Buy Endless Drummer @ Bandcamp |
![]() Joined: Dec 12, 2006 Posts: 2688 Ventura, CA ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
Thanks Jake. If you like Prokofiev give Symphony # 5 a listen. |
![]() Joined: Dec 23, 2008 Posts: 3324 Pittsboro, NC ![]() ![]() |
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![]() Joined: Feb 26, 2006 Posts: 12159 Seattle ![]() ![]() ![]() |
This is something that has been debated at great lengths in a thread and in the chat room. In my opinion there just aren't enough pieces to pull this song off. It is played well, but it is a piece that was written for organ and just doesn't work 100% with the setup the Los Twang Marvels have. At 0:27 on this video http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_FXoyr_FyFw , this is one of the reasons this piece is so brilliant. And that is really hard to capture with a band, plus there are quite a few rests in this song that also aren't recreated very well. Perhaps it is just me, but I just don't see the point in covering something where you have to make a choice of keeping 1/8th to 1/4 of a brilliant song. What do you possible throw away when all of it was written by a master composer. And most of all I think modern arrangements miss out on the feeling of the piece and just keep the melody. See 0:27 on this video again and any point of the video where there are four counterpoint pieces going. |
![]() Joined: Dec 23, 2008 Posts: 3324 Pittsboro, NC ![]() ![]() |
@0:27 it's felt as much as it is heard, I've been lucky enough to hear it on one occasion. And yes, it definitely sounds the best on a pipe organ (as it was meant to be played), but kudos to LTM for the imaginative & skilled approach, many bands wouldn't have even tried it. — |
![]() Joined: May 28, 2008 Posts: 333 Los Angeles ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
I don't think people understand the thread or are not reading the actual words in my comment. When I said I thought a surf guitarist would enjoy playing concert or classical guitar I was stating the similarities between playing each genre's pieces- short and instrumental. Catchy hooks and melodies...on the guitar for the guitar written by guitarists. Everyone else seems to be talking about symphony music which has no guitar and nothing to do with practicing left and right fingering technique or which "classical" pieces to bend into a surf tune. I admire all the efforts mentioned above and that they are thought of well by many here, but reading the replies in reverse order one would never guess the topic of this thread until the last page. |
![]() Joined: Feb 26, 2006 Posts: 12159 Seattle ![]() ![]() ![]() |
Indeed! I just wish that they had 2-3 more guitarists on stage for that one. For what happens at 0:27 they could have had a bunch of guitars turn on a delay pedal with high feedback and it could have produced something similar. Also, I got to hear Toccata and Fugue live once. My school has a pipe organ and during a music class we got a demonstration with a bunch of pieces ranging from Bach to Messiaen. They also played one of my favorite Bach pieces "Liebster Jesu, Wir Sind Hier" which is a nice little chorale commonly played on organ. |
![]() Joined: Dec 12, 2006 Posts: 2688 Ventura, CA ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
I think we understand, it is the norm for topics to veer from the original post. Your post implied a similarity between surf and guitar music like that of Sor, Tarrega and the others who wrote music for the guitar as opposed to transcribing piano music. I don't see a similarity though, classical guitar techniques do not translate to surf music where you are using a pick and heavy steel strings. I don't think a study of classical guitar will improve your surf music skills, but it will take you well beyond and would be worthwhile for anyone who loves guitar music. |
![]() Joined: Feb 26, 2006 Posts: 12159 Seattle ![]() ![]() ![]() |
We all read and understood it. Conversation drifts naturally. Especially when we got to the deeper questions presented by Stormtiger. The original topic was a really simple and basic question that doesn't allow for much drifting in the conversation. And classical guitar is classical music. There is a style these songs were written in using the same musical language. Classical music is a blanket term with chamber, orchestral, and symphonic instruments.(Very basic definition). The guitar is a chamber instrument and music composed for it is classical music regardless of the era. |
![]() Joined: May 28, 2008 Posts: 333 Los Angeles ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
I don't know that I would want any professional or teacher or professor to see "classical guitar is classical music ...music composed for it is classical music regardless of the era," and know it was on a surf music site written by a surf musician which I am one of. Be serious now: would anyone here want to stand in front of Parkening or Julian Bream and say, "This is what I think too." www.jetpackband.com Last edited: Oct 12, 2009 21:22:13 |
![]() Joined: Feb 26, 2006 Posts: 12159 Seattle ![]() ![]() ![]() |
We've had a mix-up. When something is played on classical guitar I don't automatically consider that "classical music". Classical Gas being a prime example. It is just a song that was played on a classical guitar. When I said "classical guitar is classical music" I meant composed music in the "classical" means. |
![]() Joined: Feb 02, 2008 Posts: 4559 Not One-Sawn, but Two-Sawn . . . AZ. ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
I think we may be falling into a discussion of semantics. Any time we classify music there is plenty of room for disagreement on where to draw the lines. During the summer of 1969 I spent my summer break learning Classical Gas as close to verbatim as possible when played as a solo guitar piece. Even at the tender age of 14 it was obvious that the chord voicings were considerably different than anything I had experienced before. Classical technique may find you fingering a triad at the 10th fret while playing open strings for bass notes. Classical guitar frequently boils down to squeezing as much as possible from the instrument in spite of its limitations. In a way it becomes a challenge in Industrial Engineering, working to find a process that optimizes resources and leads to greater efficiency. In the late '70s I listened to Joe Pass and did my best to copy his every move. It was a real challenge to keep a bass line going under complex changes but Joe Pass proved it was at least possible. During the mid '80s I spent a lot of time playing standards as solo pieces using classical guitar techniques. The number of pieces I played that were recognized as classical music were very limited but the techniques of classical allowed me to tackle some interesting pieces and make them sound whole and complete on solo guitar. In the '90s I studied Chet Atkins and tried to understand just how he was able to wring so very much out of the guitar. Since 2,000 I've studied Blues and Rock but also spent some time studying the solo playing of Tommy Emmanuel. Classical technique has informed my playing for many years but it was more helpful in some types of music than others. Of all those musical explorations the one that was hardest for me was Blues and Rock because it required a completely different approach (for the most part) than the LH techniques used in classical guitar. I've long since given up on drawing lines. Was Joe Pass a Classical guitarist? I could argue either direction. IMHO Johnny Smith was the quintessential claasical guitarist as far as LH technique is concerned but his RH technique is a very pure form of alternate picking. His RH technique can sound astoundingly close to fingerstyle even though it uses only a pick. If I were to debate whether or not Smith is a classical guitarist I'd have a harder time arguing against that conclusion. BTW, one of his triumphs at NBC was mastering a Classical piece in a very short time for a live on-air concert. How about Chet or Tommy Emmanuel? Chet did some classical playing during his concerts but even his more Country oriented material used at least some Classical technique. Tommy, IMHO, is in a class by himself. He's the only player I've ever seen that impressed me the same way that Chet did in concert. So maybe we should look at it from another direction. How would any of these players come across playing Surf? I know that Joe Pass had a great sense of humor about himself and I doubt that he'd look down his nose at Surf music. I can only imagine what would happen but my guess is that he'd have played the hell out of Surf. He certainly had the chops. Johnny Smith wrote Walk, don't Run", but it was more of a Classical piece than anything else crossing over into Jazz in some ways. I would have a hard time imagining Johnny Smith playing through a wall of reverb but I promise you that he'd stop the show if he were to play Surf. He could play three octave arppegios faster than most of us could listen to them. I guess my point is this; no one genre of music is "better" than another. If someone can play what they want and express themselves musically without being frustrated by limitations then they are successful in their playing. However, certain types of training, such as Classical guitar, are very useful in preparing someone to play a lot of different types of music. Scales, chords, arppegios, exercises and technique studies are preparatory activities much like a chef preparing ingredients to be used in a complex recipe. The art comes in blending the ingredients together into a pleasing, well presented meal. The greater the skill of the chef in preparing the ingredients that more likely he is to succeed in making a fine meal. Likewise, a guitarist that builds the fundmental skills will probably find it easier to express himself musically but, and it's a big but, if that player lacks the artistic talent to create good music the results will be mechanical and not musical. —The artist formerly known as: Synchro When Surf Guitar is outlawed only outlaws will play Surf Guitar. |