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SurfGuitar101 Forums » Surf Musician »

Permalink Saxaphone in your band?

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I think different mouthpieces allow more or less air to get the "overblown" sound. It is a cool sound.

<a href="klzzwxh:0000">http://www.theprofessorslounge.com</a>

JakeDobner

zak
Oh yeah, Jake...your secret's out:

image

Well done sir. Kudos for using the 2nd gayest picture we have.

whats your first gayest?

The Tremblors on Facebook!

The Tremblors on MySpace!

This post has been removed by the author.

Last edited: Sep 23, 2009 17:50:23

DennistheMenace
"And yes I can CONFIRM that TUNNEL VISION MENTALITY they have, they think they are GOD, and the rest of us suck since we do play surf, rock, etc, and not their Brand of "NOODLY JAZZ" that you fall asleep listening to on the Weather Channel after drinking too much coffee.........

Yeah, I tried to get into jazz while in high school and college, but aside
from Weather Report and some Spyro Gyra (in small doses)--fusion, you
see--I couldn't figure it out. Seemed too high-brow and elitist for my
tastes. (Steely Dan are an exception--they are the empitome of cool.)

As for the Weather Channel, yeah, I almost want to go outside and go
over a nest of baby bunnies with my lawnmower every time I hear that
music.

HOWEVER, that said, a couple years back they were using (and I'm not
making this up) "Gut Feeling/Slap Your Mammy" by DEVO as the
background music. I mean, how cool is that??? Cool

Vince

Is this something you can share with the rest of us, Amazing Larry?!?

Ok, now for my 2 cents:

Saxophone--if used tastefully--can really add a lot to a song--I'm thinking
along the lines of "Bombora!" by The Original Surfaris. Also, the stuff
the Fathoms have done has been pretty good, too.

But what I REALLY hate is when the sax is used as a rhythm instrument,
_a la_ "Miserlou" by Dick Dale (a great song in its own right, it goes
without saying, but the sax playing along with the drum and bass is,
well, cheesey; the sax solo, on the other hand, is wonderful).

Finally, although it is definitely NOT surf, "Rebel Rouser" by Duane Eddy
is a CLASSIC example of how guitar and saxophone can merge
beautifully.

Vince

Is this something you can share with the rest of us, Amazing Larry?!?

This post has been removed by the author.

Last edited: Sep 23, 2009 17:50:27

zak
My vote goes to these two - it's a tie!

This one...

image

And the one of us out of suits that you posted already. We should have worn suits to that thing, it was a radio thing.

Heh heh. . . I take it you're not a fan of Steely Dan, eh? Razz Laughing
As for Weather Report and Spyro Gyra, I haven't listened to them in
years. Can just bring myself to that level of masochism any more.

Vince

zak
That's not jazz...that's

image

mournblade
Steely Dan are an exception--they are the empitome of cool

image

Is this something you can share with the rest of us, Amazing Larry?!?

This post has been removed by the author.

Last edited: Sep 23, 2009 17:50:32

zak
Aside from 60s organ trio stuff and some early Kenny Burrell stuff, I am not really interested in bebop or anything that came after.

I dig bop, but have more affinity for the late 50s era of Miles, Coltrane, Bill Evans, etc. Love Burrell, Wes, Joe Pass, Pat Martino, etc. After that I love the 60s Impulse stuff and the beginning of the "free" era (Coleman, Ayler, etc.) Lastly, I dig late 60s Electric Miles & Mahavishnu Orchestra. ("He wrote this...." Wink )
Not a big fan pre-war jazz though (except for Charlie Christian, Django, etc).

Ryan
The Secret Samurai Website
The Secret Samurai on Facebook

). Correct me if I'm wrong but I get the impression that the sax was recorded at fairly moderate volume. I think that the best sax tones are coaxed out of the instrument with maximum volume - that wild screechy tone you get when the sax player is competing with amplified instruments (think Original Surfaris).
.

Good ear Zak. We did record that in my home office so the volume was fairly low, on top of that the sax was in need of repair and was very difficult to play. Gary went out and bought a new sax shortly after and it is a big improvement. I'm trying to stay away from the typical surf sax, the wailing and screechy stuff, but maybe I should post our slowed down Pipeline which has some down and dirty lamentations.

This post has been removed by the author.

Last edited: Sep 23, 2009 17:50:49

zak
As for fusion - I always thought that it's a musical style with absolutely no redeeming value.

You really think that Jeff Beck's 'Blow by Blow' album, 70's Herbie Hancock, Bitches Brew era Miles, anything by the Mahavishnu Orchestra, and Billy Cobham 'Spectrum' has "no redeeming value"?

I mean, for the most part I think hip-hop sucks ass but to write off an entire genre completely seems extreme. (I think I could even find some microscopic redeeming value in hip-hop if I dug deep) Confused

www.apollo4.com

This post has been removed by the author.

Last edited: Sep 23, 2009 17:55:30

Charlie Christian, Wes Montgomery, Django-- those are cool players who did jazz and make it interesting and exciting. I can't stand "fusion" and the more modern jazz thing. Early stuff still had some raw emotion-- the later stuff is too "noodly" and pointless for my liking.

http://www.facebook.com/?sk=lf#!/rockinrio.delrosa

http://www.facebook.com/?sk=lf#!/TheHighTides

http://www.facebook.com/?sk=lf#!/pages/The-Blue-Demons

zak
My vote goes to these two - it's a tie!

image

image

What happens on tour stays on tour. Wink

mournblade
Saxophone--if used tastefully--can really add a lot to a song--I'm thinking along the lines of "Bombora!" by The Original Surfaris. Also, the stuff the Fathoms have done has been pretty good, too.

Good calls. And, I've always liked the Eliminators' sax work, too. Not sure if it's always the same guy.

I'm also not sure if tastefulness is the key to all good sax work. Sometimes complete lack of taste works best. The one thing you can't do without is good tone, if that's the word. If you need to rasp or honk, do it thoroughly and beautifully.

But what I REALLY hate is when the sax is used as a rhythm instrument, a la "Miserlou" by Dick Dale ...

Er, isn't that a trumpet? We may not be thinking of the same recording, because the case I'm thinking of is a lead. Not my favorite, either, though I've had to back down on my claim that trumpets are always a negative factor in surf music. It turned out there was more exception than rule. For one thing, I think Dick Dale himself has gotten better on the trumpet - or more sensible about what he does and when he does it. Something.

Anyway, I'm not that bothered by the sax as a rhythm instrument, though I agree that it's not likely to be to current taste. It's more of a strategy for not wasting your sax player's time when there's no sax lead. Playing several different instruments is the obvious alternative. Sax and guitar or keyboards. This is probably why so many people who are primarily vocalists have this love-hate relationship with the tambourine or the harmonica. Actually, I think any surf band can use a good incidental percussionist. If you listen closely you can hear all kinds of odd stuff in the corners of old surf recordings. I love claves and cowbells or wood rasps. The Centurians throw in a slide whistle every once in a while.

And having mentioned that, what do you think about the sax work with the Centurians or, further afield, the Rumblers?

Anyone can pretty easily name two or three fairly dreadful cases of sax in early surf music, but it would be really unfair. Some of these were very early recordings under bad conditions. Others were cases of ambitious but inexperienced players going beyond their abilities at the time. There are plenty of the same for guitar and drums, too, of course. Amazing how many times the actual song that holds these false steps is something really special or important that has been lovingly preserved and improved upon ever since. Like Misirlou!

Tuck
Good calls. And, I've always liked the Eliminators' sax work, too. Not sure if it's always the same guy.

The one & only Bill Swanson since 1993.

I like The Eliminators' Bone Cruncher video. I Also like Eddie And The Showmen's "We Are The Young" I'm very pro-sax.I love the rhythm sax of The Sonics.(I know not surf)

tahitijack
Do you have a sax player in your band?

Yeah, and it is me. But only part time.

Most of the time I play the guitar, but on maybe 20 % of our live set I play tenor sax. That gives us some variety in the show, people tend to like it. Espesially when there are no other surf bands with sax in Finland to my knowledge.

It's go-go, not cry-cry.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9C-ojWHp1ek

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