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Bye from Iain
Iain said that he really enjoyed the exchange of info and ideas and asked me
to pass his best regards to Keith, Andy, Jim and Dave, etc but said he unfortunately couldn't continue in the group under the present circumstances. I'm now getting some very interesting info from Iain by email & I'm sure he won't mind me passing a bit on... "I met the saxophone players from the Duke Ellington Orchestra when we recorded a concert in the UK not long before his death. I attended the rehearsals, and found them fascinating." "The saxophones sat in a circle, and each player had his eye on Johnny Hodges, first alto. They followed his level and vibrato, so that five saxophones sounded like one saxophone with five voices:-) It was magic:-)))))." "I talked at length with Harry Carney, (baritone sax/clnt.) He had played with Ellington from the very early days - more than 40 years. He said "Where is there to go when you have played in the Famous Duke Ellington Orchestra?" I could see what he meant." Good stuff! I think it's a shame that he's gone from this NG :-( Mike |
Bye from Iain
On Wed, 3 Nov 2004 21:04:20 -0000, "Mike Gilmour"
wrote: Iain said that he really enjoyed the exchange of info and ideas and asked me to pass his best regards to Keith, Andy, Jim and Dave, etc but said he unfortunately couldn't continue in the group under the present circumstances. It was a shame that he found that he could not receive homage for his magnificence from all the members - I wonder what he's used to at home? Obviously he knows *everything* about domestic music reproduction, and should *never* be challenged on his pontifications - just look at the wonderful list of record credits and famous names he trots out on every possible occasion.................... I'm now getting some very interesting info from Iain by email & I'm sure he won't mind me passing a bit on... "I met the saxophone players from the Duke Ellington Orchestra when we recorded a concert in the UK not long before his death. I attended the rehearsals, and found them fascinating." "The saxophones sat in a circle, and each player had his eye on Johnny Hodges, first alto. They followed his level and vibrato, so that five saxophones sounded like one saxophone with five voices:-) It was magic:-)))))." "I talked at length with Harry Carney, (baritone sax/clnt.) He had played with Ellington from the very early days - more than 40 years. He said "Where is there to go when you have played in the Famous Duke Ellington Orchestra?" I could see what he meant." Good stuff! I think it's a shame that he's gone from this NG :-( Agreed, but the above stuff, while certainly interesting, belongs in a music newsgroup, not an audio newsgroup. -- Stewart Pinkerton | Music is Art - Audio is Engineering |
Bye from Iain
On Wed, 03 Nov 2004 21:04:20 +0000, Mike Gilmour wrote:
Iain said that he really enjoyed the exchange of info and ideas and asked me to pass his best regards to Keith, Andy, Jim and Dave, etc but said he unfortunately couldn't continue in the group under the present circumstances. I'm now getting some very interesting info from Iain by email & I'm sure he won't mind me passing a bit on... "I met the saxophone players from the Duke Ellington Orchestra when we recorded a concert in the UK not long before his death. I attended the rehearsals, and found them fascinating." "The saxophones sat in a circle, and each player had his eye on Johnny Hodges, first alto. They followed his level and vibrato, so that five saxophones sounded like one saxophone with five voices:-) It was magic:-)))))." "I talked at length with Harry Carney, (baritone sax/clnt.) He had played with Ellington from the very early days - more than 40 years. He said "Where is there to go when you have played in the Famous Duke Ellington Orchestra?" I could see what he meant." Good stuff! I think it's a shame that he's gone from this NG :-( Am I allowed to say "me too" on here? ;-) In spite of Stewart's apparent insistance that "audio" and "music" are two different subjects I'm sure he would agree that they can be closely related. Audio equipment is fascinating in its own right, but most people listen to other things apart from test tones. Music is also fascinating, but as we (mostly) can't fit a symphony orchestra (or even an acoustic folk duo in some cases!) into our living rooms the audio equipment comes in handy. IMHO we can only lose valuable insight into the music side of things by losing Iain's comments. That can only be bad for those interested in recreating the atmosphere of live performances. Stewart, please don't try to convert this ng into another rec.audio.high-end. There is room here for material that would be considered OT on there. There is nothing in the ng title to suggest that we are looking for perfect sound - the word "audio" leaves a lot of space for those who like to listen to single-ended OC81 transistors into 75ohm 2.5" speakers! -- Mick (no M$ software on here... :-) ) Web: http://www.nascom.info |
Bye from Iain
In article ,
mick wrote: In spite of Stewart's apparent insistance that "audio" and "music" are two different subjects I'm sure he would agree that they can be closely related. Audio equipment is fascinating in its own right, but most people listen to other things apart from test tones. Music is also fascinating, but as we (mostly) can't fit a symphony orchestra (or even an acoustic folk duo in some cases!) into our living rooms the audio equipment comes in handy. Of course they have some relationship, but discussion of technical matters would probably be considered OT in a music group - of which there are thousands covering every possible taste. It would be akin to discussing driving on a group about car design or maintenance. Of course, some want to take over the group and mould it to their own rather narrow view of audio. And I do mean narrow. Such views are best served by their own specialist group - one of which they created, but now ignore. Strange, that. The only logical conclusion is that they have some evangelical need to bring their message to everyone. I enjoyed Iain's posts, but then I've got an interest in old methods of working in 'my industry'. Where I'd disagree with him was his insistence that those methods had much relevance to today's practice - except for a niche market. Which of course if he's filling he's likely to defend... -- *Born free...Taxed to death. Dave Plowman London SW To e-mail, change noise into sound. |
Bye from Iain
"Stewart Pinkerton" wrote in message ... On Wed, 3 Nov 2004 21:04:20 -0000, "Mike Gilmour" wrote: Iain said that he really enjoyed the exchange of info and ideas and asked me to pass his best regards to Keith, Andy, Jim and Dave, etc but said he unfortunately couldn't continue in the group under the present circumstances. It was a shame that he found that he could not receive homage for his magnificence from all the members - I wonder what he's used to at home? Obviously he knows *everything* about domestic music reproduction, and should *never* be challenged on his pontifications - just look at the wonderful list of record credits and famous names he trots out on every possible occasion.................... Personally I think that says more about you than it does about Iain, however being who - you wouldn't see it anyway. I'm now getting some very interesting info from Iain by email & I'm sure he won't mind me passing a bit on... "I met the saxophone players from the Duke Ellington Orchestra when we recorded a concert in the UK not long before his death. I attended the rehearsals, and found them fascinating." "The saxophones sat in a circle, and each player had his eye on Johnny Hodges, first alto. They followed his level and vibrato, so that five saxophones sounded like one saxophone with five voices:-) It was magic:-)))))." "I talked at length with Harry Carney, (baritone sax/clnt.) He had played with Ellington from the very early days - more than 40 years. He said "Where is there to go when you have played in the Famous Duke Ellington Orchestra?" I could see what he meant." Good stuff! I think it's a shame that he's gone from this NG :-( Agreed, but the above stuff, while certainly interesting, belongs in a music newsgroup, not an audio newsgroup. The word 'Audio' first definition from Dictionary.com "Of or relating to humanly audible sound." No Stewart its not all about High Fidelity. Audio encompasses a much wider field than that. Narrow minded people however would be concerned with just the one. Mike |
Bye from Iain
Stewart Pinkerton wrote
Agreed, but the above stuff, while certainly interesting, belongs in a music newsgroup, not an audio newsgroup. I disagree. This group is a broad church and what was posted falls within the remit, I believe. If the post had said 'Duke Ellington is fab and I think he's great', or something similar, then that would have been outside. But how many times have you been listening to something and wondered about the positioning of people in a recording? For that reason if none other, what was posted has a place here. Similarly, if someone should post using an example of music that moves or interests them as an illustration of the character of different systems or components therein, that's fair enough too, I think. And should the discussion then veer off into things that aren't strictly within the group's remit, or would more properly lie within another group (such as, for example, who drives what car), well you don't *have* to read the posts. I, and many others, contributed to, read and enjoyed a similar discussion a while back that started with one thing and ended up, at least in part, discussing the music of Richard Thompson, and I defend those posts as a valid contribution to and use of this group. Much of the 'my dad can fight your dad' stuff is so ultimately tedious for many readers as to be a greater waste of bandwidth for the majority, but no-one's saying it doesn't have a place. T. My £0.02... |
Bye from Iain
"Stewart Pinkerton" wrote in message
On Wed, 3 Nov 2004 21:04:20 -0000, "Mike Gilmour" wrote: Iain said that he really enjoyed the exchange of info and ideas and asked me to pass his best regards to Keith, Andy, Jim and Dave, etc but said he unfortunately couldn't continue in the group under the present circumstances. It was a shame that he found that he could not receive homage for his magnificence from all the members - I wonder what he's used to at home? Obviously he knows *everything* about domestic music reproduction, and should *never* be challenged on his pontifications - just look at the wonderful list of record credits and famous names he trots out on every possible occasion.................... Too bad Iain couldn't drop pearls of technical wisdom as well as he could drop names. The tubies and vinylites around here are obviously very desperate for a patron saint/champion. In plan B, they finally wake up and find out that they are now in the 21st century. |
Bye from Iain
"mick" wrote Good stuff! I think it's a shame that he's gone from this NG :-( Am I allowed to say "me too" on here? ;-) Sure, if you don't mind Usenet's most predictable tit coming up with the usual 'standard response' (referring to a certain popular ISP).... In spite of Stewart's apparent insistance that "audio" and "music" are two different subjects I'm sure he would agree that they can be closely related. Audio equipment is fascinating in its own right, but most people listen to other things apart from test tones. Music is also fascinating, but as we (mostly) can't fit a symphony orchestra (or even an acoustic folk duo in some cases!) into our living rooms the audio equipment comes in handy. Much he would like to think so, that clown doesn't write the rules here - as was stated recently, if anybody wants to post about pickled onions here they have the right and freedom so to do. It's up to others to read/not read such posts and KF anyone by whom they feel persistently offended.... (Ain't hard is it?) |
Bye from Iain
"Mike Gilmour" wrote in message ... Iain said that he really enjoyed the exchange of info and ideas and asked me to pass his best regards to Keith, Andy, Jim and Dave, etc but said he unfortunately couldn't continue in the group under the present circumstances. Good stuff! I think it's a shame that he's gone from this NG :-( So do I. I found his posts interesting and entertaining. Not surprised he didn't stay the course though - he put too much energy into his posts. (The important thing to remember when you are throwing sticks for idiots to fetch is to use as little arm movement as possible - that way you can keep it up longer.....) |
Bye from Iain
I have read the whole of this thread, and I'm very pleased to be able to say
"no comment" Andy === Andy Evans === Visit our Website:- http://www.artsandmedia.com Audio, music and health pages and interesting links. |
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