Did I mention this already?
Chances are:I did, as I've only got so much in this brain of mine to share. Ah, here the nave writer ventures into the oft poeticized notion that there is some struggle between the intellectual life of the mind and the physical life of the body and soul. Anyway: Back in Vegas, after a long day of note-taking, hand-shaking, picture-snapping, nodding, smiling, and listening, I followed Jon Iverson to his hotel room where we picked up a couple of guitars and traded riffs. As with most things, when it comes to playing guitar, I don't know what I'm doing. For the first five years of my fiddling, I played in made-up tunings. It really wasn't until I joined a band, having to communicate in a certain language with other musicians, that I started playing in what we can call a standard tuning. Now, other than the fact that, from skinny to fat, the strings on a guitar go E
B
G
D
A
E, there's not much else I can tell you. I can make music, though. I can play songs for you. My own songs, I mean. I have no idea of how to play any songs you might already know. No Nirvana, no Led Zeppelin, no Rolling Stones. And even within the band, I have to be the one to lead; the others must play to me. Not because I am the best musician, but because I can't play to them. I play alone even when playing with others.
The teacher will appear when the student is ready to learn.I bet there's truth in there. I like to tell myself and others that I enjoy learning. While we were playing, Jon Iverson taught me just a couple of things. He shared with me the secret of A minor. That is: according to Jon, I really like A minor. I would have never known. Even now, I still really don’t know. I can't tell you what A minor looks like, or what it sounds like. For all I know, it might look like a Totem Arro; it might sound like a DeVore gibbon. Jon also gently informed me that much of what I play can be traced back to songs and ideas that have existed for years and years and years. And years. I'm not doing anything new or different. I could play one of my own songs, and Jon might play "Stairway to Heaven" right on top of it, and the two would hold hands like an old married couple sitting in the park. Being slowly swayed, feeding the dirty pigeons, contemplating the fat-ass squirrels.
"Sure," I reply.
John grasps the book, lifts it into the air, holds it out to Elizabeth, and points to the cover image: "You see this, Elizabeth?" "Yes?" "What is it?" "It's a boobie." "No! It's what separates us from computers. It's not a boobie. It's an abstract expression; a semi-circular line with a pink blob in the center. A computer would never see this as a boobie!"
Maybe you're just not neurotic enough to be an audiophile or reviewer. There are those who think hi-fi is so frequently off-putting to women and musicians because they [women and musicians] can listen through the badness of gear to actually hear what's going on.... Even if they can hear the difference, the majority of their brains vote that they don't care, 'cause they "get" the music just as well, either way.Well, I do like to think that I can hear emotion, relate to passion, love love, and all that. As I write this, I'm listening to Mark Lanegan and Isobel Campbell share lines about that old, familiar feeling, sounding something like Serge Gainsbourg and Bridget Bardot. I'm listening through my cheap computer speakers, and I'm sure there's so much I'm missing, but, then again, I know I'm missing nothing. Still. I can certainly hear the difference between the sound of music coming from my computer and the sound of music coming from my home system. And I do care about that difference. It's as big and as obvious as a semi-circular line with a pink blob in the center. In a great e-mail titled "Fly Specks," a reader addresses my holistic approach to listening to music:
Why do you currently listen to music in the first place? Is it for your own personal pleasure and enjoyment? Or is it in order to try and hear differences in audio equipment? Or perhaps even to try and "fit in" with the "audiophile" community?Well... Elizabeth voiced similar concerns this morning: "If you learn a more technical approach to your craft, you may lose..."Let's say you do start listening for fly specks. And let's say you do start hearing some differences. Will you still be able to listen holistically again (or as Harvey "Gizmo" Rosenberg once put it, "wholistically")? And will you experience as much pleasure and enjoyment listening to music as you did previously? Or will those fly specks remain in the back of your mind nagging at you? There's absolutely nothing wrong with your holistic approach to listening to music. It's the best approach in my opinion. Er, unless of course one is aspiring to become an equipment reviewer. You don't have any such aspirations do you?















