Eddie Van Halen or Jimi Hendrix?

Message Bookmarked
Bookmark Removed
Not all messages are displayed: show all messages (375 of them)
Given that we were not talking about music executed by people reading scores, I did not take this as being implicit.

Alright, fair enough. As a composer, I take it as a given that dynamics are one of the fixed elements in a musical composition. Of course, they don't have to be if it's any kind of indeterminate composition, but that's sort of beside the point.

By the way, Steve, I have seen some footage of Hendrix live where I thought his playing was maybe kind of sloppy, too. I don't find his playing on the records to be sloppy, however.

Well, yeah! I was never trying to imply that he sounded particularly sloppy on record. But his live playing tended to have higher peaks, too, didn't it?

Steve, what is the difference between how you think instrumentalists conceive of "technique" and what shorty was talking about?

I think technique is used to refer to mechanical skills. "Expression" is technique inasmuch as it involves the techniques of dynamic playing, different types of articulation, expressive techniques like vibrato and glissandi, etc. But generally instrumental technique specifically does not refer to artistic or expressive merit; the composer tends to have the primary role in that regard, and the player's emotive aspects are not what is usually referred to as a player's chops.

I think that most people would say that technical proficiency is not as important as expressive ability, and I would agree. But that doesn't mean I don't recognize and/or respect technical proficiency when I see it, or that I can't separate the two factors.

Steve Goldberg (Steve Goldberg), Saturday, 3 June 2006 01:45 (twenty years ago)

That is, I think technical proficiency and expressive ability are recognizable in isolation, and each is respectable in its own way. Of course the ideal is for a musician to possess both, but I think that musicians with largely one skill or the other can still do worthwhile things.

Steve Goldberg (Steve Goldberg), Saturday, 3 June 2006 01:48 (twenty years ago)

Now we're coming to some common ground I think.

shorty (shorty), Saturday, 3 June 2006 01:52 (twenty years ago)

That is, I think technical proficiency and expressive ability are recognizable in isolation, and each is respectable in its own way. Of course the ideal is for a musician to possess both, but I think that musicians with largely one skill or the other can still do worthwhile things.

Once again I am compelled to state that I disagree entirely with your entire concept of what music is. Jesus fucking christ. "Ideal"? Who are you to decree what the apex of music is? "Of course?" Not for me, thanks. I'll be over here listening to my Zoviet France records. Ooh, here's a vaguely relevant quote from the This Heat box that just came out:

Hayward: I remember thinking we could radicalize the whole audience, that people would eventually want improvisation rather than panel games.

Bullen: This was 1976 and the New Wave hand't quite happened yet...

H: White Riot. I remember we read the words and thought yes, it's about time...

B: We did relate to that.

H: ...and then we heard it; I remember thinking, this is Johnny B. Goode!

B: "No more Rolling Stones" and they sound just like the Rolling Stones - only not as good...

H: No Charlie Watts...

B: Very disappointing.

By the way, I far prefer Hendrix to Eddie for his sense of melody, and I think his songwriting is vastly superior as well. I still own & play Van Halen albums, but it just isn't the same.

sleeve (sleeve), Saturday, 3 June 2006 05:17 (twenty years ago)

Once again I am compelled to state that I disagree entirely with your entire concept of what music is. Jesus fucking christ. "Ideal"?

I think you either don't get what I'm saying or are just being an ass.

Steve Goldberg (Steve Goldberg), Saturday, 3 June 2006 11:05 (twenty years ago)

My impression was that Jimi Hendrix was, indeed, often sloppy live, and, even worse, badly out of tune. He also reverted to 12/16-bar blues stylings (as was the wont of the times, and coming from a soul background) in the absence of his own material. The more of his own, deeply original, material he had to work with, the better he played. And he knew exactly what he wanted to sound like in the studio, manifesting it wonderfully.

Van Halen, on the other hand, is always in tune (modern guitar technology explains a lot of that) and has fleet-fingered technique, some of which evolved from Hendrix. He has, however, not come up with as many actual memorable songs (memorable to me!). That's partially a result of strapping himself to some of the worst, most trivial & juvenile lyricists I can think of. Hendrix had a knack for writing the vaguest of melodies - some of which he didn't even sing - that somehow become defined in the listener's mind later. That's not my clearest writing ever, sorry.

They were both fine guitarists when allowed to just take their time and create finished versions of what they wanted to hear. They were also (often in live settings) tedious, bombastic, long-winded, self-aggrandizing noisemakers of the lowest order. It really does come down to the songwriting they attached themselves to. Just one guy's opinion.

matt riedl (veal), Saturday, 3 June 2006 16:12 (twenty years ago)

On the contrary, I think you have written one of the most articulate, rational responses in the thread.

You are clear, you show how it is not a black and white issue, and your opinion doesn't judge anyone else's.

Very cool.

shorty (shorty), Saturday, 3 June 2006 19:42 (twenty years ago)

five years pass...

omfg at this thread, how did I miss this all this time. lol at Steve Goldberg getting pwned by like 5 people...

SBing crosby (Neanderthal), Thursday, 23 June 2011 01:40 (fourteen years ago)

one year passes...

Eddie can't compare to Jimi. When Jimi brought his music to the mainstream music scene starting in London, England in 1966, he was like an explosion of a new form of music that was not only unique, but desirable and powerful. Nobody has ever heard anything like it and they were all blown away. He sidetracked the way music was progressing at that time and took it in another direction. This is the reason why it's so hard to imagine how music would sound today without Jimi. His impact on music makes him the only person who has ever pulled a Beatle.

Special thanks to Linda Keith who saw what a talent Jimi was and did something about it. She started Jimi on his way to taking the guitar as far as it can go.

Alton Wong, Saturday, 21 July 2012 22:06 (thirteen years ago)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yX0V9UlwuLM&feature=related

scott seward, Saturday, 21 July 2012 22:27 (thirteen years ago)

the only person who has ever pulled a Beatle.

scott seward, Saturday, 21 July 2012 22:27 (thirteen years ago)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=j2qIDhdLMHg&feature=youtu.be

scott seward, Saturday, 21 July 2012 22:28 (thirteen years ago)

But when Eddie brought his music to the people it was about fun and the devil and kinks covers and being the awesome,

wheras jimi was on some hippie and beating women shit

Listen to this, dad (President Keyes), Saturday, 21 July 2012 22:38 (thirteen years ago)

Hendrix was the Chris Brown of his day

Listen to this, dad (President Keyes), Saturday, 21 July 2012 22:39 (thirteen years ago)

It's super cliché to say that Hendrix is overrated, so I won't say that, but I will say that I reach for Van Halen records far more often than I do Hendrix. Just great songwriting.

Also, guy above who said that Steve Vai is a really emotional player is totally mental – dude is pure technicality, maybe you could get emotion from it if you're a robot…

Hamster of Legend (J3ff T.), Saturday, 21 July 2012 22:42 (thirteen years ago)

wtf keyes

nakhchi little van (some dude), Saturday, 21 July 2012 22:44 (thirteen years ago)

Like Eric Burdon of the Animals said, "I love Jimi, but one second, he's singin' about the underdog, and the next second, he's out in the alley beatin' the s**t out of some poor chic."

Listen to this, dad (President Keyes), Saturday, 21 July 2012 22:53 (thirteen years ago)

When someone disagrees with or challenges someone who is malignantly narcissistic, their reaction may be extreme irritation, and Jimi's interpersonal relationships seemed to represent this idea. His habitually abusive behavior towards women showed Jimi had a very low tolerance for frustration, and when others, and particularly women disagreed with him, his response to this frustration was very often physical violence.

Listen to this, dad (President Keyes), Saturday, 21 July 2012 22:59 (thirteen years ago)

this isn't unknown stuff

Listen to this, dad (President Keyes), Saturday, 21 July 2012 23:00 (thirteen years ago)

wasn't known to me but fair enough. just seemed odd the way you swung in comparing the spirit and themes of Eddie's [lead singer's] lyrics with Jimi's personal shortcomings like it was a totally logical way to measure two guitarists against each other.

nakhchi little van (some dude), Saturday, 21 July 2012 23:09 (thirteen years ago)

i was more going off of EVH's doofy grin (rather than DLR's lyrics) as an indication that he was a more fun loving dude in his 1976-1984 heydey than Jimi was in his. Of course it could be true that EVH was just as big of a woman hater.

Listen to this, dad (President Keyes), Saturday, 21 July 2012 23:12 (thirteen years ago)

we can only dream

nakhchi little van (some dude), Saturday, 21 July 2012 23:21 (thirteen years ago)

The electric guitar had two eras. Before and after Hendrix. After Hendrix came, all the guitar gods of those days had to change. Without Hendrix, there would no Eddie Van Halen.

Alton Wong, Monday, 23 July 2012 00:37 (thirteen years ago)

don't you talk about eddie's mom like that

mookieproof, Monday, 23 July 2012 00:43 (thirteen years ago)

eddie might have been the most influential american guitarist after hendrix. on hard rock and metal. for better or worse. he definitely changed things. but obviously he didn't help invent the stuff like hendrix did.

scott seward, Monday, 23 July 2012 00:49 (thirteen years ago)

Eddie did change things, but Jimi was a whole new metamorphosis. Deservingly so, the Wiki says that Jimi "is widely considered to be the greatest electric guitarist in music history". To stay consistent, the Wiki can only say that about one person if they're going to do it at all.

Alton Wong, Monday, 23 July 2012 01:47 (thirteen years ago)

To stay consistent, the Wiki can only say that about one person if they're going to do it at all.

are you accusing the Wiki of consistency

mookieproof, Monday, 23 July 2012 02:00 (thirteen years ago)

Nobody's perfect and I know the Wiki can't be consistent about all things, especially when things are changing all the time, but the Wiki can only say that about one person at a time. Mark my words, Jimi has his place forever and that won't ever change. It hasn't for over 40 years.

Alton Wong, Monday, 23 July 2012 04:43 (thirteen years ago)

hi

buzza, Monday, 23 July 2012 04:45 (thirteen years ago)

a new form of music that was not only unique, but desirable and powerful

this makes jimi sound like john galt. "loved by many but known by few, he ruled the fields of woodstock with an indomitable will and a mind that surveyed the doings of lesser men like a god enthroned upon the clouds..."

anyway, it's hard for me to render a verdict. they're both hugely talented and influential musicians. then again, they're both dudes i respectfully appreciate more than outright love. i grew up with jimi's music, but never really bonded with it (one night spent tripping to are you experienced notwithstanding). sometimes the emotionalism hits me just right, and i think it's gorgeous. more often than not, though, it bores me, and i tune it out. i'm a little more personally fond of van halen, as they're suburban adolescence incarnate, and i was a suburban adolescent during their heyday. still, they belong more to my brother and certain of my friends than to me.

i guess it depends on my mood. if i wanted music to soundtrack idle contemplations on a sunny day, it'd be hendrix. if i wanted something to amp me up and/or drink to, then i'd pick van halen.

contenderizer, Monday, 23 July 2012 05:14 (thirteen years ago)

"but I will say that I reach for Van Halen records far more often than I do Hendrix. Just great songwriting."

i think hendrix's songwriting is kinda the genius part of his genius. i think he was a great composer. i mean not that he wasn't in his a league of his own as a guitarist, he was. okay, i guess he was just a genius. or let's just say he was very very gifted.

scott seward, Monday, 23 July 2012 12:51 (thirteen years ago)

yeah people who talk about hendrix as some kind of one-dimensional instrumental genius/showman piss me off, guy was really the whole package

nakhchi little van (some dude), Monday, 23 July 2012 13:19 (thirteen years ago)

guy was really the whole package.

You're right, when Jimi played, he was "one" with his instrument. You can tell by his movements, including his facial expressions, that only one thing was happening.

It's easy to underrate Jimi because when we hear music today, and then we hear Jimi's music, he doesn't sound as unusual as he did when he was around because a lot of the music we hear today are copied or influenced from Jimi's music. The thing we need to take into consideration when judging a famous artist's music is the time period in which they were around. That is the same reason why the Beatles are so underrated by some people.

Alton Wong, Monday, 23 July 2012 18:41 (thirteen years ago)

you're preaching to the choir. if there's one thing that everyone on ILX agrees about, it's that the beatles are criminally underrated.

contenderizer, Monday, 23 July 2012 18:54 (thirteen years ago)

i think we're missing an opportunity to ponder how amazing it would have been if david lee roth was the lead singer of the jimi hendrix experience

wack nerd zinging in the dead of night (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Monday, 23 July 2012 19:10 (thirteen years ago)

really great video
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pQW81FJYeJw

tylerw, Monday, 23 July 2012 19:17 (thirteen years ago)

i like hendrix's method of comping, playing chords, coming up with fills and passing phrases. maybe this isn't an underrated part of his repertoire but it seems like it, still.

i don't have much of an opinion on EVH. i like the solo on 'beat it' a lot.

goole, Monday, 23 July 2012 19:24 (thirteen years ago)

eddie i think an unheralded rhythm player, real light touch and unique style, plays a lot of fingerstyle for a "metal" guitarist

wack nerd zinging in the dead of night (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Monday, 23 July 2012 19:33 (thirteen years ago)

yeah i guess that's true too. he does a lot of country-derived stuff.

goole, Monday, 23 July 2012 19:38 (thirteen years ago)

i mean this is cool shit

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gsqywc7fnqE

wack nerd zinging in the dead of night (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Monday, 23 July 2012 19:43 (thirteen years ago)

The Beatles are grossly underrated and they have changed music more then anybody. Actually, they seem to have changed everything. Jimi is definitely in good company.

Alton Wong, Monday, 23 July 2012 21:01 (thirteen years ago)

http://afterride.files.wordpress.com/2012/07/haruki-murakami-the-wind-up-bird-chronicle.jpg

Sig Sig Ruman (James Redd and the Blecchs), Monday, 23 July 2012 21:10 (thirteen years ago)

grossly underrated by who? martians?

scott seward, Monday, 23 July 2012 21:10 (thirteen years ago)

pizza also grossly underrated iirc

the alternate vision continues his vision quest! (Shakey Mo Collier), Monday, 23 July 2012 21:11 (thirteen years ago)

if there is one thing i have learned on the internet though EVERYONE is underrated. every single person who ever made a record. forever.

scott seward, Monday, 23 July 2012 21:11 (thirteen years ago)

i take it back. i thought you were talking about the bootles.

contenderizer, Monday, 23 July 2012 21:18 (thirteen years ago)

You're right, every recording artist has been underrated. That includes people like the Dave Clark Five, and Donny and Marie Osmond. I like your high standards.

Alton Wong, Monday, 23 July 2012 21:27 (thirteen years ago)

is this where I post Crazy Horses youtubes

the alternate vision continues his vision quest! (Shakey Mo Collier), Monday, 23 July 2012 21:29 (thirteen years ago)

yes please

Neil Jung (WmC), Monday, 23 July 2012 21:31 (thirteen years ago)

Altgeir Wongro

Marco YOLO (Phil D.), Monday, 23 July 2012 21:34 (thirteen years ago)


You must be logged in to post. Please either login here, or if you are not registered, you may register here.