It has happened to me quite some times and afterwards I forget it, but this time I won't give it the chance.
I was listening to a Erik Satie cd, and its track 5 (danse de travers III - pièces froides) I've thought "... I know that!! A hard rock guitar player with a synth guitar sounding like a piano!!" After some time I've remembered it: Steve Morse, and the record is named "coast to coast", don't remember the song. I must listen to that cd again, but it's so obvious, for God sake!
Yngwie Malmsteen, for example, mentions in all (at least all that I have) Monteverdi, Paganini, Vivaldi, Bach... and plays on his concerts Paganini's capriccios, doesn't hide it.
Question is that Steve Morse has produced a record of classical pieces interpreted on guitar and played on it (I don't have listened to it but as curiosity, tracks are: Steve Morse (Händel's "Water Music"), John Petrucci ("Flight of the Bumblebee"), Marty Friedman (Messenet's "Meditation from Thais"), Steve Howe (Bach's "Chantte 140"), Peter Frampton (Bach's Concerto in F Minor), Trevor Rabin (Beethoven's 9th), Dweezil Zappa (Suites from Bizet's "Carmen"), Al Di Meola (Piazzolla's Tango), Albert Lee (Händel's "Largo"), Jorma Kaukonen (Pachelbel's Canon), Mike Stern (Satie's "Gymnopedie #1") )
My question is: Does he expect that his audience will never listen to the music that influences him besides this kind of records and no one will notice, thus allowing him to pose as a good composer or intellectual, not just a talented guitar player?
I was listening to a Erik Satie cd, and its track 5 (danse de travers III - pièces froides) I've thought "... I know that!! A hard rock guitar player with a synth guitar sounding like a piano!!" After some time I've remembered it: Steve Morse, and the record is named "coast to coast", don't remember the song. I must listen to that cd again, but it's so obvious, for God sake!
Yngwie Malmsteen, for example, mentions in all (at least all that I have) Monteverdi, Paganini, Vivaldi, Bach... and plays on his concerts Paganini's capriccios, doesn't hide it.
Question is that Steve Morse has produced a record of classical pieces interpreted on guitar and played on it (I don't have listened to it but as curiosity, tracks are: Steve Morse (Händel's "Water Music"), John Petrucci ("Flight of the Bumblebee"), Marty Friedman (Messenet's "Meditation from Thais"), Steve Howe (Bach's "Chantte 140"), Peter Frampton (Bach's Concerto in F Minor), Trevor Rabin (Beethoven's 9th), Dweezil Zappa (Suites from Bizet's "Carmen"), Al Di Meola (Piazzolla's Tango), Albert Lee (Händel's "Largo"), Jorma Kaukonen (Pachelbel's Canon), Mike Stern (Satie's "Gymnopedie #1") )
My question is: Does he expect that his audience will never listen to the music that influences him besides this kind of records and no one will notice, thus allowing him to pose as a good composer or intellectual, not just a talented guitar player?
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