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Author Topic:  Ever had a senior moment while playing
Bo Legg


Post  Posted 13 Apr 2011 10:50 am    
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Just here recently I find myself playing a ride in Bb and winding up in the key of A and it takes me about one or two more bars to figure out what happened. I keep telling the band I'm trying out some new jazz licks. I don't think they're buying it.
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Mark Dershaw


From:
Arizona and Ohio
Post  Posted 13 Apr 2011 11:17 am    
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Bb to A is an understandable transgression. Are you jammin with horn players or what?! For me there have been plenty of times when I just completely forgot what key I was supposed to be in. Nowadays I do chalk it up to a "senior moment". I think when I was young it was more like an "alchohol/drug/looking at the pretty girl on the dance floor moment"
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Richard Sinkler


From:
aka: Rusty Strings -- Missoula, Montana
Post  Posted 13 Apr 2011 11:36 am    
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Once in a while. Sometimes I get to the point where I just have to take my hands off the guitar and re-group. It's really embarassing. Embarassed
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Bo Legg


Post  Posted 13 Apr 2011 12:28 pm    
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Mark it seems when I play in a band with a keyboard player we play a lot in Eb and Bb.
These southern rock guitar players want to play a lot in B. I don't know why they like that key. Occasionally I'll forget and find myself drifting into C.
It wasn't an asteroid that done away with the dinosaurs, it was a senior moment.

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Mark Dershaw


From:
Arizona and Ohio
Post  Posted 13 Apr 2011 12:37 pm    
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Actually I've been playing with a female singer/songwriter who runs a capo up and down the neck until she finds a position that suits her voice. Makes for some "out of the ordinary" keys to play out of.
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Brett Lanier

 

From:
Madison, TN
Post  Posted 13 Apr 2011 1:17 pm    
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I set up my left knee levers pretty much the same for both necks because sometimes I zone out and forget which neck I'm playing.
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Dave Hopping


From:
Aurora, Colorado
Post  Posted 13 Apr 2011 1:53 pm    
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I've been having senior moments since junior high school!
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Papa Joe Pollick


From:
Swanton, Ohio
Post  Posted 13 Apr 2011 2:13 pm    
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Heard it said,the 2nd thing to go is your memory,dunno..
Bo,that cartoony is funny,don't care who ya are.. Laughing
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Ben Lawson

 

From:
Brooksville Florida
Post  Posted 13 Apr 2011 3:30 pm    
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What was the question?
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Billy Tonnesen

 

From:
R.I.P., Buena Park, California
Post  Posted 13 Apr 2011 6:45 pm    
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Yes, really had to go "Pee" in the middle of a set.
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Jim Priebe

 

From:
Queensland, Australia - R.I.P.
Post  Posted 14 Apr 2011 1:55 am    
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With increasing regularity ! We call them "Deme's" (Dimentia Moments) but it's all good. Remember you have never made a mistake (or bum note) 'till the next note. A kool 'next note' converts the mistakes into passing notes or some cool momentary dissonance.
Re. the key of B saga. I read dots but not that sharp. Once backed a singer who's originals were in B. Got sick of it and told the guys do it in C - she won't know - WRONG - she picked it straight away (professionally after the song was done). "Seemed a bit high for me" - I quickly blamed the south west wind and it was before lunch - neither went over that well.
No problems - it was a freebie show anyway!
Priebs
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Bill Myrick

 

From:
Pea Ridge, Ar. (deceased)
Post  Posted 14 Apr 2011 2:16 am    
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"Senior Hearing" is a bigger problem for me--I've got to where B-C-D-E-G all sound the same a lot of times. Thankful for hand signals but a lot don't use them. - Crying or Very sad
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Jack Dougherty


From:
Spring Hill, Florida, USA
Post  Posted 14 Apr 2011 7:30 am    
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I believe there are discounts for seniors Laughing
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Barry Blackwood


Post  Posted 14 Apr 2011 7:38 am    
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At my age, my life is a senior moment! Shocked
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Jack Ritter

 

From:
Enid, Oklahoma, USA
Post  Posted 14 Apr 2011 7:55 am    
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If we are lucky to live long enough, we will all get there. You ever strayed into a different number? Wow!
Jack
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Ronnie Boettcher


From:
Brunswick Ohio, USA
Post  Posted 14 Apr 2011 8:56 am    
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My few glitches come when playing a song, especially a slow ballad, I drift into the tune of another song that is very close-sounding. The other is when I try to go up or down on the neck,(octaves), I forget where I am at, and sometimes do not hit the right fret. I don't know if 71 qualifies for senior moment, but I think i'm there. Still feel 30 though.
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Terry Winter

 

From:
Saskatchewan, Canada
Post  Posted 14 Apr 2011 11:19 am    
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I have done the same thing as Ronnie....as long as at he end of my rambling I come back to the same key at the end, it seems to work although the rest of the band is scratching their heads. Terry
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Gary Watson


From:
North Carolina, USA
Post  Posted 14 Apr 2011 1:08 pm     Senior moment
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I have noticed that I can be on a ride, on interstate "F"......and be riding up to "HughyLand", and on the way, all of a sudden, I take a "dirt road" is that one of those "senior moments", or do I just get distracted by all the pretty chords on the way? I sure do qualify for the "Senior Moment Theory" age wise. Laughing
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Bo Legg


Post  Posted 14 Apr 2011 3:19 pm    
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The real senior moments are like when you get to a gig and you discover you brought your electric fan but you forgot your amp.
I catch myself on the way to a gig stopping after I've only gone about a block and rechecking the equipment to see if I've forgotten anything.
I'm always forgetting to load my seat and have to sit on a tool box or something else uncomfortable.
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Paul Sutherland

 

From:
Placerville, California
Post  Posted 14 Apr 2011 3:24 pm    
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Last night at rehearsal I tried to play a part written by the fiddle player and I couldn't make sense of it. Then I realized I was looking at the neck as if it was C6th; third string at the 12th fret should be a C, right? But I was playing the E9 neck.
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Rick Collins

 

From:
Claremont , CA USA
Post  Posted 14 Apr 2011 4:39 pm    
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Just what is a "senior moment"?
I think I use to have "junior moments" (nocturnal emissions).
Is it anything like this? And, does it ever last for more than a moment?
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Jason Hull

 

Post  Posted 14 Apr 2011 4:42 pm    
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I've had just about every kind of moment while playing music! To quote Professor Lockhart, "This is just like magic!"
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Larry Haas

 

From:
Morganton, North Carolina USA
Post  Posted 17 Apr 2011 3:23 pm    
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I can relate to this "senior moment" real good. When I hit the wrong chord, I'll do a bar slide up the neck and it seems to hide the mistake. Now days I do a lot of bar sliding. I had one fellow say to me that it made cold chills run up his back when I did the slide. It made cold chills run up mine also but not for the same reason.
Larry
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Jack Willis

 

From:
California, USA
Post  Posted 17 Apr 2011 4:51 pm    
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This just about the most hilarious subject I have come across in the Forum....
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Jack Willis

 

From:
California, USA
Post  Posted 17 Apr 2011 4:52 pm    
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Do you ever find yourself trying to open your front door with your car remote? Me neither......
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