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Author Topic:  Great advice from Bruce Bjork
Jeffrey McFadden


From:
Missouri, USA
Post  Posted 1 Apr 2018 11:51 am    
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Just noticed Bruce Bjork's sig line:

Quote:
"Use the talents you possess; the woods would be very silent indeed if no birds sang but the best"


Thanks, Bruce. I've got a gig this afternoon, and I'll never be the best. And so far I'm not even close.
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Earnest Bovine


From:
Los Angeles CA USA
Post  Posted 1 Apr 2018 11:58 am    
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Silence is golden.
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Dan Robinson


From:
Colorado, USA
Post  Posted 1 Apr 2018 2:35 pm     Re: Great advice from Bruce Bjork
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Jeffrey McFadden wrote:
I've got a gig this afternoon...


Fantastic! Word on the street... it was the best performance yet by Jeff McFadden on pedal steel.

In all seriousness, that's a big step, and it gets easier the second time.


Jeff, can you tell us about it?
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Jim Cohen


From:
Philadelphia, PA
Post  Posted 1 Apr 2018 2:50 pm     Re: Great advice from Bruce Bjork
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Jeffrey McFadden wrote:
Just noticed Bruce Bjork's sig line:

Quote:
"Use the talents you possess; the woods would be very silent indeed if no birds sang but the best"

I endorse his overall point but, y'know, when it comes to nature, there is no "best" or "worst". That's just a human construct.
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Jeffrey McFadden


From:
Missouri, USA
Post  Posted 2 Apr 2018 4:51 am     Re: Great advice from Bruce Bjork
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Dan Robinson wrote:
Jeffrey McFadden wrote:
I've got a gig this afternoon...


Fantastic! Word on the street... it was the best performance yet by Jeff McFadden on pedal steel.

In all seriousness, that's a big step, and it gets easier the second time.


Jeff, can you tell us about it?


Thanks, Dan.

We play the 1st Sunday of every month at the VFW in Lexington, MO, as host band for an open jam / open mic session. It's a new event and public participants are still few, but the bar is open & has customers so there is some audience. Given that it was Easter Sunday with a freak spring snow, we had no singers / jammers last night.

"We" consistents of Sandy, band founder, on elec 12 string & vocals, Shawn on keyboard & vocals, Jim on bass & vocals, and me, formerly on lap steel & vocals, now on PSG & vocals.

We had dancers most of the evening. I always consider it a good sign if we can get folks on the dance floor. An old geezer my age - in fact, in Vietnam the same years I was - came up and told us he'd played rock'n'roll for 15 years and country for 15 years and strongly complimented us on our sound. I believe he was sincere.

So far I struggle fiercely to play "Red River Valley" in the Winnie Winston book, but I can work the A&B pedals, play in the pocket, hit a few picking licks, and make music with the PSG. If I stay within my limitations I can sound competent. 3 chord rock'n'roll and 3 chord country songs don't push me past my limits, and I'm ok with the occasional more complex structure like Tequila Sunrise and Nowhere Man. And a 4 hour gig is better practice than a 4 hour practice session in the living room.

I love this instrument.

Jim Cohen wrote:
I endorse his overall point but, y'know, when it comes to nature, there is no "best" or "worst". That's just a human construct.

And are we not really part of nature?
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Well up into mediocrity
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Home made guitars
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Rich Peterson


From:
Moorhead, MN
Post  Posted 2 Apr 2018 5:38 am    
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If you can play in tune, you don't have to be a master to sound good on PSG. The sound of the instrument is that good.
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Jim Cohen


From:
Philadelphia, PA
Post  Posted 2 Apr 2018 5:54 am     Re: Great advice from Bruce Bjork
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Jeffrey McFadden wrote:

And are we not really part of nature?

Yes, but the only part that makes judgments.
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Allan Haley

 

From:
British Columbia, Canada
Post  Posted 2 Apr 2018 8:05 am    
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Jeffrey- a four-hour gig is better than 4 hours of practice.

That's an understatement. For me, a couple of hours playing with real people gives me a to-do list as long as my arm of things to work on.

A live gig is where I can see what stuck from all the practicing and what I don't really have under my fingers yet. The stuff that I can conjure up in the practice room mostly goes out the window at a gig.

The solution is more practice and especially more gigs.

Al
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