Toobist wrote:You can roll a turd in sugar all you want... Doesn't make it a doughnut.
If it sounds unmusical... you're not playing music well, NO MATTER the GENRE. I make money playing orchestral music, jazz, contemporary rock, classic rock. I used to play in drum corps and lemme tell you... I can play damn loud. I can deafen a bass section if I really put my mind to it. I don't. I refuse to let people think that sounding like crap is desirable and I wish more musicians (amateur or professional alike) would take a good OBJECTIVE look at what they're presenting to the public on our instruments. The reason we THINK the audience wants us to sound that way is because we haven't given them the option. Why is it so easy to impress an audience with a few eighth notes? Because the players before you didn't give your audience a good example from which to draw their opinion.
Guess what. Even the most unenlightened layperson would prefer a loud sousaphone player with a concept of sound that is controlled and rich with overtones over a sousa player who chooses to overdo it and play "blatty". I can play with an edge while controlling my horn... can you? No? Then back to the practice room and practice loud playing kid! Geez...
Lemme paraphrase the arguments I'm hearing:
"I can only play loudly with a lack of control. Therefore, in my opinion (oh gawd! The word opinion doesn't mean you have carte blanche to spread your fact diluting "information" guys...) , that sound should be desirable in some instances. Don't be ignorant! My band teacher says i should play crappy and the audience should like it! Don't judge me because I haven't practiced! The audience should decide (based on their inexperience with the sound of a sousaphone?) how I should sound... and obviously, they like my blatty, craptastic, low expectations of tone. Don't disregard my opinion just because it's based on misinformation, inexperience and/or nonsense!"
It's up to us, the players of our chosen instrument, to raise the bar and uphold standards. What would be an error (and would cheapen our efforts and our ART), is to be complacent with our weaknesses (admitted or not) and strive to make our instrument ever more respected. Strive for better, don't try and argue that inferior playing is preferred. If you prefer it... it's because you don't wanna sit down and play your goddam long tones.
If your argument is: "I admire better tone and I'm striving for it but haven't quite got there as I'm still young and/or inexperienced, so please don't judge me!" I can commiserate. In fact, that's a state of mind a musician should be in throughout his/her career... striving for better. If your argument is: "I'm cool with my tone now and I'm gonna kick up a fuss with those from whom I should be garnering advice and information, so screw off, I'm good ENOUGH! Some genres require bad players so that's my niche (and then go on to pass on cockeyed and complacent advice to their peers)," then please, please shush and help keep this forum a USEFUL resource for the rest of us.
(Have you noticed that so many of our heroes and idols who used to frequent this list haven't been heard from in ages? Ever wonder why? I don't.)
To summarize: The lack of hard work in the practice room is compensated for by an over abundance of misplaced machismo and bad musical taste.




