Jürgen
MLT Club MemberForum Replies Created
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Bass guitarists are said to be a very special type of musician: relaxed, cool and casual, like this guy here 😀:
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“There’s a theory that I maliciously worked Stu out of the group in order to get the prize chair of bass,” Paul McCartney told biographer Barry Miles. “Forget it! Nobody wants to play bass, or nobody did in those days.”
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The following song comes to mind with a pronounced bass line. It’s not exactly MLT Forum mainstream, but I like it. It is a popular hymn at various soccer World Cups.
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Hello Jung,
a beautiful classic with an even more beautiful bass line:
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Thanks Jung, a thoughtful film, not only about friendship but also about lonliness, getting older and not losing your role in life. You’re right: the magic of such films is that in a short time and without words, these kind of films can express feelings and ideas in such a compressed form that classic movies take at least 90 minutes to do the same.
Not only since Wallace & Gromit, stop motion films have been a great way to bring physically impossible things into an enchanting form.
The following one is a beautiful metaphor about two people who live together and yet have grown so far apart over the years that they practically live in two parallel worlds. Sometimes it takes a small but important reason or a nice memory for their worlds to sync up again.
PS: you will like “Soul”
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One of the most beautiful musical animation movies I’ve seen lately is “Soul”. The film is about the love and passion for music. The focus of the story is the music teacher Joe, who dreams of being able to live out his love of music. A balancing act between his gray everyday life and his love for music. A lovely film with many surprising twists.
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Hi Jung,
thank you for the beautiful and entertaining short films.
Animated films often still struggle with the image of being just children’s films and not serious art, but I don’t think they really were. For me it is still an interesting art form in its own right, which opens the door to the imagination, which begins where reality has its limits. But the combination of music and animation also opens up new creative possibilities, as the video for Janitor Joe proves.
Probably a milestone of the animated music film is Fantasia, which was produced by Walt Disney as early as 1940 and is loosely based and inspired on a ballad by Johann Wolfgang von Goethe.
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Hi David and Jung,
there are certain songs that are forever associated with a special sound or a characteristic voice for me. “Let it be” is such a song. Without Paul’s vocals, “Let it be” is simply: …let it be… 😀. When I first heard “Let it be” as a kid or teenager, I didn’t know it was by The Beatles. But even then it gave me goosebumps. I just happened to come across “Let it be…naked”. The album was released a few years ago, but somehow I didn’t notice it and ordered it right away. It has been remixed and the musical gimmicks of Phil Spector have been removed. Some songs sound a bit different now; e.g. “The Long and Winding Road” now benefits from the piano and less of the strings and the orchestral part that has been added by Spector. But as so often in life: purely a matter of taste. The Beatles were apparently never really satisfied with the version released in 1970. Maybe it was because they already broke up as a band. Paul didn’t particularly like Phil Spector’s mastering. The other three probably liked it better. So here is a version of “Let it be” as Paul may would have liked.
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Hey David,
here’s another TV theme with a catchy riff. I don’t know if the series was ever shown (broadcasted?) in our country, but everyone knows this cool title.
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Even if the „bass“ line here only serves as an intro: a very nice arrangement:
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Hi Tim,
I always find the combination of rock music and cello or double bass fascinating. Thanks for the contribution. A groovy song, that gets right into your feet.
Here’s another great one:
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Jürgen
Member20/08/2023 at 06:11 in reply to: Amazing rendition of Somewhere Over The Rainbow variations by Tommy EmmanuelA very nice jazz adaptation of the song, Chris. I like that. I found another nice guitar/vocals cover version of the song. I think there are as many cover versions of this song as there are grains of sand by the sea (including many well-known musicians).
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Jürgen
Member20/08/2023 at 05:45 in reply to: Amazing rendition of Somewhere Over The Rainbow variations by Tommy EmmanuelWell Chris, I’m not an expert on the golden ratio, but thanks for asking me. I don’t know the book you mentioned or its author. I looked into the book once and it seems to me that it is written in an interesting way and that it gives an introduction to this topic. There are also descriptive pictures and graphics available, which I always like. As I understand it, this book focuses on the golden ratio in art, sculpture and architecture. And also in nature. I can’t judge whether the subject of music is particularly discussed here. The book is available as an e-book (kindle) for $1.95 from am…n. I don’t think you can go wrong at that price. If you buy it and read it, please let me know how you like it. I also might be interested in that.
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Jürgen
Member19/08/2023 at 09:09 in reply to: Amazing rendition of Somewhere Over The Rainbow variations by Tommy EmmanuelHi David, thanks for your comments on the golden ratio. Yes, maybe the golden ratio plays a rather minor role in music and when it does appear it’s maybe more accidental than intentional. But I’m not a musician enough to be able to judge that. I became aware of the golden ratio because I like to take pictures. In photography, the golden section describes the geometric image design. For example, it is about the placement of the main motif and the surface ratio of foreground and background. Here, the golden section can serve as an inspiration. If you take pictures regularly, you automatically divide up the area in this way. You just have the feeling that a picture looks well or looks interesting. Maybe it’s similar in music: a composer simply “feels” when a piece sounds good. A more intuitive affair and less mathematics. Or mathematics as an intuitive feeling? Which came first: the hen or the egg? 😀
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Jürgen
Member19/08/2023 at 09:05 in reply to: Amazing rendition of Somewhere Over The Rainbow variations by Tommy EmmanuelThanks Dave for posting the videoclip „Moon River“. A very nice song. You’re right: The guitar sound is really reminiscent of the theremin. I enjoyed the artistic design of the video very much. I like animated music videos like this. The mood of certain pieces of music can thus be reproduced well. All the better that Mona & Lisa’s new video clip „Janitor Joe“ is also created in such an animated style. It would have been the icing on the cake if the two had also appeared artistically stylized in the video. But also such a very imaginative music video. It’s very nice that Mona and Lisa vary their artistic style and develop an enormous diversity over the many videos they produced.