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Posted: 4 Sep 2020 12:14 pm
by Jeff Peterson
Topic, losing favor with the public. Play jazz, attract jazz listeners, compare the buying/listening public to that and you get a certainly smaller percentage of listeners. We listen, and think...that's great! Why isn't everyone listening and buying this? Question's already answered..it's the dang public! Remember, the listening public is nowhere near as astute as we are!..LMAO!!

Many good points.

Posted: 4 Sep 2020 5:06 pm
by Tracy Sheehan
I first started on piano and violin. After nearly eighty years to my ears a piano still sounds like a piano and a violin (fiddle) still sound the same. When either is played any one with any kind of ear know what they are listening to. :D





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And i should add

Posted: 4 Sep 2020 5:08 pm
by Tracy Sheehan
One knows what they are looking at.

Posted: 6 Sep 2020 8:47 am
by Jonathan Lam
Who is getting too jazzy Majority of it is recycled buzzy edmonds licks anyway the peddle steal is a classic instrument stuck in the past maybe that’s why there aren’t so many young players anymore.

Posted: 7 Sep 2020 12:51 am
by Rich Upright
The problem is that FM radio has destroyed everything except strict formula garbage music, and turned the average listeners into musical ignorami.
FM radio is the problem.

Posted: 7 Sep 2020 5:50 am
by Dustin Rhodes
Rich Upright wrote: FM radio is the problem.
How much of the general public even listens to FM radio?

Posted: 7 Sep 2020 6:36 am
by Fred Treece
Dustin Rhodes wrote:
Rich Upright wrote: FM radio is the problem.
How much of the general public even listens to FM radio?
Lots and lots. AM too.
https://radioink.com/2019/01/02/2018-by-the-numbers/
My question is, are they listening to crummy music, or the insufferable blabbermouth shows? Either way, the “ignorami” appears to be the result, maybe even the goal.

Posted: 8 Sep 2020 1:38 am
by Dave Mudgett
I don't think most of "the public" knows or ever knew much of anything about steel guitar except, to some extent, during the Hawaiian music craze going back from the 1930s and earlier, when salesmen used to go door-to-door selling steel guitars and steel guitar lessons/schools.

Up until the late 60s and early 70s period when country rock was so prevalent, if you didn't grow up in an area dominated by country music, it was rare to see or even hear a pedal steel guitar.

When I first started playing pedal steel in bands, people, including other musicians, looked at me and said, Hey, Don Ho." Preconceptions and stereotypes have frequently followed this instrument around.

Posted: 8 Sep 2020 9:00 am
by Jim Pitman
I used to here the following phrase from joe public: "I like country music, but just not the whinny stuff."
I have always assumed folks were talking about he steel guitar with that reference.
I'm getting a bumper sicker that says "I like the whinny stuff".

Posted: 8 Sep 2020 1:04 pm
by Curt Trisko
Jim Pitman wrote:I used to here the following phrase from joe public: "I like country music, but just not the whinny stuff."
I have always assumed folks were talking about he steel guitar with that reference.
I'm getting a bumper sicker that says "I like the whinny stuff".
I wasn't around during that era, but I assumed that the assembly line use of steel guitar back in the day grew old to people's ears. We revere the studio musicians of that area, as we should, but the practice of dropping samey-sounding steel into songs as a matter of course does not suit the instrument. Drums, bass, and guitar can get away with it. Steel cannot. It must have been a bad feeling for those studio musicians to not have time or freedom to craft parts for songs except for the ones that were earmarked as big hits.

Posted: 8 Sep 2020 1:35 pm
by Bill McCloskey
....

Posted: 8 Sep 2020 7:56 pm
by Bill Fisher
Ernest Tubb died.

Bill