by yoni » Thu Jun 09, 2005 3:44 pm
Hi ABAKUA, Welcome, Cohiba!
Cohiba, I second ABAKUA's words entirely. Especially where he says: "you get back what you put in."
Improving, advancing, is just a matter of doing it. Reaching very high levels can even be said to be a matter of obsession. I played for some months with two Turkish ultra-virtuosos on darbuka, Ahmet and Levent Misirli, two brothers. These guys, in their 20s at the time, played 15 hours every day. No, I'm not exaggerating. Each has a disc or two out and if you hear them you will know that few, if any, come even close to their level. These guys were just mad, absolutely possessed, and had no families/kids to look after. I was quite obsessed myself then and in other periods (still am, I admit), and will usually spend several hours daily drumming, but I have no set schedule, and sometimes a day or two may pass where I'll hardly play at all. But those two brothers put a "virus" in me, as did Giovanni Hidalgo when I met him some years before at a jazz fest we both performed in... I basically can't stop playing. At almost 47 I seem to have at least as much enthusiasm for it as I did at 16.
Luckily, I've met other musicians here of similar intensity - last night with a super-virtuoso on violin and oud I played an all - night gig then did a recording session that finished about 9:00 am. He also can't stop playing, and it shows. My girlfriend wasn't too thrilled about her night alone, but hey, she knew I was a nut case from the get-go.
Musical artistry probably can't be rated by anything but taste, but as far as technique goes one thing is sure -
the more you do it, the better you get.
All the best,
Yonatan Bar Rashi
Edited By yoni on 1118332269