Out of Interest - How many musicians we got?
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Guitar. Mostly played black metal in my free time and some death metal stuff. Also played some Kaki King shit when I was in a fingerpicking mood.
Haven't really touched a guitar in weeks, sadly.
What also requires skill is extreme metal vocals when done right and that's the first musical skill I ever learned.
I find sound design much harder than playing guitar or doing extreme vocals. I am thinking of getting one of those Roland MIDI pick-ups for one of my guitars to come up with melodies using my guitar since my sense of melody on guitar is much better than it is on keyboard.
Haven't really touched a guitar in weeks, sadly.
What also requires skill is extreme metal vocals when done right and that's the first musical skill I ever learned.
I find sound design much harder than playing guitar or doing extreme vocals. I am thinking of getting one of those Roland MIDI pick-ups for one of my guitars to come up with melodies using my guitar since my sense of melody on guitar is much better than it is on keyboard.
Last edited by Genevieve on Mon Jan 12, 2009 3:13 pm, edited 1 time in total.

namsayin
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- altered state
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Used to plau drums ages ago quite seriously
but now i only play the computer.
but now i only play the computer.
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lol yer thats so true, i know loads of people who have reached this "legendary" grade 8 status only to turn around and say "now what?". It's not like its a proffesional qualification of sorts and it's not worth anything except it lets people know you played an instrument when you were a child. It's prob a cultural thing tho, like the british go about things in a more reserved manner than stateside and the whole "parents showing their kids off" thing aint as big in the uk (like all those bullshit beauty pageants)...they should have grades in production lol. that would be cold.mad ep wrote: Now that I am in the UK... and teaching cello lessons, I find this whole "grade" level thing so cumbersome. On the one hand, I don't want my students to feel like they don't know where they stand compared to this bullshit national "standard" (especially cos the parents find the ABRSM grading the only way to judge how their student is doing)... but on the other hand, the requirements from one level to the next (at least for cello) are not consistent at all... and to me, proves absolutely nothing. It is all pants and I can't believe such an asinine system has been allowed to take over this whole country.
perhaps in this country... but as I said, I am about as classically trained as they come and think the whole ABRSM system is absolute pants. It has nothing to do with being pretentious.TEQH wrote:I think anyone with a real passion for music disregards grades anyway! Its more of a classical music thing I've found, pretentious bastards
I know what your saying bEErz... except for the fact that UK subscribes to an arbitrary 'show off' system that is completely absent in the States, shows that British 'showing off their kids' isn't any more reserved than it is in the States. If Americans were so guilty- we would have all sorts of systems in place... and the fact is: we don't. Let alone a 'national' standard.bEErz wrote:lol yer thats so true, i know loads of people who have reached this "legendary" grade 8 status only to turn around and say "now what?". It's not like its a proffesional qualification of sorts and it's not worth anything except it lets people know you played an instrument when you were a child. It's prob a cultural thing tho, like the british go about things in a more reserved manner than stateside and the whole "parents showing their kids off" thing aint as big in the uk (like all those bullshit beauty pageants)...
I think the thing that baffles me the most about it is not that there is some sort of 'national' standard... but that the highest level of 'national' standard can be so vague. I have heard ensembles that have been awarded gold medals and filled with grade 8 students that completely underwhelmed me- as well as heard concerts played by children without any distinction grades that impressed me much more.
(edit- rant replaced with more leveled-head comments)
it's interesting to read your thoughts. i started having reservations about it too - i did drums up to grade 6, but later went on to have a look at grades 7 & 8, just out of interest. i found grade 8 to be quite straightforward, and certainly much easier than grade 7!mad ep wrote:I think the thing that baffles me the most about it is not that there is some sort of 'national' standard... but that the highest level of 'national' standard can be so vague. I have heard ensembles that have been awarded gold medals and filled with grade 8 students that completely underwhelmed me- as well as heard concerts played by children without any distinction grades that impressed me much more.bEErz wrote:lol yer thats so true, i know loads of people who have reached this "legendary" grade 8 status only to turn around and say "now what?". It's not like its a proffesional qualification of sorts and it's not worth anything except it lets people know you played an instrument when you were a child. It's prob a cultural thing tho, like the british go about things in a more reserved manner than stateside and the whole "parents showing their kids off" thing aint as big in the uk (like all those bullshit beauty pageants)...
which was pretty confusing. and even though I'm confident that, with those pieces anyway, I could pass grade 8 without too much strain, since I got into the big wide world (cos this was all while I was at school) i've realised that I am in fact a comparatively poor drummer. most of my friends who are drummers would be WAY above grade 8 by that measure, but wouldn't really consider themselves anything particularly special...
Bass (upright and electric) guitar, keyboard, hand drums, a very little kit (wish I had one, I would play it all the time!!), and kazoo. I have been playing in my band, The DeepEnd for prolly 8 years now. I put all real instruments down for about 5 years when I first got into DJing and electronic music, but I'm happy to say I picked it back up because its a skill that embellishes what I do with my dance music.
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perhaps in this country... but as I said, I am about as classically trained as they come and think the whole ABRSM system is absolute pants. It has nothing to do with being pretentious.mad ep wrote:TEQH wrote:I think anyone with a real passion for music disregards grades anyway! Its more of a classical music thing I've found, pretentious bastards
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I was being facetious lol

Meh, dubstep is young. I mean, you won't find many dubstep purists who don't listen to anything that isn't dubstep, so it's likely just coincidence. It's not like the internet isn't flooded by guitarists.jbird22 wrote:Wonder what the connection between dubstep an metal is?
And I don't think that every person who posted here is a dubstep producer. I make breakcore, for example and I am sure some people are likely into making house, or techno or dnb or jungle or whatever (though I think all of them like dubstep).
Though there is a lot of appreciation for Burzum at this forum from what I've noticed. Can't blame 'em.

namsayin
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Wouldn't call Korn metal.Hurtdeer wrote:Heavy grooves man. There's not that much difference between a big heavy ass bassline and a chuggin metal riff. Hell, even Distance sounds like Kornjbird22 wrote:Wow there are tons of guitarists on ere, especially people who are into metal. I'm 1 of em.
Wonder what the connection between dubstep an metal is?
But the groove is the main similarity I can find in some metal, other than drone metal's love for sub bass.
Though what I h ave in mind is sludge metal such as Acid Bath. The way the guitarists go from a chug to a bend does remind of dubstep basslines.
Last edited by Genevieve on Tue Jan 13, 2009 5:34 pm, edited 1 time in total.

namsayin
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yeah grade 5 classical guitar, and i play electric guitar- mostly thrash but I like working out dub basslines on my guitar as well because I don't play bass XD
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They're not great metal, or great anything, really. Their style is called 'nu-metal' which isn't metal as much as metal influenced, particularly, influenced by "groove metal" aka "post-thrash" which grew out of thrash and sludge metal in the early '90s, bands like Sepultura, Pantera, Machine Head and stuff played it. Anyway, some alternative rock bands started to get influenced by groove metal and the result was constant 7 string chugging and power chords.Hurtdeer wrote:they fall under one of the metal subgenres and they use heavy riffs (which was the point of my last post) so yeah they're pretty much metalGenevieve wrote:
Wouldn't call Korn metal.
not particularly great but metal nonetheless
Wolves in the Throne Room is metal, Ulver is metal, http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=T62Br1gWpbY]Dark Angel is metal. Korn is not.

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