[Dixielandjazz] Music Definitions
Stan Brager
sbrager at verizon.net
Fri Oct 18 12:24:05 PDT 2013
As much as I hate to disagree with such august sages as Steve and Bob, Bunny
Berigan gets my nod as the originator of that phrase.
Stan
Stan Brager
-----Original Message-----
From: Steve Voce [mailto:stevevoce at virginmedia.com]
Sent: Friday, October 18, 2013 10:46 AM
To: Bob Romans
Cc: Dixieland Jazz Mailing List
Subject: Re: [Dixielandjazz] Music Definitions
It wasn't Stan Getz who said that about practicing. It was Zoot Sims.
Steve Voce
Sent from my iPad
> On 18 Oct 2013, at 18:39, "Bob Romans" <cellblk7 at comcast.net> wrote:
>
> Thanks to Dan Augustine!
>
>
>
> And here are a couple more thoughts on music:
>
>
>
> "Most people wouldn't know music if it came up and bit them on the
> ass." -- Frank Zappa
>
>
>
> "Now, everyone look like you're having fun. Only don't." --Lawrence
> Welk
>
>
>
> "When one day an arctic traveler played a recorded song by one
>
> of the most famous European composers to an Eskimo singer,
>
> the man smiled somewhat haughtily and stated: 'Many many
>
> notes, but no better music.'" -- Curt Sachs _The Wellsprings of
> Music_
>
>
>
> Someone asked famous jazz saxophonist Stan Getz how he could play so
> well
>
> while he was drunk. He replied, "Easy, I practice drunk!"
>
>
>
> Jazz musician Bobby Hackett was once addressed by a customs official,
>
> whose sceptical eye had espied his trumpet case:
>
> "Is that a musical instrument?" he asked.
>
> "Sometimes," replied Hackett
>
>
>
> "Just hoping it would get better, man."
>
> -- modern-jazz sax-player on why his solo lasted for 20
minutes.
>
> ---------------------------------------------------------------
>
> Subject: Fwd: Definitions
>
> Date: October 18, 2013 12:43:02 AM CDT
>
>
>
>
> BANDSTAND: The area furthest away from an electrical outlet.
>
> BIG BAND: Nowadays, an aggregation consisting of two musicians.
>
> BROADWAY PIT JOB: A prison sentence disguised as a gig.
>
> CABARET: A venue where singers do songs from shows that closed out of
town.
>
> CARPAL TUNNEL SYNDROME: God's way of telling you that you've practiced
> too much.
>
> CATERER: A man whose hatred for musicians is unrivaled.
>
> CLASSICAL COMPOSER: A man ahead of his time and behind in the rent.
>
> CLUBDATER: God's way of telling you that you didn't practice enough.
>
> CRUISE SHIP WORK: A gig that gives a musician two reasons to throw up.
>
> DJ: The guy your son would rather have play for his Bar Mitzvah.
>
> DOUBLE BASS: The instrument the folks footing the bill feel is
unnecessary.
>
> DOWNBEAT: The magazine that would have you believe that all jazz
> musicians are working.
>
> ELECTRIC PIANO: The instrument that enables its player to pay for the
> hernia he sustained lifting it.
>
> HOTEL PIANIST: A guy who looks good in a tux.
>
> JAZZ: The only true American art form beloved by Europeans.
>
> JAZZ FESTIVAL: An event attended by folks who think Coltrane is a car
> on the B&O railroad.
>
> LYRIC: That part of a tune known only by singers and homosexuals.
>
> MELLOPHONE: An instrument best put to use when converted into a lamp.
>
> MOVIE COMPOSER: Someone who can write like anyone except himself.
>
> NEW AGE: A musical substitute for Valium.
>
> NEW YEAR'S EVE: The night of the year when contractors are forced to
> hire musicians they despise.
>
> ORCHESTRATOR: The musician who enhances a composer's music, only to be
> chastised for it.
>
> PERCUSSIONIST: A drummer who can't swing.
>
> PERFECT PITCH: The ability to pinpoint any note and still play out of
tune.
>
> PIANIST: An archaic term for a keyboard player.
>
> PRODIGY: A kid who has as much chance at a normal childhood as the
> Chicago Cubs winning the World Series.
>
> RAGA: The official music of New York's Taxi and Limousine Commission.
>
> RARE VIOLIN: A Stradivarius, not to be confused with a rare violinist,
> which is someone over four foot eleven.
>
> SIDEMAN: The appellation that guarantees a musician will never be rich.
>
> STAFF MUSICIAN: Harder to locate than a cavity in the Osmond family.
>
> STEADY ENGAGEMENT: Look up in Webster's Dictionary under the word
> ''obsolete.''
>
> UNION REP: A guy who thinks big bands are coming back.
>
> VERSE: The part of a tune that's disposable, except to its composer.
>
> WURLITZER: The Ford Pinto of pianos.
>
> YANNI: A man blessed with great hair for music.
>
> __________________
>
>
>
>
>
> **--------------------------------------------------------------------
> **
>
> ** Dan Augustine -- Austin, Texas -- ds.augustine at mail.utexas.edu
>
> ** "The music business is a cruel and shallow money trench,
>
> ** a long plastic hallway where thieves and pimps run free,
>
> ** and good men die like dogs. There's also a negative side."
>
> ** -- Hunter Thompson
>
> **--------------------------------------------------------------------
> **
>
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