phatduckk said:he he. im makin a run for it when 30 rolls around - but hell, you never know how my musical tastes gonna change in the next 3 or 4 years; but for now i couldnt imagine not playing punk rock - it just feels right
SteveB said:Hmm... I'm 35 and the country mandate hasn't been enforced..
...although I do own ONE country album.. a Hal Ketchum disc, and it's great.
My mom's cousin is a first-rate country player.. had a hit in the 80's as a member of Larry Lee Jones' band.. song called "Sittin' in Atlanta Station", I think.
He's got great chops, and when I see him play (which is very rare unfortunately), I'm amazed at how completely alien that playing style is to me.
I couldn't jump in and play two of his licks. So, I've got a certain degree of respect for country.
Mobay45 said:Around here you can find blues jams at various venues around town. You just take your bass with you, sign up when you get there and get up and play when your name is called.
muggsy said:I respect any musician who can play, no matter what they're playing.
adouglas said:Same here. Fortunately, last year a pretty darned good blues club opened up only a few miles from my house ("The Boxcar", complete with life-sized statues of Jake and Elwood outside the door...http://www.theboxcar.com/pages/1/index.htm).
Haven't had the courage to try it yet. I know I'm skilled enough on a technical level, but I have basically no blues background because the stuff I play with my band has nothing to do with the blues.
It's one of those situations where I watch the guys on stage and know I could play as well as they do, but I'm not familiar enough with the material to step up there cold and do it comfortably, ESPECIALLY with people I don't know.
Those pick-up, open-mike situations strike me as really great learning experiences...you have to go up there cold, play with a bunch of people you've never seen before, doing material that you may not be all that familiar with, in front of a crowd, no less. Talk about pressure!
I'm really comfortable with my band, and I'd play with them in front of anyone. But this business of walking in and playing pick-up, cold, terrifies me.